Ernesto Alonso
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Ernesto Alonso | |
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Born | Ernesto Ramírez Alonso February 28, 1917 Aguascalientes, Mexico |
Died | Script error: The function "death_date_and_age" does not exist. Mexico City, D.F., Mexico |
Cause of death | Pneumonia |
Other names | El Señor Telenovela |
Occupation | Actor, producer, director, cinematographer |
Years active | 1937-2007 |
Relatives | Alfonso Ramírez Calesero (brother) |
Ernesto Alonso (February 28, 1917 – August 7, 2007) was a Mexican producer, director, cinematographer and actor. He was nicknamed "El Señor Telenovela" ("Mr. Soap Opera") because most of his work centered on telenovelas known around the world.
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Acting career
Ernesto began his career as an uncredited extra in La Zandunga (1938), a movie starring Lupe Vélez. He then appeared in 1939's "Papacito Lindo". His popularity grew as he starred in many films of the 1940s, including "La Gallina Culeca", "Historia de una gran Amor", "El Padre Morelas", "El Jorobado", "La Corte del Faraon", "Marina", "El Gallero", and "El Precio de la Gloria" in which he starred with his brother Alfonso Ramirez Calesero.
He made another series of films throughout the 1950s, including as the narrator of Los Olvidados (1950) and the lead in Ensayo de un crimen (1955), both directed by Luis Buñuel. However, it wasn't until the 1960s that Ernesto began appearing in telenovelas. His first was "Cartas de amor" (1960) which also starred another rising star Angélica María. Ernesto from there on only came out in telenovelas including "Leyendas de Mexico" opposite Jacqueline Andere, with whom he worked a lot in both films and telenovelas. Alonso's most memorable performance was as Enrique de Martino in the 1983 telenovela El Maleficio in which he played a devil like character.[1] His last acting appearance was in the telenovela Entre el Amor y el Odio (2002) in which he played Father Abad. Ernesto only made one film between those years, 1986's El Maleficio II.
Directing and producing career
Ernesto directing, produced and even starred in his own telenovelas sometimes. 1960's "Espejo de Sombras" was his first job as a director and he even produced it, but his first producing job was "Cuidado con el Angel" that very same year. Ernesto then made many memorable telenovelas including "La Leona", "La Cobarde", both of which he directed, produced and starred in. His last job as a director was the series "Cumbres Borrascosas" (1979) which was a telenovela version of an Emily Brontë novel. Ernesto then went to continue his career has a producer, producing twenty - five telenovelas throughout the 1980s, nine throughout the 1990s, and four in the 2000s. His last producing work being the telenovela "Barrera de Amor" which starred Yadhira Carrillo and Raquel Olmedo. Ernesto was awarded the Special Golden Ariel at the Ariel Awards in 2006 for his amazing career and contributions.
Death
Ernesto Alonso died at the age of 90 at his home in Mexico City.[2] Being kept in a hospital, sources say he knew he was passing, and that he wanted to spend his last moments in his home. In the end Ernesto Alonso acted in sixty-three films, directed forty-three films and telenovelas, but he would be most remembered for producing 158 telenovelas throughout his long career.
Selected filmography
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- The White Monk (1945)
- Tragic Wedding (1946)
References
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External links
- Ernesto Alonso at the Internet Movie Database
- Ernesto Alonso at the Legacy
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- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ New York Times: Ernesto Alonso mexican telenovela director died at age 90 years old
- Pages with reference errors
- Articles with hCards
- 1917 births
- 2007 deaths
- Mexican male telenovela actors
- Mexican male television actors
- Mexican male film actors
- Mexican telenovela directors
- Mexican telenovela producers
- 20th-century Mexican male actors
- 21st-century Mexican male actors
- Golden Ariel Award winners
- People from Aguascalientes