Isabelita Blanch

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Isabelita Blanch
Isabelita Blanch, Spanish-born, Mexican actress.jpg
Born Isabelita Blanch Ruiz
(1906-11-13)13 November 1906
Sagunto, Valencia, Spain
Died Script error: The function "death_date_and_age" does not exist.
Mexico City, Mexico
Occupation actress
Years active 1930s–1970s
Known for vaudeville

Isabelita Blanch (1906–1985) was a Spanish-born Mexican actress, who specialized in vaudeville and comedy during the Golden Age of Mexican cinema. She and her sister opened several theater companies and performed throughout Mexico and in the US. She also acted in movies and performed in one television series.

Biography

Isabelita Blanch Ruiz was born 13 November 1906 in Valencia, Spain.[1] She and her sister Ana, who went by the name of Anita Blanch, both had interest in the theater and arrived in Mexico in the 1920s.[2] Primarily a vaudeville entertainer, Blanch specialized in comedy and melodrama.[3]

She and her sister formed the Compañía de Teatro Anita Blanch (Anita Blanch Theater Company), hiring artists like Garasa Angel, Rafael Banquells, and Jose Cibrian, among others. In the 1940s, they produced plays like “No hables mal de os gitanos” by Enrique Bohorques; “La mujer legitima” by Xavier Villaurrutia; “Doña hormiga” by Alvarez Quintero; “El amor las vuelve locas” by Enrique Suarez, and many other productions.[4]

Isabelita also had her own touring company, Compañía de Isabelita Blanch, which in 1940 made the inaugural performance in the restored Teatro Principal de Puebla, oldest theater in Mexico, with the presentation of the work "Quién te quiere a ti".[5] In 1943, she toured in the United States, playing venues in Tucson, Arizona.[6][7]

Blanch also performed in several movies including “Luponini de Chicago” (1935) by Jose Bohr, “Casa de mujeres[4] and "La historia de siete pecadoras"[1] (1942) by Gabriel Soria and “Con la música por dentro" (1946) by Gómez Landero,[4] and "Los secretos del sexo débil"[1] (1960).[8] She was also the star of a television program called "El profesor particular".[1]

She died in Mexico City on 14 May 1985.[1]

Selected filmography

References

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  6. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. open access publication - free to read
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