Mapy Cortés

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Mapy Cortés
File:MapyCortés.jpg
Mapy Cortés
Born María del Pilar Cordero
(1910-03-01)March 1, 1910
Santurce, San Juan, Puerto Rico
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Isla Verde, Puerto Rico
Nationality Puerto Rican
Occupation Actress and dancer
Years active 1933–1986
Spouse(s) Fernando Cortés

Maria del Pilar Cordero, better known as Mapy Cortés (Santurce, San Juan, Puerto Rico March 1, 1910 – Isla Verde, Puerto Rico August 2, 1998) was Puerto Rican dancer and film and television actress who participated in many films during the Golden Age of Mexican cinema.

Biography

Mapy Cortés began experimenting as an actress since an early age, working in various Puerto Rican radio shows, with lukewarm success. Never considered a superstar, glamour girl, or actress of merit, she was a beloved fan favorite.

During the early 1930s, Cortés decided to look for fame in other places, and she arrived in Mexico, where she met and married the already famous Puerto Rican actor and producer Fernando Cortés who had already adopted Mexican citizenship. This marriage proved to be a blessing for the Puerto Rican actress, both romantically and professionally speaking. By 1933, Mapy Cortés participated in the first of over 50 films she would make in Mexico and in Puerto Rico. Her film debut was in a movie named Dos Mujeres y un Don Juan (Two Women and a Womanizer). By the time this movie was released, Cortes had a nephew, Paquito Cordero, who himself became a legendary figure in Puerto Rican show business. Paquito was only two years old when Mapy's first movie was released.

The Cortés couple became a phenomenon across Latin America, when, after 1940, they set out to film movies in practically every Latin American country that was into the movie making industry. Mapy Cortés was able to gain celebrity in places like Cuba and Argentina, where she filmed some movies that are considered classics among those movies produced there. She also played an eponymous — albeit unmarried — singer in the 1942 American musical comedy Seven Days' Leave, where her character is engaged to Victor Mature's character. Cortes parlayed her acting career into a singing one, recording various albums while still active as an actress. In 1944, she participated in La Picara Susana (Mischievous Susan), followed by 1945's La Corte del Faraon (Pharaoh's Court).

The Cortés family spent much of the 1950s making movies and participating in a television show in Puerto Rico. Mapy and her husband Fernando returned to the island and presented an idea for a comedy show to Ángel Ramos, owner of El Mundo Enterprises. On March 28, 1954, Puerto Rico received its first television transmission from Angel Ramos's WKAQ-TV Telemundo Channel 2. The first comedy show to go on the air was Mapy y papi which also included Maria Judith Franco and Paquito Cordero.

With a lot of wealth earned from their days as actors, the Cortéses decided to retire soon after their show came off the air in Puerto Rico. They travelled constantly between their houses in Puerto Rico and in Mexico. Her niece Mapita Cortés, also born in Puerto Rico, became a renowned telenovela actress in Mexico.

After Fernando Cortés died in 1982, Mapy Cortés led a relatively quiet life, without getting involved in many scandals or public activities.

She died at her home in Puerto Rico in 1998, of a heart attack.

Filmography

  • Dos mujeres y un don Juan (1933)
  • El paraíso recobrado (1935)
  • El gato montés (1936)
  • El amor gitano (1936)
  • No me mates (1936)
  • Centinela, alerta (1937)
  • The Unknown Policeman (1941)
  • Cinco minutos de amor (1941)
  • La liga de las canciones (1941)
  • Seven Days' Leave (1942)
  • Yo bailé con don Profirio (1942)
  • El Conde de Montecristo (1942)
  • Las cinco noches de Adán (1942)
  • El globo de Cantoya (1943)
  • Internado para señoritas (1943)
  • La guerra de los pasteles (1944)
  • El sexo fuerte (1945)
  • Mischievous Susana (1945)
  • Dos mujeres en la niebla (1947)
  • Las tandas del principal (1949)
  • Recién casados, no molestar (1950)
  • Dormitorio para señoritas (1959)
  • Lamento borincano
  • Luna de miel en Puerto Rico

Television

  • Pobre juventud (1986)
  • Marionetas (1986)

See also

Bibliography

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External links