Rosa Carmina

Movie Actress

Rosa Carmina was born in Havana, Havana Province, Cuba on November 19th, 1929 and is the Movie Actress. At the age of 94, Rosa Carmina biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, and networth are available.

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Date of Birth
November 19, 1929
Nationality
Mexico, Cuba
Place of Birth
Havana, Havana Province, Cuba
Age
94 years old
Zodiac Sign
Scorpio
Profession
Actor, Film Actor, Television Actor
Rosa Carmina Height, Weight, Eye Color and Hair Color

At 94 years old, Rosa Carmina physical status not available right now. We will update Rosa Carmina's height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, and measurements.

Height
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Weight
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Hair Color
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Eye Color
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Rosa Carmina Religion, Education, and Hobbies
Religion
Not Available
Hobbies
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Education
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Rosa Carmina Spouse(s), Children, Affair, Parents, and Family
Spouse(s)
Francisco Morales Llanes, Juan Orol (1949-1954), Ramón de Florez
Children
Not Available
Dating / Affair
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Parents
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Rosa Carmina Career

Rosa Carmina began her artistic career in the Mexican Cinema starring the film A Woman from East (1946), directed by Juan Orol. Rosa had signed a contract to film two more films with Orol. Her second project was Tania, the Beautiful Wild Girl (1947). Her third film made with Orol was Gangster's Kingdom (1947). Both this film and its sequel, Gangsters Versus Cowboys (1948), are now considered cult films in the Gangster film genre, and have an important place in several film libraries around the world. In both films Rosa Carmina plays the femme fatale, the object of the conflict between the male characters in the story, a situation that contributes to elevate to star as one of the most representative sex symbols of the Mexican cinema of the time. In some Orol films the actress played herself. To close the 1940s, Rosa Carmina filmed two more films with Orol: Wild Love (1949) (controversial film based on a story by José G. Cruz, who spoke about a love conflict between a young man and his own uncle) and Cabaret Shangai (1950). Rosa Carmina success in film increases due to her versatility, she soon proved to be a complete vedette, because she not only showed talent for dancing but also singing and acting. In 1951, Rosa Carmina films the trilogy Percal, which consisted of three films: The Poor's Hell, Women Perdition and Men without Soul. This trilogy was based on a popular original comic of José G. Cruz. The success of the comic magazine in the audience was overcome by the film version.

Despite being virtually exclusive star of Orol films and his production company (España Sono Films), he gives her the opportunity to film with other producers. After her filmic collaborations with Producciones Rosas Priego and CLASA Films Mundiales, Rosa Carmina rejoins the Orol film team with The Goddess of Tahiti (1953). In 1954, Juan Orol produces and directs in Cuba Sandra, the Woman of Fire (1954). The movie was one of the most important and memorable blockbusters films by Rosa Carmina and Orol. Rosa Carmina continued her filmic collaborations next to Juan Orol in three more films: Crime Syndicate (1954), Under the Fear Influence (1955) and Dangerous Secretary (1955). In total, between 1946 and 1955, the legendary Orol directed her in sixteen films. Despite the peculiar style of cinema Juan Orol, these films help to enrich the myth of Rosa Carmina and give it the undisputed title of Queen of the Gangsters of the Mexican Film noir.

In 1950, Rosa shot with the production company Producciones Rosas Priego. At this studio, Rosa Carmina had the opportunity to make dramatic films with very different plots: she filmed movies like Treacherous (1950), with Fernando fernández; In the Flesh (1951), with Rubén Rojo; Ladies Specialist (1952), with Rafael Baledón; Voyager (1952), again with Fernandez, and The Second Woman (1954), with Antonio Aguilar, among others. Rosa Carmina was also originally considered to star in the film un extraño en la escalera, directed by the filmmaker Tulio Demicheli, next to Arturo de Córdova. However, Rosa rejected the project to join a new film project with Orol. She was then replaced by Silvia Pinal.

In the mid 1950s, the Rumberas film experienced a decline. Like other exponents of the genre, Rosa Carmina made fewer productions in this genre. In 1956 she filmed the Spanish-Mexican co-production Love Me with Music (1956), directed by Ignacio Iquino. The film was a great success in the Spanish market, making Carmina one of the few Mexican stars to achieve success in Spain. From this point on, Rosa Carmina performed musical numbers only sporadically in her films.

In 1956, Rosa Carmina received an offer to make a film in France with actress Viviane Romance, but because the movie would contain lesbian scenes, Juan Orol recommended that she reject the project. In 1959 she starring the film My Private Secretaries, with the American-Cuban actor Cesar Romero.

In the late 1950s and during the 1960s, Rosa Carmina ventured into other film genres. Carmina's career stands out because of her versatility in working in different genres while keeping the same success with the public. Few actresses in the Mexican cinema were able to do this. She was part of the era of the Luchador films for her involvement in films like The Last Fight (1959) and The White Shadow (1964). She also ventured into the fantasy and horror film genres in films like The Cobra Mystery (1959), Infernal Face (1963) and Macabre Footprint (1963). In 1974, Rosa Carmina met for the last time with Juan Orol in the film México by Night, where they made their last appearance Sandra and the serie of characters created by Orol to his classic films. In 1975, Rosa appeared in the film Beauties by Night, which introduced the Mexican sex comedy that flourished between the 1970s and 1980s in the Mexican Cinema.

In 1976, the Peruvian Nobel Prize winner Mario Vargas Llosa directed her in Captain Pantoja and the Special Services, based on his novel of the same name. Rosa was considered for the role of Chuchupe. Mario Vargas Llosa himself claimed to have inspired her for the character in the novel. However, they realized that Rosa was too physically attractive to play an obese and decadent woman. The character was then performed by Katy Jurado, although a special character was created so that they could keep Rosa Carmina in the cast: La Cubana. The film was produced by Paramount Pictures and made in the Dominican Republic.

In 1981, Rosa appeared in the Arturo Ripstein film Rastro de muerte. Her last film was Teatro Follies, a musical film made for television in 1983, in which she shared credit with María Victoria and Tongolele.

In 1992, Rosa was considered for a role in the film The Years of Greta. However, her physical attractiveness was again an impediment to the realization of the character she was intended to play, so she was replaced by the Mexican actress and rumbera Meche Barba.

Carmina also performed in arenas, stadiums, cabaret, public theaters and nightclubs around Central and South America, which achieved significant success in an era when the television was not yet considered a mass medium. Her foray into the theater in Mexico occurred shortly after her arrival to the country and after the success of the film Tania, la bella salvaje. Juan Orol organized a tour throughout the country for Rosa Carmina, where he presented her live to the public. Eventually, Rosa entered in a musical revue presented at the Tivoli Theatre in Mexico City, where she shared scenes with figures like Libertad Lamarque, Rosita Fornés and Los Panchos.

In her live music shows, Rosa Carmina was not limited to the interpretation of Caribbean dances, as dhe experimented with other music genres like the Rock and roll. To develop these new rhythms, she had the support of the Dominican choreographer Julio Solano, Broadway dancer and former member of the Katherine Dunham Company.

In 1976 she starred in a successful music season in the Blanquita Theater of Mexico City, alongside the comedian Adalberto Martínez and the Cuban rumbera Amalia Aguilar.

In the early 1990s, Rosa Carmina starred in a show called Rumba, poetry and song, which wove the songs of her films with Cuban poetry and dance. One thousand performances were held at the Teatro Esperanza Iris of Mexico City, coinciding with the 45th anniversary of Rosa Carmina's career, under the sponsorship of the National Council for Culture and the Arts, the Secretariat of Public Education and Leon Alazraki Riverón.

Rosa Carmina has had a very selective presence on Mexican television. She was one of the first figures to present a musical show on Mexican television. At the end of her film career, Rosa made her debut in the Mexican telenovelas in 1984, in the telenovela La pasión de Isabela (1984). Probably her most memorable works in this medium are the telenovelas Juana Iris (1985) and Muchachita (1986), where she played special characters written especially for her by the writer Ricardo Renteria. In 1992 she participated in the telenovela Maria Mercedes (1992), the first of the successful television soap opera trilogy known as the Trilogy of the Marias, starring the singer Thalía. She played a minor character and got her role due to her friendship with the soap opera's writer Carlos Romero. This is, to date, her last professional work as an actress.

Rosa Carmina was initially considered to be part of the cast of the telenovela Marimar. However, Carmina rejected the project and was replaced by Ana Luisa Peluffo.

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