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Rodolfo de Anda was the son of producer, director, actor Raul de Anda. His son is Rodolfo de Anda, Jr. and his brothers include producer Raul de Anda Jr. and director, actor Gilberto de Anda. He began his acting career in the mid–1950s. De Anda’s IMDB listing has over 150 acting entries both in film and on television beginning with La ...
El zurdo (English: The Left-Handed) is a 1965 Mexican drama film directed by Arturo Martínez and starring Rodolfo de Anda with Germán Robles, Andrés Soler, Noé Murayama and special performances by Ofelia Montesco, Francisco Avitia, and Irma Serrano.
The exterior scenes of El buscabullas were shot in the state of Durango at locations such as Cañón de las Huertas, Lerdo de Tejada, el Saltillo, San Vicente de Chupaderos, and the Peña del Águila Dam from May 17 to May 31, 1974. [1] The interior scenes were shot in sound stages at Estudios América between May 6 to June 22, 1974. [2]
During the time of its release, Rodolfo de Anda, who portrays The Zorro/Diego de La Vega character, was in the prime of his career and was known for Mexico's version of 'Spaghetti Westerns'. The Movie is Western and the first to portray the Zorro character in such fashion, deviating from the clumsy, lazy or uninterested Diego de La Vega that ...
In 1964, she married Rodolfo Enrique Serrano Anda, a marriage that lasted fourteen years and produced two children: Patricia and Rodolfo. Since the late 1990s, she has staged something of a comeback, this time on television, but her work in youthful roles (from the 1960s) is best remembered today, where she played opposite the best-paid actors ...
Las delicias del poder ("The Delights of Power") is a 1999 Mexican political satire comedy film directed by Iván Lipkies starring María Elena Velasco as La India María with Ernesto Gómez Cruz, Irma Dorantes, and Adalberto Martínez.
ANDA began in 1934 as an independent union of actors guilds from throughout Mexico. When Angel T. Sala became its secretary general in 1936, the union was subsumed into the Union of Cinema Studio Workers ( Unión de los Trabajadores de Estudio Cinematográficos , UTEC), which was under the control of the CTM , a labor confederation with ...
The film opened on 20 January 2000 on 320 screens in Mexico. It opened at number one at the box office in Mexico City with a gross of 7.1 million pesos ($0.7 million) in its first week from 94 screens. [2]