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Pedro Vargas Mata (29 April 1906 [1] – 30 October 1989) was a Mexican tenor and actor, from the golden age of Mexican cinema, participating in more than 70 films. He was known as the "Nightingale of the Americas", "Song Samurai" or "Continental Tenor".
"Flores negras" ("Black Flowers") is a bolero song written and composed by Cuban musician Sergio De Karlo and published in 1937. [1] It was introduced by Mexican tenor Pedro Vargas in the 1937 film Los chicos de la prensa. [2] Vargas recorded it for RCA Victor.
Pedro Vargas 6 "Amorcito corazón" Manuel Esperón (music) & Pedro de Urdimalas (lyrics) Pedro Infante / Trío Los Panchos 7 "Bonita" Luis Arcaraz: Luis Arcaraz y su Orquesta 8 "La rondalla" Alfonso Esparza Oteo: Luis Aguilar / Luis Pérez Meza 9 "Sin ti" Pepe Guízar: Trío Los Panchos 10 "Miseria" Miguel Ángel Valladares
This is a list of the 10 most popular songs in Mexico for each year between 1940 and 1949, ... Fernando Fernández / Toña la Negra / Pedro Vargas: 3 "Como el besar" [d]
Aventurera has the perfect industrial film ingredients that bind to the Rumberas film genre of the 1940s and 1950s: five intermediate sung (with the voices of Ana Maria Gonzalez and Pedro Vargas), three impossible musical numbers (created by Ninón Sevilla), an emblematic story of innocence and perversion.
From 1981 to 1984 the group established itself doing backup vocals for artists such as Emmanuel and Pedro Vargas (who is the sisters' godfather), and backup vocals for the group Timbiriche. On 29 November 1984, the group signed a record deal with EMI and became Mexico's first all-female musical trio in thirty years. The artistic director of EMI ...
Los chiflados del rock and roll (English: The Stooges of Rock and Roll) is a 1957 Mexican musical comedy film, directed by José Díaz Morales, starring Luis Aguilar, Agustín Lara, and Pedro Vargas. The supporting cast includes Eulalio González, Lina Salomé, Delia Magaña, and Rosita Arenas.
"Allá en el Rancho Grande" is a Mexican song. It was written in the 1920s for a musical theatrical work, but now is most commonly associated with the eponymous 1936 Mexican motion picture Allá en el Rancho Grande, [1] in which it was sung by renowned actor and singer Tito Guízar [2] and with mariachis.