Roberto Gavaldón

Roberto Gavaldón

DirectorWriterSecond Unit or Assistant Director
Born
June 7, 1909
Died
September 4, 1986
Awards
9 wins, 37 nominations

Roberto Gavaldon was the most prominent director of the so-called Golden Age of Mexican CInema. One of the supreme artists of the melodrama, Gavaldon was a rival to Old Hollywood movies. Gavaldon's movies, like contemporary director Emilio 'Indio' Fernandez, were popular and populist. Because that…

Biography

Roberto Gavaldon was the most prominent director of the so-called Golden Age of Mexican CInema. One of the supreme artists of the melodrama, Gavaldon was a rival to Old Hollywood movies. Gavaldon's movies, like contemporary director Emilio 'Indio' Fernandez, were popular and populist. Because that Gavaldon's cinema has melodramatic plots, extravagant and larger-than-life star performances, feverish and hyperbolic scenarios, and thunderous and over-the-top musical scores. Few directors in the history of world cinema have been so fully and passionately dedicated to melodrama - not just as a movie genre, but as a distinct and legitimate art form in its own right. Besides his cinematographic activities, Gavaladon was fighting for the Mexican workers rights and against foreign investment in the country.

Actor

Beautiful SkyBeautiful Sky(1936)as Juan
The Call of the BloodThe Call of the Blood(1934)as Joven de sociedad amigo de José
Souls in ConflictSouls in Conflict(1934)
El prisionero 13El prisionero 13(1933)as Preso

Second Unit or Assistant Director

El niño de las monjasEl niño de las monjas(1944)
Caminito alegreCaminito alegre(1944)
DivorciadasDivorciadas(1943)
Noches de rondaNoches de ronda(1943)
El baisano JalilEl baisano Jalil(1942)

Archive Footage

Un Recuerdo Para Ellos de GloriaUn Recuerdo Para Ellos de Gloria(2020)as Director, Prisionero

Known for

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Photos 2

Gabriel Figueroa, Roberto Gavaldón, and Ignacio López Tarso in Macario (1960)Roberto Gavaldón