Lilia Lazo was born in Pinar del Rio, Cuba, in 1935. From an early age,
she showed a great gift for acting, painting, writing and oratory.
After her father's death, she and her mother moved to Havana. She
enrolled in Sociedad de Bellas Artes (The Society of Fine Arts) a
theatrical group that was a springboard for many fine Cuban actors.
Young Lilia developed on the stage and showed an unusually skillful
ability to tackle demanding roles.
In late 1940s Cuba, dozens of radio stations broad casted scores of
soap operas. Lilia auditioned for and was hired by Radio CMQ in 1948.
By 1950 she starred in five daily radio programs, all with the top
audiences. Cuban radio corporations, like their US counterparts, began
the transition to TV in the late 40s and CMQ's state-of-the-art
television studio was inaugurated in 1949. Lilia was invited to act on
television.
Her loyal radio audience could now see the pretty, talented girl they
had heard, and her popularity skyrocketed. The Cuban Television
Association voted her Cuba's best dramatic and comedic actress in 1952.
She created various comedic characters for Cuban television, including
one named Popa, which would later reappear in the United States.
Her years of TV stardom were from 1953 to 1960, but she also made time
to appear in various movies, most notably Affair in Havana with Raymond
Burr and John Cassavetes, and the leading role in the Cuban-made La
Vida Comienza Ahora, released in 1960 and considered by critics the
first Castro-era movie of note. In 1960, she accepted an offer to study
acting with Lee Strasburg at New York's Actors Studio. Rejecting Cuba's
Communist Revolution, she and her husband of 47 years, producer Mario
Agüero, settled in New York.
In 1967, former Cuban television mogul Gaspar Pumarejo asked Lilia to
return to TV with one of her comedy characters, Popa. Popa En Nueva
York, as the series was titled, was taped and televised at WNJU channel
47 in Newark, NJ. A second season was aired in 1968 in color, making it
the first Spanish language TV show made in color in the US. A
full-length film, Popa en Nueva York, was released by Columbia Pictures
that same year, directed by the legendary Mexican director Julio Bracho
and co-starring Mexican leading man Rogelio Guerra.
In 1971, Goya Foods, Inc., sponsored production for Santa Barbara,
Virgen y Martir, the first Spanish language TV Soap Opera made in the
U.S. 75 full color episodes were aired between 1971 and 1972, and the
novela topped the ratings in various cities in the United States.
By 1975, the illness and death of Lilia's mother and her husband's new
upper east side restaurant took Lilia away from acting for good.
Thereafter she turned her attention to art, embarking on a successful
painting career with various solo and group exhibitions in the US and
abroad.