The Latino singer and actor Raul Roulien worked briefly in Hollywood in
the waning days of the American movies' embrace of the "Latin Lover" (a title invented for the Italian actor Rudolph Valentino). This
phenomenon encouraged the Jewish-American actor
Jacob Krantz to change his name to Ricardo Cortez. Raul began recording in 1928 and grew
in reputation as a theater actor and composer as well.
He emigrated to the U.S. in 1931 and became an actor, signing with 20th
Century-Fox and making his movie debut in a Spanish-language version of
Charlie Chan Carries On (1931),
called
Eran trece (1931). (Before
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer's
Douglas Shearer
and other sound technicians at the Hollywood studios perfected dubbing,
foreign language versions of films had to be shot for the export
market.) He sang the Gershwin song "Delishious" for his second movie
Delicious (1931), but earned more
attention appearing in the first
Fred Astaire/
Ginger Rogers
cinematic pairing
Flying Down to Rio (1933) as
part of a romantic triangle with
Gene Raymond and
Dolores Del Río and for his singing of
"Orchids in the Moonlight".
He was married four times. Following his 1920s marriage/divorce to
actress
Abigail Maia, he married
actress/dancer Tosca Izabel Querze (1909-1933), who died in a car
accident on September 27, 1933 (it is rumored that
John Huston, the future
Oscar-winning director and screenwriter, had struck her down while
driving drunk, and the tragedy hushed up by MGM's
Louis B. Mayer as a favor to Huston's
father, the great stage and film actor
Walter Huston). Whatever the truth, after
finishing
John Ford's
The World Moves On (1934), he
returned to Brazil where he continued to act throughout the 1930s. He
married third wife actress
Conchita Montenegro in 1935 but they
later divorced.
When he ceased acting in 1938, he continued sporadically on television
as a director from 1950 to 1970 and hosted TV programs as well as
working for newspapers as a writer. He was married to his fourth wife,
Valkyrie de Almeida, when he died of pneumonia in São Paulo, Brazil on
September 8, 2000, a month before his 95th birthday.