María del Puy | |
---|---|
Born | María del Puy Alonso González 1941
Pamplona, Spain |
Died | (aged 78)
Madrid, Spain |
Occupation | Actress |
Awards | Ondas Award (1963) |
María del Puy Alonso González (1941 – 25 November 2015), known artistically as María del Puy, was a Spanish actress. [1] [2]
Titled in piano at the Madrid Royal Conservatory, María del Puy also pursued declamation studies at the Royal Superior School of Dramatic Art and at the Superior School of Cinema. [1] [3]
With some incursions into the cinema, her career was developed mainly in theater and television. On the big screen she worked under Edgar Neville in My Street (1960), [4] with Luis César Amadori in My Last Tango (1960), [5] and Fernando Fernán Gómez in Yo la vi primero (1974). [1]
On stage, she played dozens of characters, in productions such as Duck in Orange Sauce by William Douglas-Home (1972), Caimán by Antonio Buero Vallejo (1981), [6] Un hombre en la puerta (1984), An Enemy of the People by Henrik Ibsen (1985), La puerta del ángel by José López Rubio and directed by Cayetano Luca de Tena (1986), [7] Los tres etcéteras de Don Simón by José María Pemán (1997), [8] and The Children's Hour, in a version by Fernando Méndez-Leite (2004). [1] [9]
Beginning in 1956 she dubbed the voices of some of the most distinguished stars of international cinema, such as Shirley MacLaine, Liza Minnelli, Geraldine Chaplin, Ingrid Bergman, Jane Fonda, [1] Katharine Hepburn, and Jaclyn Smith in the first season of Charlie's Angels.
She worked in radio, as a voice actress and as a screenwriter, on Radio Intercontinental (1957–1958), [10] Radio Nacional de España, and Radio Madrid .
Finally, she developed a prolific career in television, especially in the 1960s and 70s, during the apogee of televised theater. She had roles on dozens of classic shows such as Estudio 1 and Novela . Her work on the small screen earned her the Ondas Award in 1963. [11]
María del Puy | |
---|---|
Born | María del Puy Alonso González 1941
Pamplona, Spain |
Died | (aged 78)
Madrid, Spain |
Occupation | Actress |
Awards | Ondas Award (1963) |
María del Puy Alonso González (1941 – 25 November 2015), known artistically as María del Puy, was a Spanish actress. [1] [2]
Titled in piano at the Madrid Royal Conservatory, María del Puy also pursued declamation studies at the Royal Superior School of Dramatic Art and at the Superior School of Cinema. [1] [3]
With some incursions into the cinema, her career was developed mainly in theater and television. On the big screen she worked under Edgar Neville in My Street (1960), [4] with Luis César Amadori in My Last Tango (1960), [5] and Fernando Fernán Gómez in Yo la vi primero (1974). [1]
On stage, she played dozens of characters, in productions such as Duck in Orange Sauce by William Douglas-Home (1972), Caimán by Antonio Buero Vallejo (1981), [6] Un hombre en la puerta (1984), An Enemy of the People by Henrik Ibsen (1985), La puerta del ángel by José López Rubio and directed by Cayetano Luca de Tena (1986), [7] Los tres etcéteras de Don Simón by José María Pemán (1997), [8] and The Children's Hour, in a version by Fernando Méndez-Leite (2004). [1] [9]
Beginning in 1956 she dubbed the voices of some of the most distinguished stars of international cinema, such as Shirley MacLaine, Liza Minnelli, Geraldine Chaplin, Ingrid Bergman, Jane Fonda, [1] Katharine Hepburn, and Jaclyn Smith in the first season of Charlie's Angels.
She worked in radio, as a voice actress and as a screenwriter, on Radio Intercontinental (1957–1958), [10] Radio Nacional de España, and Radio Madrid .
Finally, she developed a prolific career in television, especially in the 1960s and 70s, during the apogee of televised theater. She had roles on dozens of classic shows such as Estudio 1 and Novela . Her work on the small screen earned her the Ondas Award in 1963. [11]