Isabel del Puerto
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Isabel del Puerto | |
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Born | Elisabeth von Hortenau August 7, 1921 |
Died | March 13, 2014 | (aged 92)
Nationality | Mexican, American |
Occupation(s) | Model, actress, dancer, writer, photo-journalist, realtor and entrepreneur |
Years active | 1925–1989 |
Spouses |
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Children |
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Parents |
Isabel del Puerto (born Elisabeth von Hortenau;[1] August 7, 1921 in Vienna, Austria – March 13, 2014) was an Austrian-born noblewoman Mexican-American model, actress, dancer, writer, photojournalist, realtor and entrepreneur, and is the daughter of Charlotte Helene Beer[2] and Alfred Joseph von Hortenau,[3] a cavalry officer in the Austro-Hungarian Army and illegitimate son of the Archduke Otto Francis of Austria. Her parents divorced when she was two years old.
Early career
At four she made her stage debut under the guidance of Isadora Duncan and her grandmother Maria Schleinzer[4] who was a vedette at the Vienna Court Opera. She attended the Centro Sperimentale di Cinematografia in Rome, Italy, with Alida Valli and other stars of the 1930s.
Movie star
After a short career on Broadway, she went to Mexico, where she modeled for a department store and appeared in 17 films, becoming a star of the Golden Age of Mexican cinema of the 1940s and 1950s.
Photo journalist
After retiring from films, she worked for Time Life magazines and in advertising and public relations in New York.
Chef
She owned and cooked for five gourmet restaurants, among them El Cuchitril, a famous bistro in the Zona Rosa Mexico City.
Writer
She was working on her fifth book (a novel set in the early 1900s). One of her oeuvres is a semi-fictitious biography called My Way, two are detective stories: "The Key" and "The Portrait" and one is a book for children, Sonia, which she hoped to have illustrated and published.
Entrepreneur
She had a real estate license, selling properties in Mexico and the United States.
Later life and death
In her last years, Isabel resided in San Antonio, Texas, with her three dogs that had been picked up as strays. She actively supported the Democratic Party and headed a charity that was trying to help homeless people and their pets.
On 13 March 2014, she died of an embolism at 6:30 p.m. after a brief hospitalization, surrounded by her son Joe, and daughter Kat.[5]
Filmography
Del Puerto has taken part in the following films:
- Nunca besaré tu boca (I Will Never Kiss Your Lips), Mexico, 1947.
- Mi madre adorada (My Mother Adored), Mexico, 1948.
- A Family Like Many Others, as Estela Cataño, Mexico, 1949.[6]
- Midnight, as Lidia, Mexico, 1949.
- Hay lugar para... dos (There's a Place for... Two), as Elsa de Olivares, Mexico, 1949.[7]
- Angels of the Arrabal, Mexico, 1949.[8]
- Confessions of a Taxi Driver, as Elizabeth de Legazpi, Mexico, 1949.[9]
- Ventarrón (Gale), as Mirna, Mexico, 1949.
- The Devil is a Woman as Clara, Mexico, 1950.[10]
- Mariachis, Mexico, 1950.[11]
- Matrimonio y mortaja (Marriage and Shroud), as Rosario, Mexico, 1950.[12]
- Rosauro Castro, as Esperanza, Mexico, 1950.[13]
- Entre abogados te veas (Among Lawyers I See You), as La amante, Mexico, 1951.
- El gendarme de la esquina (Policeman on the Corner), as Carolina Santillán, Mexico, 1951.[14]
- Captain Scarlett, as Josephine Prenez, USA, 1953.[15]
- Honey, I Shrunk the Kids, USA, 1989.
- Old Gringo, USA, 1989.
Bibliography
- García Riera. Emilio, Breve historia del cine mexicano: primer siglo 1897-1987. México. Publisher: Conaculta, Imcine, Universidad de Guadalajara. Zapopan, Jalisco, Mexico. 1998. 466 pages.
- García Riera, Emilio, Historia Documental del Cine Mexicano. Época Sonora. 18 tomos. Publisher ERA. Mexico. 1971.
- Ayala Blanco. Jorge, La aventura del cine mexicano: en la época de oro y después. Mexico. Publisher: ERA. 1979. 422 pages.
References
- ^ "Elisabeth von Hortenau b. 7 August 1921 - Rodovid EN". en.rodovid.org. Retrieved July 12, 2020.
- ^ "Charlotte b. 1893 d. 1966 - Rodovid EN". en.rodovid.org. Retrieved July 12, 2020.
- ^ "Alfred Joseph von Hortenau b. 10 November 1892 d. 1956 - Rodovid EN". en.rodovid.org. Retrieved July 12, 2020.
- ^ "Marie Schleinzer b. 25 March 1874 d. 1 June 1949 - Rodovid EN". en.rodovid.org. Retrieved July 12, 2020.
- ^ "13 de Marzo, Aniversario luctuoso de la actríz Isabel del Puerto". KhronosDigital.com (in Spanish). March 13, 2019. Archived from the original on November 29, 2020. Retrieved April 29, 2019.
- ^ García Riera, Emilio, Historia Documental del Cine Mexicano. Época Sonora. Tomo III 1945-1948, pages 309–314
- ^ García Riera, Emilio, Historia Documental del Cine Mexicano. Época Sonora. Tomo III 1945-1948, pages 335–336
- ^ García Riera, Emilio, Historia Documental del Cine Mexicano. Época Sonora. Tomo IV 1949-1951, pages 52-53
- ^ García Riera, Emilio, Historia Documental del Cine Mexicano. Época Sonora. Tomo IV 1949-1951, pages 49–51
- ^ García Riera, Emilio, Historia Documental del Cine Mexicano. Época Sonora. Tomo IV 1949-1951, pages 101, 102
- ^ García Riera, Emilio, Historia Documental del Cine Mexicano. Época Sonora. Tomo IV 1949-1951, page 29
- ^ García Riera, Emilio, Historia Documental del Cine Mexicano. Época Sonora. Tomo IV 1949-1951, page 115, 116
- ^ García Riera, Emilio, Historia Documental del Cine Mexicano. Época Sonora. Tomo IV 1949-1951, pages 176–178
- ^ García Riera, Emilio, Historia Documental del Cine Mexicano. Época Sonora. Tomo IV 1949-1951, pages 290, 291
- ^ García Riera, Emilio, Historia Documental del Cine Mexicano. Época Sonora. Tomo V 1952-1954, page 233, De Hollywood a México.
External links
- Media related to Isabel del Puerto at Wikimedia Commons
- Isabel del Puerto at IMDb
- 1921 births
- 2014 deaths
- 20th-century Mexican actresses
- Actresses from Vienna
- Deaths from embolism
- Golden Age of Mexican cinema
- Mexican film actresses
- Austrian emigrants to Mexico
- Mexican restaurateurs
- 20th-century Mexican women writers
- Austrian expatriates in Italy
- Austrian expatriate actresses in the United States
- Mexican expatriate actresses in the United States