Alfredo Ripstein
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Alfredo Ripstein (December 10, 1916, Parral, Chihuahua, Mexico — January 20, 2007, Mexico City) was a Mexican film producer. He is credited with helping shape Mexico's film industry in the period surrounding World War II.
Ripstein also helped start the careers of contemporary Mexican actors such as Gael Garcia Bernal and Salma Hayek.
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[edit] Early life
Ripstein's father was a Polish merchant in Parral. Members of Pancho Villa's army were the main customers of his parents' store. Ripstein's mother asked Villa for permission to close the store in order to give birth to Alfredo. Villa stopped by the store a few days later to see the newborn. "So the first man that ever carried my father was Pancho Villa," Ripstein's son Arturo told Los Angeles Times reporter Reed Johnson.
Ripstein's family moved to Mexico City when he was 5 years old. Ripstein first worked as an accountant and then was hired by Simon Wishnack's Filmex company as a production manager and executive producer.
[edit] Career
Ripstein opened his own company, Alameda Films, in 1950. His final feature film was El Crimen del Padre Amaro in 2001. It was produced with his grandon, Daniel Birman.
Ripstein had collaborated with his son Arturo on several films, including the 1999 adaptation of Gabriel Garcia Marquez's novel No One Writes to the Colonel and The Beginning and The End, adapted from the novel by Egyptian author Naguib Mahfouz.
He produced more than 100 films
[edit] Death
Ripstein died of respiratory failure at his home in the Polanco district of Mexico City. He was survived by his wife and son, two daughters, seven grandhildren and six great-grandchildren at the time of his death.