Angélica María

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Angélica Maria
Born Angélica María Hartman Ortíz
September 27, 1944 (1944-09-27) (age 63)
New Orleans, Louisiana, United States
Spouse(s) Raul Vale 1975-? (deceased)

Angélica María (born Angélica Maria Hartman Ortíz September 27, 1944 in New Orleans, Louisiana) is an American-born Mexican actress, singer-songwriter.

She is the daughter of the American musician Arnold Federic Hartman and Angélica de Jesús Ortíz Sandoval, a theater producer. When she was 5 years old, Angélica's parents divorced and she moved with her mother to Mexico City.

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[edit] Early career

Her mother's sister, Yolanda Ortiz, introduced little Angélica to the Mexican Cinema when Gregorio Wallerstein, a movie producer, was looking for a boy for his next movie. Angélica told the producer, "Give me a haircut and I'm that boy" [1]. Charmed by the girl, he let her into his audition. She got the role in the movie Pecado ("Sin"). Soon afterwards, she worked on, Una Mujer Decente ("A Decent Woman"), La Hija de la Otra ("The Daughter of the Mistress"), Los Amantes ("The Lovers"), Fierecilla, Sígueme, Corazón ("Follow Me, Sweetheart"). She obtained the Ariel award for her role in Mi Esposa y la Otra ("My Wife and the Mistress") when she was 6. She also performed in her first fotonovela Rayito del Sol ("Little Sunray"). She sang in her two next movies, 2 Caras Tiene el Destino ("Destiny Has Two Faces") and Los Gavilanes with superstar Pedro Infante, who told her she would be a great actress, because she spoke with her eyes, as she did.

[edit] Teen idol

In 1955, Rita Macedo offered her a role in the play La mala semilla ("The bad seed"), which would be the first of a series of plays she was involved with while she filmed. When she was 16 she joined the telenovela industry with the production Cartas De Amor. Next year she acted in musicals as well as in lucha libre movies such as El Señor Tormenta and Muerte en el ring ("Death in the ring"). At that time she was beginning to be referred to as La novia de la juventud ("Youth's girlfriend" or Latin America's sweet heart) and after her first musical, a journalist, Octavio de Alba, named her La novia de México, ("Mexico's girlfriend" or Mexico's sweetheart) which is a title she would keep thereafter.

[edit] Singing career

After a few musicals, she asked for her mother's assistance (who was also her manager) and together with Armando Manzanero, then a new songwriter, she performed the song Eddie Eddie which would eventually become her greatest musical success. Manzanero took Angélica to see a producer, and in the same year she released her first album in the Musart record company. The album was a success, so she began touring and making movies with teen idols such as César Costa and Venezuelan actor/singer Enrique Guzmán who she would date later.

In 1965, she filmed Fray Torero in Spain and came back to Mexico to work in two movies, and to record her sixth album. Then, she acted in such successful films as 5 de chocolate y 1 de fresa ("Five of chocolate and one of strawberry" and obtained the starring role in the 1968 film version of Corazón salvaje a movie that made her famous in places as far as China. After joining RCA, she would later become one of the biggest stars in Latin America. In 1971, she acted in Ernesto Alonso's telenovela Muchacha italiana viene a casarse ("Italian girl comes here to get married") which opened the Spanish television market in the United States, and was a success in Central America and South America. In 1973 she met the aspiring singer Juan Gabriel who would become one of the biggest selling artists in the world. Together, they would record ballads performed by mariachi bands, thus creating the style "balada ranchera". The single Tú sigues siendo el mismo ("You are still the same") sold one million copies in the United States alone, and has since then been performed by dozens of other singers. She also filmed one of her biggest telenovelas Ana del aire ("Ana of the air", playing a flight attendant role) and recorded three more albums in 1974. In 1980, she recorded for the first time in a U. K. studio, making an album of ballads and a single record with two pop songs in English, in order to search some kind of crossover. During these years, she signed with Marsal Productions, then Caytronics, Melody, RCA again, and finally CBS, which was her last contract with a foreign record company. Since then, she established her own recording company in which she has produced 7 albums. In fact, her singing career spans through 2004, being her most recent album "Amor del Bueno", produced by Joan Sebastian, and launched by Ole Music/Universal.

[edit] Marriage

In 1975, she met Venezuelan singer/comedian Raúl Vale, and soon they got married. Their wedding was the first to be televised in Mexico. Soon after she became pregnant, and broke records in New York when her show was sold out twice the same day at the Madison Square Garden, a record that has never been broken three decades later.[1] The next year, 1976, her daughter, the international actress, comedienne, singer, and impersonator Angélica Vale, was born.

In 1977, she made the telenovela version of her film Corazón salvaje, released two albums, and performed in the play Papacito Piernas Largas ("Daddy Long-legs"), a play that would spun off an album, and broke the record of more than 1000 performances sold out in the next 3 years.

[edit] International tours

In 1980, she recorded her 28th album and created the show La historia del cine ("The history of cinema") in which she sang, danced, and performed various characters. She changed wardrobes 15 times without leaving the stage. That same year she recorded another album with Juan Gabriel and starred in El hogar que yo robé ("The home I stole") that would be remade in the 2000s as La usurpadora. Next year she took her show in a tour throughout the Americas. In 1982 she recorded another "balada ranchera" album and obtained a role in her first English-language film Matar a un extraño ("To kill a stranger") and presented a second show La magia de Angélica Maria ("The magic of Angélica María") in places from New York to Chile.

In 1986 she starred in Herencia Maldita ("Cursed inheritance") singing the theme-song and releasing an album called "El Hombre de Mi Vida". She later acted with her daughter in a production by Angélica Ortíz titled Una Estrella. In 1988 she divorced Vale and starred in a TV show titled Tres generaciones ("Three generations") with Carmen Montejo and Sasha Sokol. In 1990 she acted in the play Mamá ama el rock ("Mom loves rock") with her daughter and Ricky Martin. In 1994, she acted in Luis de Llano's Agujetas de color de rosa which would be such a great success that it was extended to 600 episodes.

In 2001, Reader's Digest released an album of her hits, and she acted in the movie ¿Qué me va a hacer?. In 2003 she got a role in Sea of dreams with Sonia Braga.

[edit] TV and films

[edit] TV shows

  • Premier Orfeon 1964
  • TV Musical ( several seasons)
  • Los Días Felices (several seasons)
  • Los Grandes Años del Rock And Roll(1975)
  • Exitos Bacardí (several seasons)
  • Arriba El Telón (1977)
  • Siempre En Domingo ( yearly seasons)
  • Angélica María En..... (1984, 1985)
  • La Hora Marcada (1986)
  • Tres generaciones (1989)

[edit] Telenovelas

  • La fea mas bella as Julieta Solis de Padilla (2006)
  • Amar otra vez as Balbina Eslava viuda de Castañeda (2003)
  • Tu historia de amor as Esperanza/Martha (2003)
  • Rosalinda as Soledad Martha Romero (1999)
  • La antorcha encendida as Doña Bernarda de Muñiz (1997)
  • Bendita mentira as Esperanza (1996)
  • Agujetas de color de rosa as Elisa viuda de Armendáres (1994)
  • Herencia maldita as Adela Beltrán (1986)
  • El hogar que yo robé as Diana Díaz/Andrea Velarde (1981)
  • Yara as Yara (1979)
  • Corazón salvaje as Mónica (1977)
  • El milagro de vivir (1975)
  • Ana del aire as Ana (1973)
  • Muchacha italiana viene a casarse (1971)
  • Puente de amor (1969)
  • Águeda (1968)
  • Leyendas de México (1968)
  • Más fuerte que tu amor (1966)
  • * Cartas de amor (1960)
  • La cobarde as Mara niña (1953)

[edit] Hollywood films

  • Sea of Dreams as Rina (2005)
  • To Kill a Stranger as Christina Carver (1985)

[edit] Mexican films

  • ¿Qué me va a hacer? (2002)
  • Una estrella (1988)
  • La guerra de los pasteles (1979)
  • Penthouse de la muerte (1979)
  • Yo amo, tu amas, nosotros... (1975)
  • Entre monjas anda el diablo as María (1973)
  • ¡Quiero vivir mi vida! as Lucía (1973)
  • El Premio Nobel del amor as Leonarda Tomasa Isaaca (1972)
  • Ya se quién eres (te he estado observando as Rosalba (1971)
  • La verdadera vocación de Magdalena as Magdalena, "Magui"/"Irene Durán" (1971)
  • Alguien nos quiere matar as Carlota (1970)
  • El cuerpazo del delito (1970)
  • Como perros y gatos (1969)
  • Somos novios (1969)
  • 5 de chocolate y 1 de fresa as Esperanza/Brenda/Domitila (1968)
  • Romeo contra Julieta (1968)
  • Corazón salvaje (1968)
  • Me quiero casar (1967)
  • Sólo para tí as Elena Montero (1966)
  • Fray Torero (1966)
  • Adorada enemiga as Patricia (1965)
  • Mi héroe as Mané (1965)
  • Perdóname mi vida as Dina (1965)
  • El gángster' (1965)
  • Los signos del zodiaco as Sofía (1964)
  • Napoleoncito as Rosita (1964)
  • La sombra de los hijos as Nora (1964)
  • Vivir de sueños as María (1964)
  • Mi alma por un amor as Marga (1964)
  • Tormenta en el ring as Rosita (1963)
  • El Señor Tormenta as Rosita (1963)
  • Mi vida es una canción as Marta (1963)
  • El cielo y la tierra as Marisa (1962)
  • Bajo el manto de la noche as Margot (1962)
  • Las hijas del Amapolo (1962)
  • Muchachas que trabajan as Tere (1961)
  • Aventuras de la pandilla as La Cachuquis (1959)
  • La pandilla en acción (1959)
  • La pandilla se divierte (1959)
  • Triunfa la pandilla (1959)
  • Música de siempre as Bailarina (1958)
  • El buen ladrón as Angélica (1957)
  • Los gavilanes as Florecita (1956)
  • Sublime melodía as Clarita (1956)
  • El secreto de una mujer (1955)
  • Sucedió en Acapulco as Niña empleada por chantajistas (1953)
  • Secretaria particular as Venus (1952)
  • Dos caras tiene el destino as Rosa María (1952)
  • Sígueme corazón as María Luisa (1952)
  • Mi esposa y la otra as Carmelita (1952)
  • Fierecilla as Rosita niña (1951)
  • La ausente as Rosita (1951)
  • Pecado as Miguelito (1951)
  • La hija de la otra as Lupita pequeña (1951)
  • Los amantes as Gloria (1951)
  • Una mujer decente as Hijito de Rosa (1950)

[edit] Facts

  • Angélica María is known as La Novia de México (Mexico sweetheart).
  • Although she was one of the main movie and TV attractions during 60s and 70s and the no. 1 record seller in the country during the same period, she is still one of the most respected and beloved performers in Mexico.

[edit] References

[edit] External links

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