Rosita Díaz Gimeno

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Rosita Diaz Gimeno (September 13, 1908 - August 23, 1986) was a Spanish stage and film actress from Madrid. She was 5' tall, with reddish hair, and brown eyes. She weighed ninety-eight pounds.

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[edit] Stage actress

Diaz Gimeno was educated at the Convent of the Sacred Heart in Madrid. She trained in theater at the conservatory of the Teatro Real. She appeared in thirty-five plays in Spain, beginning her career accompanied by G. Martinez Sierra, a Spanish playwright. Gimena achieved fame as a stage actress in Spain and France.

[edit] American films

Acquired by the Fox Film Company, Diaz Gimeno came to Hollywood in October 1934. She signed her contract in Paris, France. She made Rosa de Francia in 1935. The movie set a record in film by requiring Diaz Gimeno to sit in a tub filled with soap suds for nine hours, while shots were made. The same year she filmed Angelina o el honor de un brigadier. This production was immensely popular with audiences in Harlem, New York.

[edit] Government informant

Diaz Gimeno was reported to have been executed as a spy by Spanish Insurgents in January 1937. She had been arrested at Córdoba, during the Spanish Civil War, in August 1936. She was released. Later she went to Seville, the southern headquarters of the insurgents. There she mixed in military circles. Gimena was found to have been affiliated with a secret broadcast station which supplied the Spanish government with information regarding insurgent military plans.

Film actress Rosita Moreno received a cablegram on February 27, 1937. In answer to one she had sent to Segovia, the reply read: I am well. Fondest greetings. It was signed Rosita. Spanish police also denied that Gimena had been shot or arrested. However they professed ignorance as to her whereabouts.

[edit] Late career

In 1948 Diaz Gimeno was forced to pay taxes to five governments-Morocco, Spain, France, the United States, and Mexico.

Norman Foster directed Diaz Gimeno in El Canto de la sirena (1948). The film was made in Mexico and is her last screen credit. At the time she was called Rosita Diaz Negrin. She was the wife of Dr. Juan Negrin Jr., son of the former premier of Loyalist Spain. Negrin was a New York brain surgeon. The couple became American citizens in 1953.

Diaz Gimeno starred in a Spanish production of The Teahouse of the August Moon in Mexico City, Mexico, in 1955. It was produced by Jean Dalrymple and Rita Allen of New York. Gimena played the part of Sakini, the cunning interpreter from Okinawa.

Rosita Diaz Gimena died in 1986 in New York.

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