Evita Muñoz

Evita Muñoz "Chachita"
Born Eva María Muñoz Ruíz
(1936-11-26) November 26, 1936
Orizaba, Veracruz, Mexico
Occupation Actress, Comedian
Website http://m3talent.net/talent_roster/chachita

Eva María de J. Muñoz Ruíz (born November 26, 1936) is a Mexican actress, comedian, singer and dancer. Her professional career began at the age of four: An extremely gifted young child who began performing during the golden age of Mexican cinema. She was catapulted towards stardom in her fourth film, at age 6. During more than 75 continuous years, 'Chachita' has been recognized as a successful artist in cinema, TV, theatre, radio, nightclub and circus shows.

Beginnings

She was the only daughter of singer / actor Francisco 'Paco' Muñoz and Ernestina Ruíz (née Sanchez). She enjoyed being taken to performances of theatre, circus and zarzuela traveling companies that visited her Hometown; Orizaba, Veracruz, Mexico.

Stardom

At a little under four years old, she shot her first motion picture, starting a career of starring roles as a child talent; beginning with a minor role in El secreto del sacerdote in 1941. After her second movie, ¡Ay Jalisco, no te rajes! (1941), she received the nickname "Chachita" (short for "muchachita", the diminutive of "muchacha"= 'young girl'). Evita Muñoz "Chachita" has been able to become a popular icon and has managed to remain present in her audiences´ minds during a lifelong career as a child, teenager, young adult, adult and senior actress: A transition next-to-impossible for most of young performers whom got an early start in Showbiz.

Around 1944, her popularity in the movies led to her starting a radio career in the radio show La legión de madrugadores on the XEQ radio station. In 1947, she signed a contract with CBS in New York to star in the radio serial: Aventuras de una niña, which was broadcast in all Central and South America, and produced by Carlos Montalbán. During the mid-fifties, Chachita played all the female roles in Panzón Panseco's radio sketches, along with Pedro Vargas, and Juan García Esquivel's orquesta (1957): "Ahora es la hora". And in the late fifties, she starred in the show El Risámetro.

During her adolescence, she was constantly involved in showbiz, through her familiar and professional ties with performers such as: Sergio Corona, and Alfonso Arau.

To promote her movie La Hija del Payaso (1946), in which she performed along with trained elephants and dogs. She learned to play the marimba and the xylophone. She made personal appearances with the Atayde Circus when she was only eight years old.

During her teenage years, she costarred with Pedro Infante in the trilogy: Nosotros los pobres (1948), Ustedes los ricos (1948) and Pepe el Toro (1952), which jumpstarted a new cycle for Mexican cinema.

Her privileged voice allows her to sing not only as herself; she does impersonations of female singers from the era like: Celia Cruz, Olga Guillot and Mona Bell.

She was invited by Pérez Prado as a mambo dancer for a tour all over the Philippine islands and Japan where she became a sensation. During that tour they also performed in USO shows during the Korean War for the Hispanic-American troops of soldiers (and once for the American staff as well), where she received raving ovations for her impresion of Marilyn Monroe.

A Pioneer of Mexican television: in soap operas such as Gutierritos with Rafael Banquels, in comedy shows with Roberto Gómez Bolaños Chespirito, and variety shows, such as: En el Estudio with Pédro Vargas and later on in Siempre en Domingo with Raúl Velasco, both as entertainer and guest-hostess. She quickly became a favorite of the Mexican audience.

In the seventies she played the role of 'Sister Carmela', a novice nun in the convent where ‘Cristina’ (Graciela Mauri) went to elementary school in the Mexican versión of the soap opera Mundo de Juguete. In 1975, she starred in the varieties show Un hombre y una mujer with Fernando Allende. She appeared as a guest star in TV series such as: Columbo and I Spy.

Theatrically, she has performed during lengthy seasons of: dramas, comedies and musicals, receiving different awards and recognitions, both in Mexico and abroad.

During the eighties, she played the role of the witch Hermelinda Linda in a couple of films. In television, she starred along with Jorge Ortiz de Pinedo and Macaria in the sitcom Dos mujeres en mi casa, and in 1986, she co-starred along Freddy Fernández "El Pichi" in the TV sitcom Nosotros los Gómez.

In the nineties, she continued working in a series of soap operas for Televisa up to nowadays, besides making films like De lengua me como un plato with Alberto Rojas "El Caballo" and Maribel Fernández "La Pelangocha" and she played a nun from northern Mexico in Cambiando el destino with the band Magneto.

In the new millennium, she has starred in several episodes of Mujer: Casos de la vida real produced and presented by Silvia Pinal and she has lent her voice to CGI animated characters such as 'Cocó' the lamp in Serafín: La Película and 'Dr. Lucille Krunklehorn' in the Latin American Spanish version of Disney´s Meet the Robinsons.

In the U.S. she has appeared in Hispanic-oriented ad campaigns for Black Flag´s Roach Motel and S. C. Johnson & Son´s Ziploc bags.

2010s

In 2010 she played a role in Televisa's soap opera Cuidado con el ángel that was broadcast all around the globe and she wrapped-up the 2011 season of Sesame Street - Mexico. In 2016, "Chachita" is celebrating 75 years of an uninterrupted artistic career.

For her countless contributions to the: Television, Theater and Motion Picture industries: "Chachita"'s handprints have been embedded onto the Paseo de las Luminarias in Mexico City.

'Chachita' is currently writing her Memoirs.

Filmography

Cinema

Television

Soap operas

Situation comedies

Video theatre

Theatre

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, January 26, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.