Columba Domínguez

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Columba Domínguez
Mexican
Occupation(s)Actress, singer, painter
Years active1945–2014
PartnerEmilio Fernández (1947–1952)

Columba Domínguez Alarid (March 4, 1929 – August 13, 2014) was a Mexican actress, singer, and painter. She is remembered particularly for her performance in the film Pueblerina (1949).

Biography

Early life

Columba Domínguez Alarid was born on March 4, 1929, in

Río Escondido (1947).[citation needed
]

Career

In 1948, Fernandez gave her the antagonistic role in the film

Maclovia (1948), with María Félix. Her performance was praised by critics and, thanks to this film, Fernández entrusted with the leading role that would become her best film: Pueblerina (1948). Thanks to this movie Columba rose to stardom rapidly and became known worldwide to be presented at the Karlovy Vary International Film Festival. In that same year she participated in La Malquerida, with Dolores del Río and Pedro Armendáriz.[citation needed
]

Domínguez in L'edera (1950), photograph published by italian magazine Epoca

Following the success of Pueblerina, Columba was contracted in

L'Edera (1950).[1] That same year, she filmed Un día de vida (1952), which went unnoticed in Mexico, but became a huge success in the former Yugoslavia.[citation needed
]

Encased in native roles, Columba separates professionally from Fernandez in 1952, which allowed them to become one first figure and work under the orders of other filmmakers, such as

Berlin Film Festival. Columba also made the first official nude in the Mexican Cinema in the film La virtud desnuda. (1956).[citation needed
]

Domínguez with Emilio Fernández and Marilyn Monroe in 1962

In 1961, she recorded an LP record titled La voz dulce y mexicana de Columba Domínguez (The Sweet, Mexican Voice of Columba Domínguez) for the RCA Víctor label, with orchestral arrangements by Mario Ruiz Armengol and Chucho Ferrer.[2] The album has ten tracks and was reissued in digital format by Sony Music in 2012.[3]

On television, Domínguez performed in telenovelas like La tormenta (1967) and El carruaje (1972). Her last television appearance was in Aprendiendo a amar (1979).[citation needed]

After her retirement in 1987, Columba devoted herself to dance, humanistic art, painting and piano. In 2008, after more than 20 years of retirement from cinema, the Mexican director Roberto Fiesco returned her to the screen in the short film Paloma. That same year, Dominguez was honored by the International Film Festival de la Frontera, in

Ciudad Juarez, at which some of the most representative titles in which she performed were shown.[4] In 2010, Domínguez made special appearances in the films La cebra and Borrar la memoria,[5] and in 2012 she appeared in the film El último trago.[citation needed
]

In May 2013, Columba Domínguez was honored with the Golden Ariel Award for her contributions to the Mexican film industry.[citation needed]

Personal life

In 1945, Domínguez was discovered by the famous Mexican film director Emilio Fernandez, who launched her career in film. She and Fernandez began a friendly relationship, which soon led to romance, and Columba later claimed that this resulted in their secret marriage. The couple had a daughter, Jacaranda, born in 1952. Personal differences, and infidelities by Fernández, prompted Domínguez to leave him in 1952, taking their daughter with her.[citation needed]

A tragic event marred Domínguez' life when, in 1978, her daughter Jacaranda died after falling from the fourth floor of a building, in circumstances that were never clarified.[citation needed]

Domínguez and Fernández resumed their relationship several times. She was with him in his last days, despite their having been apart many years, and she did not leave the hospital room until his body was removed. In March 1987 she wrote a book titled Emilio, the Indian that I love which was dedicated to her great love.[citation needed]

Domínguez in 2013

After Fernández' death in 1986, a dispute over his will erupted, particularly concerning his stunning "fortress" home in the neighborhood of

Coyoacan, in the south of Mexico City. Emilio died intestate, and his only surviving daughter, the writer Adela Fernandez y Fernandez, was automatically named the sole heir to the exclusion of Domínguez, who claimed property rights. According to Domínguez, Adela was not a biological daughter of Emilio, and he had never legally adopted her.[6] These details, and the legal situation, were never clarified as Adela died in 2013.[citation needed
]

Her very Mexican beauty was portrayed in paintings by famous artists like Miguel Covarrubias, Jesús Guerrero Galván and Diego Rivera.

Death

Columba Domínguez died on August 13, 2014, in the Hospital Ángeles Santelena in Mexico City, as a result of a heart attack, after being hospitalized for several days[7] due to complications from pneumonia.[8] She was entombed at the Mausoleos del Ángel Graveyard, in Mexico City.[9]

Selected filmography

Features

Domínguez with Roldano Lupi in L'edera (1950)
Domínguez with Vittorio De Sica (dressed in white) in Bread, Love and Andalusia (1958)
  • La Perla
    (1947)
  • Río Escondido
    (1948)
  • Maclovia
    (1948)
  • Pueblerina (1949)
  • The Unloved Woman (1949)
  • L'edera (1950)
  • Un día de vida (1951)
  • La Bienamada (1952)
  • Reportaje (1953)
  • Women Who Work (1953)
  • Historia de un abrigo de mink (1953)
  • El río y la muerte
    (1957)
  • Esposas infieles (1956)
  • La Virtud Desnuda (1956)
  • Ladrón de Cadáveres
    (1957)
  • Cabaret Trágico (1958)
  • Pan, amor...y Andalucía (1959)
  • Los hermanos Del Hierro (1961)
  • Ánimas Trujano (1962)
  • Pueblito (1962)
  • El tejedor de milagros (1962)
  • Paloma herída (1963)
  • La Loba (1965)
  • Las Momias de Guanajuato (TV) (1966)
  • La tormenta (TV) (1967)
  • Mi niño Tizoc (1972)
  • Los Ricos Tambien Lloran
    (TV) (1979)
  • Aprendiendo a Amar (TV) (1979)
  • Una gallina muy ponedora (1982)
  • Paloma (2008)
  • La Cebra (2010)
  • Borrar la Memoria (2010)
  • El último trago (2012)
  • Ramona (2014)

Discography

With Kitty De Hoyas: Cabaret Trágico (
Juan Garcia Esquivel, orchestration, arrangement) (RCA Víctor
, 1958)
La voz dulce y mexicana de Columba Domínguez (RCA Víctor, 1961)[2]

Side one:

  1. "La pajarera"
  2. "Pregones de México"
  3. "Nunca"
  4. "Se me hizo fácil"
  5. "Dime si me quieres"

Side two:

  1. "Xochimilco"
  2. "Te amaré vida mía"
  3. "Nunca, nunca, nunca"
  4. "Paloma mensajera"
  5. "La barca de Guaymas"

References

  1. ^ "cartoline | amerblog". Amerblog.wordpress.com. 7 February 2010. Retrieved 2014-08-14.
  2. ^
    MercadoLibre
    . Retrieved 16 September 2016.
  3. ^ "Columba Dominguez en Apple Music". iTunes. Retrieved 16 September 2016.
  4. ^ La Jornada. "Columba Domínguez regresó a la pantalla grande en Ciudad Juárez - La Jornada". Jornada.unam.mx. Retrieved 2014-08-14.
  5. ^ "Espera Columba Domínguez estreno de Borrar de la memoria". Mx.globedia.com. Archived from the original on 2016-09-27. Retrieved 2014-08-14.
  6. YouTube
  7. ^ "Muere Columba Domínguez". www.reforma.com. Retrieved Aug 3, 2020.
  8. ^ "Columba Domínguez murió por neumonía". Excélsior. Aug 15, 2014. Retrieved Aug 3, 2020.
  9. ^ "Columba fue despedida sin la presencia de su gremio". www.elfinanciero.com.mx. 16 August 2014. Retrieved Aug 3, 2020.
  • Agrasánchez Jr., Rogelio (2001). Bellezas del cine mexicano/Beauties of Mexican Cinema. Archivo Fílmico Agrasánchez. .

External links