Silvia Legrand

For other uses, see Legrand (surname).
Silvia Legrand

Silvia Legrand in 1959
Born María Aurelia Paula Martínez Suárez
23 February 1927 (age 89)
Villa Cañás, Santa Fe, Argentina
Years active 1940 - 1972
Spouse(s) Eduardo Lópina (1944-2005)
Children 2

María Aurelia Paula Martínez Suárez, known professionally as Silvia Legrand (born 23 February 1927), is a retired Argentinian film actress.

She is the twin sister of actress Mirtha Legrand, with whom she debuted and co-starred in a number of films and sister of director José A. Martínez Suárez.[1] She starred in some 20 films between 1940 and 1972.

Biography

Legrand sisters in the early 1940s

Legrand was born in Villa Cañás, a town in the province of Santa Fe located some 200 km from Rosario. Her parents were both Spanish immigrants, her father the owner of a bookstore and her mother a schoolteacher. In 1934 her parents separated. Her mother relocated to Rosario to ensure a better education for her three children, while her father remained in Villa Cañás.

In Rosario, with her twin sister Mirtha Legrand she took basic courses at the Municipal Theater. After the death of their father in 1936, the family relocated permanently to Buenos Aires, to the barrio of La Paternal. There they lived in poverty, mitigated by sporadic employment, until in 1939 the sisters were offered small roles in a film starring Niní Marshall which would be released in 1940 under the title Hay que educar a Niní.

Silvia Legrand on "El juego del amor y del azar", 1944

The Legrand sisters' next film together was Novios para las muchachas in 1941. Mirtha's first leading role came later that year in Los martes, orquídeas. The same year her mother would be contacted by a well-known film industry figure, Ricardo Cerebello, who offered to represent the sisters. It was Cerebello who devised the stage names Mirtha and Silvia Legrand.

During the same period, Mirtha and Silvia hosted El club de la amistad for Radio Splendid.

In 1960 she appeared in the Antonio Cunill Jr. film Los Acusados.

Her last film was Juan Manuel de Rosas in 1972 before she moved into television.

Selected filmography

Footnotes

  1. Silvia Legrand profile, imdb.com; accessed 19 November 2015.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 6/5/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.