Nélida Dodó López Valverde known professionally as Nelly Beltrán (29 August 1925 – 2 December 2007) was an Argentine actress. She appeared on the radio from the age of 10 and in 85 theatrical performances, 48 films and 3 dozen television shows between 1953 and 1996. She won a Martín Fierro Award as Best Comic Actress for her television work on La hermana San Sulpicio; participated in the film Pajarito Gómez which won the Best Youth Film award at the 15th Berlin International Film Festival; won a Konex Foundation Award; and was honored by the Argentina Actors Association in 2004 for her career contributions.
Biography
Nélida Dodó López Valverde was born on 29 August 1925 in Buenos Aires, Argentina.[1] From a young age she took painting and acting classes. Her career began in radio because her father was a friend of Cortez Conde, who wrote the program Ronda policial for Radio Porteña. The show was looking for new talent and asked her to test for a part. She was ten years old, read a script and was hired, along with Nelly Prince and Guido Gorgatti.[1] She made numerous radio broadcasts, but the most important were La craneoteca de los genios[2] (1952)[3] and La revista dislocada[2] (1954).[4]
Theater and television
In 1952, the actress Beatriz Taibo suggested to Beltrán that she go to a tryout for the play Las lágrimas también se secan.[1] She won a part and had her debut on the stage in the piece, which starred Irma Cordova.[2] In 1953, joining the cast of Señorita maestra, she met Maurice Jouvet, an actor born in France, and within two weeks they were married.[1] She played many theatrical seasons of comedies in Mar del Plata and Villa Carlos Paz. Some of her finest performances were in Dos imbéciles felices, which ran for two seasons 1971 and 1972; El enfermo imaginario (1981), which played in Teatro Cervantes,[5] and Boeing-Boeing, which ran for four seasons[2] and whose cast included Ernesto Bianco, Paulette Christian, Ambar La Fox, Osvaldo Miranda, and Beatriz Taibo.[6]
Beltrán earned her only starring role in La Gorda (1966), along with Rodolfo Zapata.[2] The movie was based on a song composed by Zapata which was in the style of Argentine folk dances and earned such acclaim that it became a musical, aired on the radio, was taken to television, and ultimately became the idea behind the movie.[14] In 1967 she was directed by Julio Saraceni in Villa Cariño with Roberto Airaldi and Juan Carlos Altavista[15] and the following year released Villa Cariño está que arde, directed by Emilio Vieyra with Altavista again and Ricardo Bauleo.[16]
Beltrán died on 2 December 2007 in Buenos Aires following complications from diabetes, and was buried on 3 December in the Pantheon of Actors La Chacarita Cemetery.[20]
Private life
Beltrán first married Juan Lejcovich, by whom she had two children, who were taken by relatives to the United States in the 1940s.[8]
^ ab"Premios Martín Fierro" (in Spanish). Argentina: ISA Produccion. 2 May 2010. Archived from the original on 14 June 2015. Retrieved 14 June 2015.
^ abGarritano, Rafael (24 June 2011). "Nelly Beltrán 1925–2007". Asociacion Argentina de Actores (in Spanish). Buenos Aires, Argentina. Archived from the original on 18 June 2015. Retrieved 18 June 2015.
^"El televisor (1962)". Cine Nacional (in Spanish). Buenos Aires, Argentina. Retrieved 18 June 2015.
^Marina, Ceppi; Descamps, Fernanda; Falcón, Rita; Mora, Denise (2008). "Pajarito Gómez (Rodolfo Kuhn, 1965)"(PDF). Historia del Cine Latinoamericano y Argentino (in Spanish). Buenos Aires, Argentina: Universidad de Buenos Aires: 2. Retrieved 18 June 2015.
^Lamarque, Libertad (1986). Libertad Lamarque (in Spanish). Buenos Aires, Argentina: J. Vergara Editor. p. 358. ISBN978-950-15-0599-3. Retrieved 19 June 2015.