Oh Darling! Look What You've Done!
Appearance
Oh Darling! Look What You've Done to Me! | |
---|---|
Directed by | Gilberto Martínez Solares |
Written by | Gilberto Martínez Solares Juan García |
Produced by | Óscar J. Brooks Ernesto Enríquez Felipe Mier |
Starring | Germán Valdés Rebeca Iturbide Marcelo Chávez |
Cinematography | Ezequiel Carrasco |
Edited by | José W. Bustos |
Music by | Luis Hernández Bretón |
Production company | Mier y Brooks |
Release date |
|
Running time | 85 minutes |
Country | Mexico |
Language | Spanish |
Oh Darling! Look What You've Done To Me! (Spanish: ¡Ay, amor, cómo me has puesto!) is a 1951 Mexican romantic comedy film directed by Gilberto Martínez Solares and starring Germán Valdés, Rebeca Iturbide and Marcelo Chávez.[1] It was shot at the Tepeyac Studios in Mexico City. The film's sets were designed by the art director José Rodríguez Granada.
Synopsis
[edit]A bakery delivery man falls in love with a middle-class woman after helping her following an accident, but her family object to him.
Cast
[edit]- Germán Valdés as Tin Tan
- Rebeca Iturbide as Margarita
- Marcelo Chávez as Patrón de la Panaderia
- Famie Kaufman as Vitola
- Jorge Reyes as Doctor Esteban
- Mimí Derba as Doña Beatriz, mamá de Margarita
- Arturo Soto Rangel as don Manuel, padre de Margarita
- Pascual García Peña as Ranilla
- Lucrecia Muñoz as Lupita
- José René Ruiz as Pepito
- Club de Foot-Ball Marte
- Armando Arriola as Enfermero
- Stephen Berne as man in the cantina
- Enrique Carrillo as Policía
- Fernando Curiel as Doctor
- Magdalena Estrada as Esposa del patrón
- Leonor Gómez as Doña Rupertota
- Ismael Larumbe as Héctor Ramírez, novio de Margarita
- Elvira Lodi as Tía de margarita
- Chel López as Doctor
- Gloria Mestre as Martita
- Kika Meyer as Vecina
- José Ortega as Doctor
- Ángela Rodríguez as Vecina
- Manuel Sánchez Navarro as Tío Roberto
- Ramón Sánchez as Panadero
- Manuel 'Loco' Valdés as Hombre en cantina
- Ramón Valdés as Panadero
- Hernán Vera as Hombre encarcelado
- Acela Vidaurri as Amiga de Lupita
References
[edit]- ^ Monsiváis & Kraniauskas p.116
Bibliography
[edit]- Carlos Monsiváis & John Kraniauskas. Mexican Postcards. Verso, 1997.
External links
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