profile

    Mercedes Pascual

    1930-09-25 (94 years old) in Madrid, Spain

    She moved to Mexico at the age of nine, when her family had to leave Spain as a result of the Spanish Civil War, where she began attending ballet classes, participating in the Ballet Moderno de Bellas Artes and the Ballet de Opera de Bellas Artes. She later studied acting with maestro Seki Sano and at the Andrés Soler Theater Academy. Her debut as an actress was in the play La soga in 1952. The following year she became a Mexican citizen. She was the driving force and founder of the National Theater Company, and joined the stable cast when it was restructured in 2008; in 2012, she was distinguished as a Number One actress. She had an extensive career as an actress, participating in films such as Persíguelas y alcánzalas, El retrato de Anabella, Jóvenes delincuentes, Ángel de fuego, Novia que te vea (for which she was nominated for an Ariel) and Cilantro y perejil, among many others. In television she has participated in several telenovelas, including Mi esposa se divorcia, Maximiliano y Carlota, El manantial del milagro, Viviana, Cuna de lobos, Teresa, Muchachitas, Retrato de familia and El candidato. She also acted in plays such as Miércoles de ceniza, Las criadas and El vestidor. Mercedes married diplomat Víctor Flores Olea with whom she had her only daughter, actress Mercedes Olea. She was previously married to actor Claudio Brook, with whom she had her daughter Claudia Brook. Her last participation was in the TV Azteca soap opera Emperatriz, where she played Doña Leonor Bustamante. At the age of nine she began attending ballet classes, "I started in the art because I saw some great ballet artists on a ship going from Finland to I don't know where. I saw them doing their warm-up and they fascinated me, I put myself in a little corner to do the same steps they did and they told me: come here to the bar and do it with us. At the age of 12. Mercedes Pascual entered dance classes with a Russian teacher Zakharov, later with Nina Shestakova and Sergio Unger. The actress did not give up professional dance until she was 25 years old and even then, she continued taking dance classes because she was certain that "many things could be translated from dance to theater". She received a scholarship from the French government to study drama in Paris, France, from 1960 to 1961 with Tania Balachova and mime with Jacques Lecoq. He was a founding member of the Université du Théâtre des Nations created in Paris in 1960. After her studies in France, she was called by Benito Coquet, Ignacio Retes and José Solé to join the Social Security Company from 1960 to 1964, The actress received a scholarship from the Instituto Nacional de Bellas Artes for a postgraduate course in drama in London, England, at the Royal Central School of Speech and Drama with Peter Hall and Liziz Picks in 1970. This scholarship was possible thanks to the support of Héctor Azar and the architect Luis Ortiz Macedo, director of INBA at the time.

    Movies

    poster
    Tamara and the Ladybug
    56 %|Nov 18, 2016
    Drama
    poster
    A Good Death Beats a Dull Life
    54 %|Apr 7, 2006
    Comedy, Drama, Thriller
    poster
    La paloma de Marsella
    50 %|Mar 5, 1999
    poster
    Recipes to Stay Together
    56 %|Dec 31, 1996
    Comedy, Romance
    poster
    Like a Bride
    48 %|Jun 3, 1994
    Drama, Romance, Comedy
    poster
    Matrimonio y mortaja
    0 %|Jan 1, 1992
    Drama, Crime
    poster
    Jóvenes delincuentes
    50 %|Apr 18, 1991
    Drama, Crime
    poster
    Angel of Fire
    59 %|Jan 2, 1991
    Drama
    actor
    A la misma hora
    50 %|Jan 1, 1988
    actor
    Vieja moralidad
    50 %|Jan 1, 1988
    Drama, History
    poster
    Una adorable familia
    50 %|Jan 1, 1987
    poster
    I Love You Catalina
    50 %|Jan 1, 1986
    actor
    Los años verdes
    50 %|Jan 1, 1967
    poster
    Las Troyanas
    60 %|Jul 1, 1963
    poster
    The Skeleton of Mrs. Morales
    79.4 %|May 26, 1960
    Comedy, Crime, Horror
    poster
    El valor de vivir
    50 %|Feb 2, 1954

    Series

    poster
    The Marked Hour
    78 %|Invalid Date
    Mystery, Sci-Fi & Fantasy
    poster
    Emperatriz
    82 %|Apr 5, 2011
    Drama, Comedy, Crime