December 08, 2009
Lupe Velez: When Shame, Abortion and Suicide Collide
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Lupe Velez, The Mexican Spitfire.
The lives of Hollywood stars are frequently tragic and messy tales of absent fathers, cruelly ambitious mothers, and madly dysfunctional families.
Mexican-American actress, Lupe Velez (July 18, 1908 – December 13, 1944) “The Mexican Spitfire,” was a beautiful, passionate, emotionally unstable woman best known for a series of 1930’s B movies in which she plays a delightfully scatter-brained character who speaks broken English mixed with streams of rapid fire Spanish.
Her first feature-length film was in the Douglas Fairbanks blockbuster, The Gaucho (1927), where she plays a high spirited Spanish dancing girl. Velez performed in a further eighteen films before settling into comedy—she had a Carole Lombard vibe, a flair for screwball situations, but her accent limited her appeal—most notably in the seven Mexican Spitfire series of films (1939-1943).
To read my entire article, please head on over to my home away from home Big Hollywood.
Posted by Robert J. Avrech at 08:11 AM | Comments (0)
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