Hugo Arana
Hugo Arana (23 July 1943 – 11 October 2020) was an Argentine film, television, and theatre actor.
Hugo Arana | |
---|---|
Born | Ricardo Hugo Arana July 23, 1943 |
Died | 11 October 2020 (aged 77) |
Occupation | Film actor |
Spouse(s) | Marzenka Nowak |
Life
Arana was born on 23 July 1943.[1] He grew up in Monte Grande where his parents were farmers[1] and moved with his family to Lomas de Zamora and then Lanús. He studied acting with Marcello Lavalle and Augusto Fernandes.
In his first years as an actor, he was part of a theatre group called "Errare Humanum Est" and he acted in films such as El Santo de la Espada (1970) and La tregua (1974).
In the 1980s, he became popular for his part in an advertisement for Crespi wine, and then for his part in the TV sitcom Matrimonios y algo más, created by Hugo Moser, in which he played two characters who were highly acclaimed by the public: the "Groncho" (in the comedy sketch "El Groncho y La Dama" (The Shabby Man and the Lady)) and Huguito Araña (a stereotypically feminine gay man).
He worked on the Telefé TV series Los exitosos Pells, where he played the director of the fictitious channel "Mega News", Franco Andrada.[2][3]
After suffering a hard fall, Arana was hospitalized and subsequently tested positive for COVID-19.[4] Arana died of the disease on October 11, 2020, at the age of 77.[1]
Filmography
Movies
Cine | |||
---|---|---|---|
Year | Title | Character | |
1970 | El santo de la espada | ||
1974 | Los golpes bajos | ||
1974 | La Vuelta de Martín Fierro | ||
1974 | La balada del regreso | ||
1974 | Dale nomás | ||
1974 | La Madre María | ||
1974 | La tregua | ||
1975 | Los días que me diste | ||
1977 | El soltero | ||
1979 | No apto para menores | ||
1979 | ...Y mañana serán hombres | Oliva | |
1979 | La isla | ||
1979 | Este loco amor loco | ||
1980 | Buenos Aires, la tercera fundación | Narrator | |
1982 | Volver | Ángel Ragucci | |
1985 | The Official Story | Enrique Ibáñez | |
1986 | Vivir a los 17 | Andrea's Father | |
1987 | Made in Argentina | ||
1987 | Chorros | Traverso | |
1988 | Las puertitas del Sr. López | ||
1991 | Un lugar en el mundo | Zamora | |
1992 | El lado oscuro del corazón | (Very minor role) | |
1995 | El verso | ||
1997 | El Che | ||
1997 | Noche de ronda | ||
1997 | Queréme así (piantao) | ||
1998 | El inquietante caso de José Blum | José Blum | |
1999 | Dibu 2, la venganza de Nasty | Lencinas | |
1999 | Caminata espacial | ||
2002 | Mi suegra es un zombie | ||
2003 | Tus ojos brillaban | Heriberto | |
2003 | El viaje hacia el mar | Rodríguez | |
2003 | Cautiva | Judge Barrenechea | |
2004 | Peligrosa obsesión | el Brujo | |
2008 | Chile puede | ||
2014 | Death in Buenos Aires | Sanfilippo | |
Television
Televisión | |||
---|---|---|---|
Year | Title | Character | |
1982–1988 | Matrimonios y algo más | ||
1997–2003 | 5 Amigos | ||
1999 | Buenos vecinos | ||
2003 | Resistiré | ||
2004 | La panadería de los Felipe | ||
2007 | Hechizada | ||
2007 | El Capo | ||
2008–2009 | Los Exitosos Pells | ||
2009 | Hogar Dulce Hogar (Uruguay) | ||
2010 | Para vestir santos | 2013 | |
2016 | La Leona | ||
Awards and nominations
Year | Award | Category | Movie/TV Show | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|
2003 | Festival de Cine Iberoamericano de Huelva | Best Actor | El viaje hacia el mar | Winner |
2005 | Cóndor de Plata | Best Supporting Actor | Cautiva | Winner |
2008 | Martín Fierro | Supporting Actor/Comedy | Nominated |
References
- Ceballos, Susana. "Murió por coronavirus el reconocido y talentoso actor Hugo Arana". infobae (in Spanish). Retrieved October 11, 2020.
- "Biography about Hugo Arana". Archived from the original on 2009-07-01. Retrieved 2010-08-02.
- Newspaper Clarín's note about Hugo Arana
- "Murió Hugo Arana: el actor tenía 77 años y había sido hospitalizado por coronavirus" (in Spanish). La Nacion. October 11, 2020. Archived from the original on October 11, 2020.
External links
- Hugo Arana at IMDb
- CineNacional.com (Filmography).
- GaceMail.com.ar (Interview).