| Cinnamon Skin | |
|---|---|
![]()  | |
| Directed by | Juan José Ortega | 
| Written by | 
  | 
| Produced by | Ramón Peón  Juan José Ortega  | 
| Starring | |
| Cinematography | Manuel Gómez Urquiza | 
| Edited by | José W. Bustos | 
| Music by | Gonzalo Curiel | 
Production company  | Compañía Cinematográfica Mexicana  | 
Release date  | 6 August 1953 | 
Running time  | 82 minutes | 
| Country | Mexico | 
| Language | Spanish | 
Cinnamon Skin (Spanish: Piel canela) is a 1953 Mexican drama film directed by Juan José Ortega and starring Sara Montiel, Manolo Fábregas and Ramón Gay.[1] It was set and partly filmed in Cuba.
In Havana, gangster moll and singer Marucha, who has had a disfigured face since childhood, is helped by a plastic surgeon who falls madly in love with her. The doctor hopes to reform her and turn her into a good woman by transforming her face through surgeries. However Marucha, with her new beautiful face, has other plans and becomes a night club entertainer and a highly paid prostitute.[2]
Cast
- Sara Montiel as Marucha
 - Manolo Fábregas as Dr. Carlos Alonso
 - Ramón Gay as Julio Chávez
 - Felipe de Alba as Dr. Jorge Morales
 - Rosa Elena Durgel as Alicia Álvarez, enfermera
 - Fernando Casanova as Paco
 - Magda Donato as Paciente loca de Alonso
 - Salvador Quiroz as Don Ernesto
 - Ismael Larumbe as Antonio Salas Porras
 - Jorge Casanova
 - Arturo Corona as Amigo de Antonio
 - Manuel de la Vega as Amigo de Antonio
 - Pedro Vargas as Cantante
 - Rosita Fornés as Cantante
 - Julio Gutiérrez
 - Olga Chaviano as Bailarina
 - Victorio Blanco as Empleado casino
 - Josefina Burgos as Mujer en casino
 - Rogelio Fernández as Esbirro de Julio
 - Ana Bertha Lepe as Empleada carpa
 - Chel López as Detective
 - José Muñoz as Cantinero
 - Rafael A. Ortega
 - Ignacio Peón as Hombre en casino
 - Alicia Reyna as Mesera
 - Joaquín Roche as Espectador gritón carpa
 
References
- ↑ Agrasanchez p.55
 - ↑ Piel canela (1953) - Plot - IMDb, retrieved 2024-01-04
 
Bibliography
- Rogelio Agrasánchez. Cine Mexicano: Posters from the Golden Age, 1936-1956. Chronicle Books, 2001.
 
External links
    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.
.jpg.webp)