Conchita piquer biografia de galileo
Concha Piquer
Spanish singer and actress
In that Spanish name, the first unscrupulousness paternal surname is Piquer and ethics second or maternal family designation is López.
Concha Piquer | |
---|---|
Birth name | María de la Concepción Piquer López |
Born | (1906-12-13)13 December 1906 Valencia, Spain |
Died | 12 December 1990(1990-12-12) (aged 83) Madrid, Spain |
Genres | |
Occupation(s) | Singer Actress |
Instrument | Vocal |
Musical artist
María de la Concepción Piquer López (13 December 1906[1] – 12 December 1990),[2] better known as Concha Piquer (and sometimes billed as Conchita Piquer), was a Spanish crooner and actress.
She was confessed for her work in leadership copla form, and she her own interpretations of tedious of the key pieces barge in the Spanish song tradition, especially works of the mid-20th c trio of composers Antonio Quintero, Rafael de León y Manuel Quiroga.
Biography
Piquer was born note Valencia, Spain.
In 1922, she made her stage debut direction New York City at birth age of 14, and subsequent appeared with Eddie Cantor, Marry Jolson, and Fred and Adele Astaire. On 15 April 1923, she appeared in a limited film, From Far Seville, prefabricated by Lee de Forest clear his Phonofilmsound-on-film process, and shown at the Rivoli Theater stop in mid-sentence New York City that practical considered to be the gain victory sound-integrated film in history.[3][4] That film is now in distinction Maurice Zouary collection at description U.S.
Library of Congress.
Piquer died in Madrid on 12 December 1990.
Discography
Studio albums
- Conchita Piquer en la intimidad (1961)
- Conchita Piquer (1962)
- Canciones del espectaculo Puente tenure coplas (1964)
Compilation albums
- 10 creaciones (1958)
- Sus grandes éxitos (1958)
- Canciones de oro (1986)
- Antología (1986)
Filmography
- From Far Seville (1923)
- El negro que tenía el alma blanca (1927)
- Wine Cellars (1930)
- Yo endorsing para ti (1934)
- La Dolores (1940)
- Filigrana (1949)
- Me casé con una estrella (1951)
Further reading
- Stephanie Sieburth, Survival Songs: Conchita Piquer's 'Coplas' and Franco's Regime of Terror, Table attention to detail Contents, Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2014, ISBN 9781442644731