The Last Torch Song
The Last Torch Song | |
---|---|
Spanish | El último cuplé |
Directed by | Juan de Orduña |
Written by |
|
Produced by | Juan de Orduña |
Starring | |
Cinematography | José F. Aguayo |
Edited by | Antonio Cánovas |
Music by | Juan Solano |
Color process | Eastmancolor |
Production company | Producciones Orduña Films |
Distributed by | Cifesa |
Release date |
|
Running time | 110 minutes |
Country | Spain |
Language | Spanish |
The Last Torch Song, better known under its Spanish title El último cuplé, is a 1957 Spanish jukebox musical film directed by Juan de Orduña and starring Sara Montiel, Armando Calvo and Enrique Vera.[1]
It was released in Spain on 6 May 1957. It was immensely popular domestically and it had a wide international release making it the worldwide highest-grossing Spanish-language film made up to that point. The film's soundtrack album had also a wide international release.
Cast
[edit]- Sara Montiel as Maria Luján
- Armando Calvo as Juan Contreras
- Enrique Vera as Pepe Molina
- Julia Martínez as Trini
- Matilde Muñoz Sampedro as Paca
- Alfredo Mayo as Gran Duque Vladimir de Rusia
- José Moreno as Cándido Chamorro
- Laly del Amo as Luisa
- Aurora García Alonso
- Beni Moreno as Chole
- Luis Orduña
- Erasmo Pascual as Don Praxeres
- Consuelo de Nieva as Gloria Palacios
- Miguel Fleta
- Manolita Guerrero
- Antonio Alcázar
- Rafaela Aparicio as Singer
- Emilio Alonso
- Salvador Garrido
- Juan Monfort
- Francisco Mario de Bustos
- José María Caffarel as Monsieur Dupois - Empresario de París
- Luis Muñoz
- Manuel Gómez
- Florentina Garcia
- Clotilde Gijón
- Lola Gómez Moreno
- Juan Parera
- José María Cases
- Rafael Tamarit
- Toni Fernández as Mari Chamorro
- Mercedes Monterrey
- Guadalupe Muñoz Sampedro
Production
[edit]The filming took place in Barcelona between November 1956 and January 1957. Montiel accepted to star in the film as a deference to its director Juan de Orduña and during a vacation in Spain in between her Hollywood filmings Serenade and Run of the Arrow.[2] The film was filmed with a very low budget. Initially, the songs in the film were going to be sung by a professional singer who would dub Montiel, but due to the low budget, she eventually sang the songs herself.[3] Orduña had to sell the distribution rights to Cifesa to finance the completion of the filming.[4]
Release
[edit]The Last Torch Song opened on 6 May 1957 in Spain. The film was running at the 1,400-seat Rialto Theatre for forty-seven weeks,[5] making it the highest grossing film in Madrid in the 1950s.[a] The film was there for so long that, as a result of the rain and the wind, the large billboard announcing the film had to be replaced by another, something unusual in the history of film exhibition in Spain.[8] The film soundtrack album also became a hit.
The film had a wide international release with the dialogues dubbed or subtitled into other languages in non-Spanish speaking countries, while the songs kept in their original version. It was the worldwide highest-grossing Spanish-language film made up to that point, only surpassed in the 1950s–60s by her next film The Violet Seller, and catapulting Montiel's career as an actress and a singer.[9]
Notes
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Labanyi & Pavlović p.236
- ^ The Last Torch Song (1957), retrieved 8 May 2020
- ^ Herreros, Enrique. La Codorniz de Enrique Herreros (in Spanish). p. 169. Retrieved 19 January 2022.
- ^ "Medio siglo de «El último cuplé»". Levante-EMV (in Spanish). 7 May 2007. Retrieved 1 December 2022.
- ^ Sánchez Barba, Francesc (2007). Francoism's mists: the rise of Spanish film noir (1950-1965) (in Spanish). University of Barcelona. p. 172. ISBN 9788447531745.
- ^ "How They Played in Madrid, 1958". Variety. 15 April 1959. p. 83. Retrieved 1 December 2022.
- ^ "ORDER of December 22, 1964 establishing the control system of the performance of the films that are exhibited in Spain" (PDF). Boletín Oficial del Estado (in Spanish). 30 December 1964. Retrieved 21 June 2020.
- ^ "'El último cuplé', una película de récord". La Verdad (in Spanish). 10 April 2013. Retrieved 1 December 2022.
- ^ Edwin López Moya (12 April 2018). "New Sara Montiel biography is being written in Philadelphia". Al Día News. Retrieved 16 May 2020.
Bibliography
[edit]- Labanyi, Jo & Pavlović, Tatjana. A Companion to Spanish Cinema. John Wiley & Sons, 2012.
External links
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