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Armando Bó | |
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Armando Bó in the 1940s, photographed by Annemarie Heinrich | |
Born | (1914-05-03)3 May 1914 Buenos Aires, Argentina |
Died | 8 October 1981(1981-10-08) (aged 67) |
Years active | 1939 – 1979 |
Spouse |
Teresa Machinandiarena
(m. 1956) |
Partner | Isabel Sarli (1956–1981, his death) |
Children | 3, including Víctor Bó |
Relatives | Armando Bó (grandson) Nicolás Giacobone (grandson) |
Armando Bó (3 May 1914 – 8 October 1981) was an Argentine film actor, director, producer, screenwriter and score composer. He began his career as an actor and producer during the Golden Age of Argentine cinema of the 1930s and 1940s. In 1956, Bó met Isabel Sarli and cast her as the lead actress in his film Thunder Among the Leaves (1957), in which she made the first full frontal nude in the history of Argentine cinema. Bó and Sarli became both romantic and commercial partners, and the duo turned to the sexploitation genre in the 1960s and 1970s, these films being considered emblematic of the genre.
Bó's son is the actor/producer Víctor Bó and his grandson is the screenwriter and director Armando Bó.
Biography
Bó began acting for film in 1939 in Ambición and made some 50 film appearances as an actor, but by the late 1940s he had already taken up an interest in film production and began as a director, producer, actor, and screenwriter in the early 1950s. He was involved in almost 100 different films during his career.
In June 1956, he met Isabel Sarli on a television show. He later offered her the opportunity to star in El trueno entre las hojas (Thunder in the Leaves). Bo tricked Sarli to appear naked in a scene in which she bathed in a lake, though she had previously been told she would wear a flesh-colored body stocking. The film became the first to feature full frontal nudity in Argentine cinema. Bo and Sarli became lovers and he continued to exploit her in his films, many, in which she was asked to perform sex acts on film always starring him as her lover. She became the primary star of his films until his death in 1981. Upon his death Sarli was given no rights to any of the films they made together.
Their films were controversial at the time and most of them were banned, but this ban led them to be even more successful. Films like Fuego (1969) and Fiebre (1970) reached the American and European markets. The banning of Fuego led to them moving into exile.
He was married to Teresa Machinandiarena, and had three children: María Inés, María Jesús, and Víctor. His son, Víctor Bó, was a prominent actor in Argentina during the 70s and 80s. His grandsons are Academy Award winners Nicolás Giacobone and Armando Bó Jr., credited as Armando Bó.
Filmography
Legacy
Renowned filmmaker John Waters has claimed to be a big fan of Bó's filmography, and to have been influenced by it as well. Waters presented Bó's 1969 cult film Fuego as his annual selection within the 2002 Maryland Film Festival, and it was also a featured film in episode three of the Here! network original series John Waters Presents Movies That Will Corrupt You.
References
- "Preem of 'Fuego' in N.Y. Another Bitter Pill For Argentine Film Industry". Variety. 15 October 1969. p. 19.
- Kairuz, Mariano (20 August 2012). "Waters toma Coca" [Waters drinks Coca] (in Spanish). Pagina 12. Retrieved 22 February 2022.
- Kuschevatzky, Axel (24 January 2010). "Los juegos que juegan los hombres" [The games men play] (in Spanish). Pagina 12. Retrieved 22 February 2022.
External links
- Armando Bó at IMDb
- "Armando Bo". Iconos Argentinos (in Spanish). Government of Argentina, Secretary General. 21 January 2019.
Armando Bó and Isabel Sarli filmography | ||
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1950s |
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1960s |
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1970s |
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1980s | Una viuda descocada (1980) | |
Other topics: |
- 1914 births
- 1981 deaths
- Argentine male film actors
- Argentine film directors
- Argentine film producers
- Argentine film score composers
- Argentine male film score composers
- Male actors from Buenos Aires
- Deaths from brain cancer in Argentina
- Burials at La Recoleta Cemetery
- 20th-century Argentine male actors
- 20th-century Argentine composers
- 20th-century Argentine male musicians