Alfonso XII and María Cristina
Alfonso XII and María Cristina or Where Are You Going, Sad Man? (Spanish: ¿Dónde vas triste de ti?) is a 1960 Spanish historical drama film directed by Alfonso Balcázar and Guillermo Cases and starring Marga López, Vicente Parra and José Marco Davó. It is the sequel to Where Are You Going, Alfonso XII? and portrays the marriage between Alfonso XII of Spain and Maria Christina of Austria.
Alfonso XII and María Cristina | |
---|---|
Directed by | Alfonso Balcázar Guillermo Cases |
Produced by | Alfonso Balcázar Francisco Balcázar Eduardo Manzanos Brochero |
Written by | Juan Ignacio Luca de Tena Luis Marquina Miguel Cussó |
Starring | Marga López Vicente Parra José Marco Davó |
Music by | Guillermo Cases |
Cinematography | José F. Aguayo |
Edited by | Sara Ontañón |
Production company | Balcázar Producciones Cinematográficas |
Release date | 17 April 1960 |
Running time | 99 minutes |
Country | Spain |
Language | Spanish |
It is similar in style to the German Sissi film series. It was very popular but led to Vicente Parra's typecasting.[1]
The film's sets were designed by the art director Enrique Alarcón.
Cast
- Marga López as María Cristina
- Vicente Parra as Alfonso XII
- José Marco Davó as Antonio Cánovas del Castillo
- Tomás Blanco as Duque de Sesto
- María Fernanda Ladrón de Guevara
- Marta Padovan
- Ana María Custodio as Duquesa de Montpensier
- Francisco Arias
- Rafael Bardem as Doctor Federico Rubio y Galí
- Rosita Yarza
- Mario Morales
- María Dolores Cabo
- Antonio Jiménez Escribano
- Felip Peña
- Manuel Insúa
- José Sepúlveda as Damián
- Josefina Serratosa
- José Morales
- Consuelo de Nieva
- Carolina Jiménez
- Mario Bustos
- José Vidal
- Salvador Muñoz
- Mario Beut
- Rafael Calvo
- Gonzalo Medel
- Amalia Sánchez Ariño
- Ramón Hernández
- Marta Novar
- Alejo del Peral
- Carmen Aroca
- Juan Eulate as Novaleches
- Camino Delgado
- Julia Pachelo
- José Cuenca
- Carmen Lozano
- Lolita de Málaga
- Manuel Ausensi
- Miguel Aguerri
References
- Mira p.236
Bibliography
- Mira, Alberto. Historical Dictionary of Spanish Cinema. Scarecrow Press, 2010.
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