Marisol Calero
Marisol Calero (born 13 September 1963) is a Puerto Rican actress and singer.[1]
Marisol Calero | |
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Born | Marisol Calero 13 September 1963 |
Nationality | Puerto Rican |
Known for | Actress and singer |
Awards | Star Actress of the Year at the 19th festival of the Arts Critics Awards for her role in Tal para cual |
Early years
Calero was born in Ponce, Puerto Rico, on 13 September 1963.[1] As a child, Calero participated in school performances at the Academia del Perpetuo Socorro and briefly in the San Juan Children's Choir. As a teenager she attended the Escuela Libre de Música (Free School of Music) in San Juan where she continued to participate in the dramatic arts. She studied singing from the age of 14 under the sopranos Rina de Toledo, Vilna Echenique and Darysabel Isales.[2]
Theatrical career
She started her professional career with a fino performance in a poetic musical, accompanied by her mother, the actress and politician Marta Font. She was a singer in various civic, college and professional groups. In time she rose to the theatrical horizon in Puerto Rico.[2]
Singing career
In addition to her theatrical career in Puerto Rico, Calero also became a professional singer. Her first hit was "Conmigo no" ("Not with me") in 1986. This was followed by "Duende", "Ojalá", "Te voy a dejar", "Duendes de la noche" and "Frágil".[2] A parody of "Duendes de la noche" became the comedic character Vitín Alicea's signature song, "Hombres en la noche".
As a singer, Calero represented Puerto Rico at the OTI Festival in Portugal in 1987. She also performed as an actress in Panama in El diluvio que viene.[2]
US scenes
At the beginning of the 1990s, Calero moved to Miami, Florida, where she worked telenovelas as well theater. In 1994, she was named Star Actress of the Year at the 19th festival of the Arts Critics Awards for her role in Tal para cual where she performed with Evelio Taillac.[2]
Later she participated in La duda, directed and produced by Carmen Montejo; Rosita la soltera, a play by Federico García Lorca and Hazme de la noche un cuento by Jorge Márquez, directed by Ramón Pareja for the Latin Theatrical Festival in Miami. Calero was concurrently participating in various TV projects such as Aguamarina, starring Ruddy Rodríguez and Leonardo García, Hey Miami and the telenovela Me muero por ti, also filmed in 2000.[2]
Puerto Rico scenes
In 1998, Calero starred in Tal para cual at the San Juan Centro de Bellas Artes. She had a role in the movie Under Suspicion, which was filmed entirely in Puerto Rico. In March 2001, Calero was part of Huracán criollo of the dramatist Juan González-Bonilla.[2]
In 2002, Calero was contracted by the Brazilian company Rede Globo for a role in Vale tudo, playing the role of Mercedes, a Mexican mother bringing up an adolescent daughter. A year later, she starred at the Abanico Theater in Coral Gables in El último de los amantes, the Spanish version of Neil Simon's The Last of the Red Hot Lovers. She starred in the role of four different characters. Prior to her acting in El último de los amantes, she was recognized by the Office of the Government of Puerto Rico in Miami together with Sully Díaz, Mara Croatto, Yolandita Monge and Adamari López.[2]
She currently resides in Miami.
Filmography
- Aguamarina (1997) TV (series) as Penelope
- Me muero por tí (1999) (TV series) as Jasmina
- Under Suspicion (2000) as Sergeant Arias
- Bala perdida (2003/II), a.k.a. Stray Bullet
- Ángel rebelde as Etelvina Perez (1 episode, 2004)
- Vale todo (2002) (TV series) as Mercedes
- Una historia común (2004) as Clarita
- Manuela y Manuel (2007) as Norma (a.k.a., "Manuela and Manuel" – USA)
- El Fantasma de Elena (2010) as La Nena Ochoa
Health issues
Calero suffered a cranial aneurysm on 21 August 2020 and was hospitalized at HIMA San Pablo hospital in Caguas.[3]
See also
References
- Marisol Calero at IMDb
- Fundacion Nacional para la Cultura Popular
- Marisol Calero está delicada de salud: La presentadora fue operada anoche por segunda vez tras sufrir un aneurisma cerebral. Guaynabo, Puerto Rico: Primera Hora. 21 August 2020. Accessed 24 August 2020. (In Spanish.) Archived by the Wayback Machine on 2020-08-25.