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Infos supplémentaires

Acteur dans 20 films

Né(e) le 26 février 1925

Lieu de naissance
Prague - Czechoslovakia

Mort le 09 mars 1955 (à 30 ans)

Miroslava

Acteur dans

1957

  • Torero!

1955

  • Le Juge Thorne fait sa loi
  • Más fuerte que el amor
  • Escuela de vagabundos
  • La vie criminelle d'Archibald de La Cruz

1954

  • La visita que no tocó el timbre

1953

  • Reportaje

1952

  • Dos caras tiene el destino

1951

  • El puerto de los siete vicios
  • Ella y Yo
  • Le Bagne des Filles Perdues
  • Monte de piedad
  • Streetwalker

1950

  • La posesión

1949

  • Secreto entre mujeres

1948

  • Una aventura en la noche
  • Juan Charrasqueado
  • Nocturno de amor

1947

  • Cinco rostros de mujer

1946

  • Bodas trágicas
Miroslava (February 26, 1925 – March 9, 1955) was a Czechoslovakian-born Mexican film actress who appeared in thirty two films. Born Miroslava Šternová in Prague, Czechoslovakia (now the Czech Republic), Miroslava moved to Mexico as a child with her adoptive parents in the late 1930s, seeking to escape war in their native country. After winning a national beauty contest, Miroslava began to study acting. She appeared in a few Hollywood and Mexican films. She was offered a role in Ensayo de un crimen (Rehearsal for a Crime) in 1955, directed by Luis Buñuel. Soon after the final wrap of the film, Miroslava committed suicide by overdosing on sleeping pills.[2] Her body was found lying outstretched over her bed, she had a portrait of bullfighter Luis Miguel Dominguín in one hand. Her friends stated her suicide was due to unrequited love for Dominguín, who had recently married Italian actress Lucia Bosé. Bosè would go on to star in Buñuel's next movie, Cela s'appelle l'aurore (1956). The Mexican and Hollywood star Katy Jurado claimed to be one of the first people to find the body of Mexican actress Miroslava Stern after her tragic suicide. According to Katy, the picture that Miroslava had between her hands was Cantinflas, but the artistic manager Fanny Schatz exchanged the photo to that of the Spanish bullfighter Luis Miguel Dominguín. In his 1983 autobiography, Mon dernier soupir ("My Last Breath"), Buñuel recalls the irony of Miroslava's cremation following her suicide, when compared to a scene inEnsayo de un crimen, her last film, in which the protagonist cremates a wax reproduction of Stern's character. Her life is the subject of a short story by Guadalupe Loaeza, which was adapted by Alejandro Pelayo for his 1992 Mexican film called Miroslava, starring Arielle Dombasle.





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