José Mojica
(San Gabriel, 1895-Lima, 1974) Mexican actor and singer.After studying music, he turned to the world of opera, to the point of being part of the Chicago opera company as a tenor, from where he arrived at the cinema in the first Spanish versions that were made in Hollywood as soon as the talkies were implanted.The Fox Film Corporation hired him to take part in The Price of a Kiss (1930), by James Tinling and Marcel Silver.
From that moment on, a series of comedies and melodramas of romantic adventures will make him one of the most recognizable Hispanic faces in Hollywood.He plays both the roles of trainer and prince or fisherman, although in all of them the most important thing was to articulate a melody as suggestive as possible so that the singer could show off his excellent voice.Francisco Moré de la Torre, José López Rubio and Enrique Jardiel Poncela intervened in the Spanish versions of his films.José Mojica himself co-signed most of the songs and music in his films.
Of the scarce ten films in which he intervenes in Hollywood, it is worth highlighting The Cross and the Sword (1933), by Frank Strayer, in which he played the role of a Franciscan friar at the time of the Californian gold rush.It so happens that years later the actor will leave the world of cinema to enter a Peruvian convent of the Franciscan order with the name of Fray José Francisco de Guadalupe Mojica.However, before entering the convent, he appeared in the Argentine film Melodías de América (1942), by Eduardo Morera, with songs by Agustín Lara.A decade later, and as an isolated case, the story that he wrote for the Spanish film El Pórtico de la Gloria (1953), by Rafael J.Salvia, in which he also participated.
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