Lalo Ríos
Lalo Ríos | |
---|---|
Born |
San Miguelito (Sonora, Mexico) | February 7, 1927
Died |
March 7, 1973 46) Los Angeles, California | (aged
Occupation | Actor |
Lalo Ríos (7 February 1927 - 7 March 1973) was a Mexican-born American actor better known by his lead role in The Ring (1952 film), playing to "Tommy".[1]
Biography
Lalo Ríos was born on February 7, 1927 in San Miguelito (Sonora, Mexico). At the age of 9 he moved to East Los Angeles, California, with his family. He graduated from Abraham Lincoln High School.[2][3]
During Ríos' work as a carpenter[4] he got his first acting role with the Paramount film The Lawless (1950). The film cast Ríos as a young Mexican who faces a racist lynch mob in a small North California town. Since his inclusion in the work, Ríos spanned his acting career for nearly twenty years. In 1952, Ríos was then cast into his most well-known role as "Tommy", in The Ring (1952), in which he played the lead actor and protagonist. Ríos was also known for certain relevance in films such as Big Leaguer (1953), and Touch of Evil (1958). He eventually ended his career in film in 1962, with Lonely Are the Brave (1962).
After ending his career in film, Ríos began to focus solely in television. This was a format with which he was familiar due to his initial inclusion in Westinghouse Desilu Playhouse (in 1958). His casting with the series was short lived, only appearing in two episodes, but assisted him in creating a platform to sell his craft. After 1966, he participated in multiple television series, such as Laredo (1966) and Marcus Welby, M.D. (1968).
Marcus Welby was the last series in which he participated, before he left American television.
Ríos died in Los Angeles in on March 7, 1973.
Filmography
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1950 | The Lawless | Paul Rodriguez | |
1950 | Bandit Queen | Juan, a vigilante | |
1951 | The Law and the Lady | Panchito (uncredited) | |
1952 | Untamed Frontier | Pepe (uncredited) | |
1952 | The Ring (1952 film) | Tommy | |
1952 | One Minute to Zero | Pvt. Chico Mendoza (uncredited) | |
1953 | Big Leaguer | Chuy Aguilar | |
1953 | City Beneath the Sea | Calypso | |
1954 | Prisoner of War | Sachez Rivero (uncredited) | |
1957 | Gold of the Seven Saints | Mexican Robber (uncredited) | |
1958 | Touch of Evil | Risto | |
1962 | Lonely Are the Brave | Prisoner |
Television
Year | Title | Role | episodes |
---|---|---|---|
1958 | Westinghouse Desilu Playhouse | Martinez | My Father, the Fool |
1959 | Wagon Train | Juan | The Stagecoach Story · The Sister Rita Story |
1960 | Overland Trail | Telegrapher | Mission into Mexico |
1960 | Tate | The Shepherd | Tigrero |
1961 | The Untouchables | Tony Diaz | The Big Train, Part 1 · The Big Train, Part 2 |
1961 | Assignment: Underwater | Roberto | The Key |
1961 | Gunsmoke | Little Fox | Long Hours, Short Pay |
1961 | The Case of the Dangerous Robin | Doll of Death | |
1966 | Laredo | Pepe | The Calico Kid |
1967 | The High Chaparral | First Bandit | The Terrorist |
1969 | Marcus Welby, M.D. | Sanchez | Neither Punch nor Judy |
References
- ↑ William Anthony Nericcio. Tex[t]-Mex: Seductive Hallucinations of the "Mexican" in America, 2007. "But "Mike" is not done; Heston as Vargas grabs Risto, played with surly acerbic detachment by the late Lalo Ríos (b. 1927, Sonora, Mexico; d. 1973, Los Angeles, CA, U.S.A.), and demands to know where Susy (drugged and kidnapped by the ..."
- ↑ Frank Javier Garcia Berumen. Brown Celluloid: Latino/A Film Icons and Images in the Hollywood. Volume 1, 2003. Page 355: "Lalo Ríos - Lalo Ríos was one of the most promising actors of the premature Chicano cinema of the 1950s. He was born in San Miguelito, Mexico, on February 7, 1927, in Sonora, Mexico. He moved with his parents and two brothers..."
- ↑ Clara Rodriguez. Heroes, Lovers and Others: The Story of Latinos in Hollywood, 2008. Page 142: "Ricardo Montalban, Anthony Quinn, Rafael Campos (born in the Dominican Republic and raised in New York City), and Lalo Rios (born in Mexico and raised in East Los Angeles) all took roles in a number of films that focused on life in the barrio and the place of Latinos in American society."
- ↑ "The San Bernardino County Sun from San Bernardino, California · Page 4". Newspapers.com. Retrieved 2015-12-27.