Miguel Ángel Suárez

Miguel Ángel Suárez
Born July 5, 1939 (1939-07-05)
San Juan, Puerto Rico
Died 1 April 2009(2009-04-01) (aged 69)
Guaynabo, Puerto Rico
Occupation Actor
Years active 1971–2008
Spouse(s) Amneris Morales

Miguel Ángel Suárez (July 5, 1939 – April 1, 2009) was a Puerto Rican soap opera and movie actor.

Early years

Suárez and his sister were born into a middle class family and raised in the Santurce section of San Juan, Puerto Rico. His father worked at a local supermarket and his mother was a housewife. When Suárez was a child, he went with his mother to see a play. This was his first experience with the theater and Suárez was so impressed that after the curtains rose and the actors did their show, he knew that he wanted to become an actor. Suárez went to school and received his primary and secondary education in his hometown. When Suárez and his sister returned from school, their mother would read stories or prepare little plays which helped to develop their imagination.[1]

The supermarket where the elder Suárez worked was located next to the radio station "Radio El Mundo". Manuel Méndez Ballester, a well known playwright, who worked as a writer for the radio station, would frequently visit the supermarket and Suárez's father soon became friends with Ballester. In 1947, Ballester told the elder Suárez that he was in need of an 8-year-old for the protagonist role in a play that he wrote, because the person he had in mind didn't pass the audition. When the elder Suárez realized that the "part" paid more than what he was making working in the supermarket, he took his son to the audition and that was the beginning of Suárez's acting career. In 1956, when Suárez was 17 years old, he enlisted in the U.S. Navy and was assigned to the submarine division. He traveled the world and learned about different customs and cultures.[1]

Television

When Suárez was discharged from the Navy, he returned to Puerto Rico, where he began doing theater work and later starred as Rev. Sullivan in the first soap opera produced by Tommy Muniz for Wapa TV, "Las Almas No Tienen Color" (1969). In 1972 he was cast in "El Hijo De Angela María" which was so successful that was soon made into a movie. Afterwards the artistic class in the island went through a crisis and since he was unable to get an acting job, Suarez decided to try his luck elsewhere. He went to Argentina where he was given a role in the soap opera Amor Gitano (Gypsy Love). He later went to Venezuela where he became a renowned actor after participating in the soap operas Corazon de Diamante (Heart of Diamonds) and Laura Benson. In Puerto Rico he participated in many locally produced soap operas, among which was Vivir Para Ti (I live for You). In 1994 he was cast in Señora Tentacion (Mrs. Temptation) with Mexican movie star Lucía Méndez. This soap opera was a hit in the Caribbean, Central and South America and in Europe.[1]

Film

In 1971, Suárez was cast in the locally produced Woody Allen movie Bananas with Jacobo Morales. In 1980 he played an inmate in a made-for-TV movie partially filmed in Puerto Rico, 'Escape', with Timothy Bottoms and Colleen Dewhurst. He then went to Hollywood and in 1981 landed a role in the movie Stir Crazy, directed by Sidney Poitier starring Richard Pryor and Gene Wilder. He was sometimes credited under the names Miguelángel Suárez and Miguel Suárez .

Other movies in which Suárez participated are: La Gran Fiesta (1985); Isabel la Negra (1978) with Míriam Colón and Raúl Juliá; Havana (1990) produced by Sidney Pollack and Under Suspicion (2000) with Gene Hackman, Morgan Freeman, and Nydia Caro. In 2007, Suárez performed one of the main roles in Jacobo Morales' new film, Ángel.[1]

Death

Suárez died on April 1, 2009 losing his battle with esophageal cancer, he was 69 years old. He is survived by his widow, the actress Amneris Morales, his daughter Alondra Suárez and his stepdaughter Belange Rodríguez.[2] Suárez's remains were cremated on April 5 in accordance to his wishes.[3] On 4 April 2010, his cremated remains where interred in a family plot located in Santa Maria Magdalena de Pazzis Cemetery in Old San Juan.[4]

Filmography

Among the films in which he participated are:[3]

Novelas (Soap operas)

See also

References

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