Enrique San Francisco
Rogelio Enrique San Francisco Cobo (10 March 1955 – 1 March 2021), better known as Quique San Francisco, was a Spanish actor and comedian. He was a noted figure in the so-called cine quinqui scene.[1]
Enrique San Francisco | |
---|---|
Born | Rogelio Enrique San Francisco Cobo 10 March 1955 Madrid, Spain |
Died | 1 March 2021 (aged 65) Madrid, Spain |
Other names | Quique San Francisco |
Occupation | Actor |
Biography
Enrique marked his theatre debut with El sueño de una noche de verano.[2] In 1965, he started his Television career with Televisión Española's show Santi, botones de hotel at the age of 10.[3] and Diario Vasco on 13 March 1965.
In 1975, he joined Madrid Actors' Studio.[4]
In 1975, he starred in the TV series El pícaro, directed by Fernando Fernán Gómez. He appeared in acclaimed films directed by Eloy de la Iglesia such as Colegas (1982), Navajeros (1980) o El pico (1983) in the 1980s.
On 24 October 2002, Enrique suffered a severe accident which led to his prolonged illness.[5] He later appeared in Television Series Cuéntame cómo pasó (2001-2008).
His theatre plays include Frankie y la boda (1965), Los ochenta son nuestros (1988), La noche del sábado (1991), Decíamos ayer (1997), Entre fuerte y flojo (2004), Hijos de mamá (2005), Misterioso asesinato en Manhattan (2007), El enfermo imaginario (2009), Arte (2010), ¡Se quieren! (2011), remake of 2002 drama Amparo Larrañaga and Orquesta Club Virginia (2012), adaptation of 1992 theatre film of the same title. As a Radio Presenter, he worked in shows like No somos nadie in M80 Radio. He also lent his voice to Loquillo y Trogloditas (El Mánager) with Rosario Flores (Gypsy Funky Love Me Do) and with La Fuga (Humo y cristales) etc.
San Francisco died on 1 March 2021, aged 65.[6]
Filmography
- Hombres y mujeres de blanco (1962), by Enrique Carreras.
- Diferente (1962), by Luis María Delgado.
- El aprendiz de clown (1967), by Manuel Esteba Gallego.
- La banda del Pecas (1968), by Jesús Pascual Aguilar.
- Le Paria (1969), by Claude Carliez avec Jean Marais.
- Un invierno en Mallorca (1969), by Jaime Camino.
- Estoy hecho un chaval (1975), by Pedro Lazaga.
- La larga noche de los bastones blancos (1977), by Javier Elorrieta.
- Arriba Hazaña (1978), by José María Gutiérrez.
- Sentados al borde de la mañana, con los pies colgando (1978), by Antonio José Betancor.
- Navajeros (1980), by Eloy de la Iglesia.
- Maravillas (1981), by Manuel Gutiérrez Aragón.
- La mujer del ministro (1981), by Eloy de la Iglesia.
- Colegas (1982), by Eloy de la Iglesia.
- El pico (1983), by Eloy de la Iglesia.
- Amanece, que no es poco (1988), by José Luis Cuerda.
- La huella del crimen: El crimen del expreso de Andalucía (TV) (1991), by Imanol Uribe.
- Orquesta Club Virginia (1992), by Manuel Iborra.
- Acción mutante (1993), by Álex de la Iglesia.
- La mujer de tu vida: La mujer gafe (TV) (1994), by Imanol Uribe.
- La mujer de tu vida: La mujer vacía (TV) (1994), by Manuel Iborra.
- Tirano Banderas (1995), by José Luis García Sánchez.
- Así en el cielo como en la tierra (1995), by José Luis Cuerda.
- La ley de la frontera (1995), by Adolfo Aristarain.
- Belmonte (1995), by Juan Sebastián Bollaín.
- Hotel y domicilio (1995), by Ernesto Del Río.
- La leyenda de Balthasar el castrado (1996), by Juan Miñón.
- Pepe Guindo (1999), by Manuel Iborra.
- París-Tombuctú (1999), by Luis García Berlanga.
- Más pena que gloria (2000), by Víctor García León.
- El chocolate del loro (2001), by Ernesto Martín Ataz.
- Sinfín (2005), by Manuel Sanabria and Carlos Villaverde.
- Hot Milk (2005), by Ricardo Bofill Maggiora.
- La dama boba (2005), by Manuel Iborra.
- Animal Crisis (2008), by Pedro Rivero.
- Save the Zombies (2013), by Federico López.
- Sin rodeos (2018), diredcted by Santiago Segura.
- 4 latas (2019), directed by Gerardo Olivares.
Television
Series and fictions
- Estudio 1 (1971–80) in TVE.
- Los libros (1974–77) in TVE.
- Cuentos y leyendas (1978) in TVE.
- Los pintores del Prado (1974) in TVE.
- El pícaro (1975) in TVE.
- Curro Jiménez (1976) in TVE.
- Proceso a Mariana Pineda (1984) in TVE.
- Miguel Servet, la sangre y la ceniza (1989) in TVE.
- La mujer de tu vida (1990–94) in TVE.
- Compuesta y sin novio (1994) in Antena 3.
- Colegio Mayor (1994) in Telemadrid.
- Los ladrones van a la oficina (1993–95) in Antena 3.
- Ni contigo ni sin ti (1998) in Televisa.
- Condenadas a entenderse (1998) in TVE.
- Ellas son así (1999) in Telecinco.
- Un paso adelante (2005) in Antena 3.
- Cuéntame cómo pasó (2001–08) in TVE.
- Aída (2005) in Telecinco.
- Águila Roja (2015) in TVE.
- Gym Tony (2016) in Cuatro.
- Follow San Francisco (2019) in Flooxer.
Programs
- La bola de cristal (1987–88) in TVE.
- La noche con Fuentes y cía (2001–04) in Telecinco.
- Un, dos, tres... a leer esta vez (2004) in TVE.
- El club de la comedia (2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2011 and 2012) in Canal+ 1, Antena 3 and La Sexta
- El hormiguero (2007–19) (Guest) in Cuatro (2007–11) and Antena 3 (2011–19)
- Mi casa es la tuya (2018) in Telecinco
Awards and nominations
Year | Category | Film | Result |
---|---|---|---|
1989 | Goya Award for Best Supporting Actor | El baile del pato | Nominated |
1992 | Orquesta Club Virginia | Nominated | |
- Actors' Union Awards
Year | Category | Film | Result |
---|---|---|---|
1992 | Second Best Actor | Orquesta Club Virginia | Nominated |
- Other Awards
- Gijón International Film Festival Best Actor Award for El aprendiz de clown (1968) [7]
- Culture Ministry's Best Actor Award - 1979 [7]
References
- Martínez, Luis (1 March 2021). "Muere a los 65 años Quique San Francisco, actor mítico del cine quinqui". El Mundo.
- "El sueño de una noche de verano en el Español". Diario ABC. Retrieved 22 December 2020.
- Por fin, en TVE, una 'serie' para chicos
- "CINeol entrevista a Enrique San Francisco".
- "Enrique San Francisco suffers severe accident".
- Pozo, José Carlos (1 March 2021). "El cómico y actor Enrique San Francisco ha muerto a los 65 años". Hobby Consolas.
- "Web de Vicente Haro, representante de actores y actrices". Archived from the original on 23 June 2010. Retrieved 22 December 2020.