Mosaico criollo

Mosaico criollo

0

1929-12-02

“Mosaico criollo” is not exactly a spoken film: it is a series of filmed musical sketches of several popular genres in four scenes, each one with a description. Joaquina Carreras sings folk song “Triste está mi rancho”, then Giménez and Suárez (“genuine northern dancers”) dive into an enthusiastic folk tap dance. After them, Julio Perceval (“delight of Buenos Aires citizens’ ears”) executes a piano solo, and “graceful interpreter” Anita Palmero sings the tango “Botarate”, by Acuña and De Cicco.

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Mosaico criollo

Storyline

“Mosaico criollo” is not exactly a spoken film: it is a series of filmed musical sketches of several popular genres in four scenes, each one with a description. Joaquina Carreras sings folk song “Triste está mi rancho”, then Giménez and Suárez (“genuine northern dancers”) dive into an enthusiastic folk tap dance. After them, Julio Perceval (“delight of Buenos Aires citizens’ ears”) executes a piano solo, and “graceful interpreter” Anita Palmero sings the tango “Botarate”, by Acuña and De Cicco.

Released

1929-12-02

Runtime

9

Director

Eleuterio Iribarren

Budget

$0

Revenue

$0

Genres

Music

Documentary

Language

Español

Production

Casts

  • Image 2

    Nedda Francy

    Nedda Francy
  • Image 2

    Miguel Faust Rocha

    Miguel Faust Rocha
  • Image 2

    Julio Perceval

    Julio Perceval
  • Image 2

    Anita Palmero

    Anita Palmero