Vicente Parra


Vicente Parra Collado was a Spanish actor.

Early career

Born in Oliva, in a lower-class family, he began his career at a young age in the theater. He formed part of a number of theatrical companies. He made his film debut at age eighteen with the film Rumbo in a small role. He became famous with the thriller film El expreso de Andalucía under the direction of Francisco Rovira Beleta. He then put his work in the theater in the background to concentrate in pursuing a career in films. He made two films directed by Mauel Mur Otis: Fedra, an adaptation of the classical play, and the melodrama El batallón de las sombras. The same year he starred in Rapsodia de sangre a film directed by Antonio Isasi-Isasmendi about the Hungarian Revolution of 1956.

Success

Vicente Parra achieved his biggest success with the film ¿Dónde vas Alfonso XII? , under the direction of Luis César Amadori, a film in which he played the eponymous king while the singer Paquita Rico played Queen Mercedes. Two years later, he reprised the role in the film's sequel ¿Dónde vas, triste de ti? ? in which the Mexican actress Marga López, took the role of Queen María Cristina, Archduchess of Austria. Both films, inspired by the "Empress Sissi" trilogy of films, were highly sentimental and typecast him. His popularity declined afterwards.
In the following years Parra starred in the musical Nobleza baturra and he mixed his work in the theater, where he formed his own company, with edgier parts in films like: Varietés ' under the direction of Juan Antonio Bardem. He left behind his image as a handsome leading man with two horror films for controversial director Eloy de la iglesia: La Semana del Asesino ' and Nadie oyó gritar . In La Semana del asesino, he played a working class serial killer who put his victims through the grinder at a meat factory.

Later career

After these films, Parra's career never took off again. For a couple of years, he lived and worked in Argentina. Back in Spain, his works were spaced out appearing in brief iconic parts in films like: Las Largas vacaciones del 36 ' directed by Jaime Camino; La siesta ', directed by Jorge Grau; the comedy Nosotros que fuimos tan felices ', directed by Antonio Drove and La Guerra de Papá under the direction of Antonio Mercero.
During the first part of the 1980s, Vicente Parra retired for a decade from acting both in films and theater. He came back to the big screen with secondary roles in two films directed by José Luis García Sánchez:
Suspiros de españa y Portugal
', a black comedy, and Tranvía a la Malvarrosa '', which was his last film. He died, age 66, of lung cancer.

Partial filmography