Pedro Armendáriz
Pedro Armendáriz was born in Churubusco, a neighborhood of Mexico City, and spent part of his upbringing in Texas. He pursued engineering at California Polytechnic State University, earning his degree before embarking on a successful acting career. Armendáriz began performing on stage in Mexico City and transitioned to the film industry in 1935. Over the next decade, he starred in a remarkable 42 Spanish-language films, establishing himself as one of Mexico's leading film actors with notable works such as "Maria Candelaria" (1943) and "La Perla" (1947).
His Hollywood debut came in 1947 with the film "The Fugitive," and Armendáriz went on to have a prolific international film career, appearing in over 80 films across several countries, including the United States, England, France, Germany, and Italy. His filmography features classics such as "Fort Apache" (1948), "Three Godfathers," "We Were Strangers" (1949), "El Bruto" (1952), "The Littlest Outlaw" (1955), "The Conqueror" (1956), "La Cucaracha" (1958), and "The Wonderful Country" (1959).
Tragically, while filming the second James Bond movie, "From Russia With Love," Armendáriz fell seriously ill. His scenes were expedited to allow for his treatment at UCLA Medical Center, where he ultimately learned of his terminal cancer diagnosis. In a moment of despair, he took his own life there in 1963.
Filmography
Old Gringo
La Chèvre
Casa de Mi Padre
The Brute
Captain Sindbad
The Snitch Cartel
Nurses on the Line: The Crash of Flight 7
Herod's Law
The Deadly Trackers
Manuela
A Wonderful World
Blacker Than the Night
The Fugitive
Fort Apache
Guns for San Sebastian
Guns and Guts
Freelancers
One Long Night
Mariana Mariana
Maine-Ocean Express
Another Dawn (1943)
Life Sentence
The Phantom Gunslinger
Earthquake
The Conqueror: Hollywood Fallout
Border River
Macho Callahan
From Inside
Highway Patrolman
3 Godfathers
Tulsa
Walker
The Wonderful Country