Carmela Rey Explained

Carmela Rey
Birth Name:Carmen Sánchez Levi
Birth Date:7 December 1931
Birth Place:Xalapa, Veracruz, Mexico
Death Place:Mexico City, Mexico
Occupation:Singer, actress
Years Active:1955 - 2000

Carmen Sánchez Levi (7 December 1931[1] – 13 February 2018), known as Carmela Rey, was a Mexican singer and actress.

One of the last official vocalists of Agustín Lara, she became famous in the 1950s as a soloist on radio and television programs, and recorded exclusively for Musart Records and later for RCA Records. In movies, she had starring roles in A sablazo limpio (1958), Viva la parranda (1960), Las hijas del Amapolo (1962), and Escuela para solteras (1965).

With her husband, singer Rafael Vázquez, she formed a duet named Carmela y Rafael, "The Romantic Couple of Mexico", which was hugely successful in the 1960s and 1970s.

Life and career

Carmela Rey was born in Xalapa, the capital of Veracruz, Mexico. Her parents were Vicente Sánchez Rebolledo and Dinah Levi Rey. She took her stage name from her maternal grandmother, Isabel Rey. Carmela finished her primary and secondary school in Mexico City, and learned solfège, harmony, history of music, and Italian at the Conservatorio Nacional de Música.[2] She was also a student of the famous Mexican contralto Fanny Anitúa.

Rey began her career participating in recitals at Mexico City's Palacio de Bellas Artes, but she married and went abroad to live with her husband. She made a comeback singing in her own radio programs and performing at the posh Capri nightclub in Mexico City. Rey also made her television debut, and one of her TV programs remained on the air for 26 consecutive weeks. Her popularity spread to other Latin American countries, including Cuba, Colombia and Venezuela.

Her great beauty and natural charm attracted the attention of film producers Óscar J. Brooks and Ernesto Enríquez, who signed her for the female lead opposite Viruta y Capulina and Chilean bolero singer Lucho Gatica in A sablazo limpio (1958), a comedy set in the Spanish empire of the 18th century.

Rey also made musical appearances in La mujer marcada (1957) and Mi mujer necesita marido (1959), and played one of the leading roles in Yo pecador (1959), a biopic of Mexican tenor-turned-priest José Mojica. These performances were followed by three more starring roles, in the films Viva la parranda (1960), with Miguel Aceves Mejía, Lucho Gatica and Guillermina Téllez Girón; Las hijas del Amapolo (1962), with José Elías Moreno, Lucha Moreno, María Eugenia Rubio and Angélica María; and Escuela para solteras (1965), with Flor Silvestre, Fanny Cano, Alma Delia Fuentes, Lucha Moreno and Sara García.

Death

Rey died at around 9:00 am on 13 February 2018 in Mexico City.[3] She was 86 years old. Her grandson revealed the cause of her death to be "a heart attack and she was asleep, so when we found her she was in her bed; and although she suffered from hypertension this was not the cause of her death". Her husband, who is in delicate health, was not able to attend her funeral service. Her remains were cremated on 14 February.

Discography

Filmography

YearTitleRoleNotes
1957La mujer marcadaSinger
1958A sablazo limpioRosauraFilm debut
1959Mi mujer necesita maridoSinger
Yo pecadorFlorita
1960Viva la parrandaChole
1962Las hijas del AmapoloLuz
1965Escuela para solterasLucero

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Álvarez. José Rogelio. Enciclopedia de México, Volume 12. 1998. 1564090248. 6943.
  2. News: Haro. Carlos. Liner notes from Musart album D369. Carmela Rey interpreta Agustín Lara. c. 1957.
  3. News: Fallece de un infarto la cantante Carmela Rey. 15 February 2018. Excélsior. Notimex. 14 February 2018.