Francisco Rabal(1926-2001)
- Actor
- Writer
- Director
Francisco Rabal -- Paco to everyone -- was born in the mining camp
where his father worked. His mother owned a small mill. At the age of
six, with the Civil War breaking out, the family emigrated to Madrid
and he started working as a street salesman and later in a chocolate
factory, which later led to him working as an electrician in the
Chamartín Film Studios. It was here he started in his first films in
crowd scenes and so on. However, following advice from people like
Dámaso Alonso, he found his way into the theatre and in 1950 started
working with José Tamayo where he met Asunción Balaguer, who was to
become his wife and inseparable companion for the rest of his life. One
of the plays he starred in was a Spanish version of Arthur Miller's
"Death of a Salesman." The big breakthrough came when he met Luis Buñuel,
one of the greatest of Spanish film directors. They became great
friends, in part due to their similar philosophies on life. Nazarín and
Viridiana remain as hallmarks of that early period. However, with
maturity and the passing of the Franco Régime, Rabal's best work was
yet to come, and indeed culminated with his exceptional rôle in
_Santos Inocentes, Los (1984)_, one of the best three or four Spanish films of all time. In
1987 he made a wonderful TV series called Juncal (1989) which was probably
the character which mostly resembled the real-life Paco Rabal: a
veritable "truhan" -- a roguish rascal. However, he has played the
character of the Aragonese painter Francisco Goya in three different
films, a personage who he became heavily identified with. It is in this
period that he received his highest awards in Spain, Cannes, Montreal,
etc. He is the only Spanish actor to have been given a Doctor Honoris
Causa by the University of his native Murcia. Returning from the XXV
Montreal Festival where he was homaged for a lifetime's work, he died
over the English Channel aboard the aeroplane bringing him from London
to Madrid and, despite the emergency landing in Bordeaux, nothing could
be done for him. The pressure inside the plane aggravated his chronic
bronchitis and started a fit of coughing which he was not able to
overcome. He has published a few books which he called "some little
things of mine," but most notably his collection of verses and "coplas"
in 1994 and a little later collaborated with Agustín Cerezales on his
biography "Si yo te contara" (If I told you all about it). His
daughter, Teresa Rabal, is a successful actress, singer and TV
presenter, while his son, Benito, also works as film director.