Mecha Ortiz (née María Mercedes Varela Nimo Domínguez Castro; 1900–1987) was a classic Argentine actress who appeared in films between 1937 and 1981, during the Golden Age of Argentine Cinema. At the 1944 Argentine Film Critics Association Awards, Ortiz won the Silver Condor Award for Best Actress for her performance in Safo, historia de una pasión (1943), and won it again in 1946 for her performance in El canto del cisne (1945). She was known as the Argentine Greta Garbo and for playing mysterious characters, who suffered by past misfortunes in love, mental disorders, or forbidden love. Safo, historia de una pasión was the first erotic Argentine film, though there was no nudity. She also played in the first film in which a woman struck a man and the first film with a lesbian romance. In 1981, she was awarded the Grand Prize for actresses from the National Endowment for the Arts.
Early life and background
María Mercedes Varela Nimo Domínguez Castro, known as Mecha was born 24 September 1900. Until she was 29, Mecha, was married to a farmer and was busy being a wife and mother.[1] She had enrolled for acting classes in the Conservatorio Nacional de Música y Declamación (National Conservatory of Music and Speech) in the inaugural class under the direction of Carlos López Buchardo and Enrique García Velloso. This first class of 1926, which included Ortiz, Miguel Mileo and Paulina Singerman, among others, sought to teach acting using a standardized manual.[2] When her husband was thrown from a horse and had a serious back injury, she took a job in the prosecutor's office, refusing help from her well-to-do family. Her sister, Amanda Varela, was an established actress and got her a screen test with Paramount Studios of France. She was selected but no films were made, so her sister introduced her to a friend, influential film critic Chas de Cruz, who helped her find work.[1]
In 1936 she had her first film role as "Rubia Mireya", with Florencio Parravicini, Irma Córdoba and Santiago Arrieta, in the classic Los muchachos de antes no usaban gomina directed by Manuel Romero. The role was the first of many wherein she played a character who could not be with the man she loved, but made personal sacrifices to be honorable.[7] Mecha was often cast as mysterious characters, plagued by past misfortunes in love, mental disorders, or forbidden love and was frequently compared with Greta Garbo.[1][8][9] She was also seen as a symbol of sophistication and was referred to in other works to denote the line between what was chic or provincial.[8] Years later the character was brought back for Ortiz in the film La Rubia Mireya (1948) with Fernando Lamas also directed by Manuel Romero. In this version, a woman who had reluctantly married, divorced and is rejected by her daughter.[10]
In 1938 she starred with Niní Marshall in Mujeres que trabajan, which was directed by Manuel Romero,[11]Con las alas rotas directed by Orestes Caviglia[12] and Maestro Levita with Pepe Arias.[13][14] In 1943 Lumiton produced, Safo, historia de una pasión, adapted from Alphonse Daudet, directed by Carlos Hugo Christensen with Roberto Escalada. Safo was Argentina's first erotic film and was forbidden to minors. There was no nudity in the film, but the innuendo of a sexual encounter between the characters played by Ortiz and Escalada arose from their smoking a cigarette together.[15] She won her first Silver Condor Award for Best Actress for Safo at the 1944 ceremony.[16] The "forbidden" romance of an older woman and a younger man, was repeated in the 1945 sequel El canto del cisne[15] (Swan Song) for which Ortiz won acting awards in Cuba and Brazil,[8][17] as well as the Argentine Silver Condor Award for Best Actress.[15]
Stability and permanence was rarely found in Argentine theatre companies. One of the exceptions was La Compañía Argentina de Comedias Mecha Ortiz (the Argentine Comedy Company of Mecha Ortiz) which included a cast of Ortiz, Lola Membrives, Rosa Rosen and Narciso Ibáñez Menta. In early 1949, she and the director Luis Mottura, led and managed their own cast, which stayed together for almost a decade, disbanding in 1958. They produced over 15 productions—the best being "Iremos a Valparaíso " by Marcel Achard at the Odeón Theater on 13 May 1949; " “Un tranvía llamado deseo” (A Streetcar Named Desire) by Tennessee Williams at the Casino Theater on 7 July 1952; "Rueda de amantes" by Regás Luz Maria and Juan Albornoz at the Casino Theater on 27 July 1953; "Anna Karenina" by Raymond Rouleau, based on Leo Tolstoy's novel[3] at the Casino Theater[18] on 11 June 1953; " Tú el ángel y yo el demonio " by Maria Luz Regás and Juan Albornoz at the Versailles Theater on 6 April 1954; "Sandra" by Sixto Pondal Ríos and Carlos Olivari at the Versailles Theater on 6 April 1955; and "Ardelé (la margarita del amor) " by Jean Anouilh and translated by Maria Luz Regás at the Athenaeum Theatre on 23 May 1957.[3]
Between 1940 and 1950 she broadcast on the radio on the Teatro del Aire Palmolive with Orestes Caviglia, Pedro López Lagar, and Francisco Petrone.[9] Then beginning in the late 1950s, she appeared in television series, including El mar profundo y azul (1956), Estrellita, esa pobre campesina (1968-1969), Rolando Rivas, taxista (1972-1973), Invitación a Jamaica (1977) and Aventura '77 (1977).[21] Her last appearance on TV was in 1981 for the ATC Special Christmas 2000 with Rosa Rosen, Duilio Marzio, Luisa Vehil and Iris Marga.[9]
In the 1960s, her career began to decline and she made a suicide attempt, which was stopped by her son.[1]
She returned to the theatre and did a revival of El proceso de Mary Duggan (1965-1966), Así es la vida (1967), Canción para un crepúsculo (1968) and several television roles.[21]
In 1981, she was awarded the Grand Prize for actresses from the National Endowment for the Arts.[29] She wrote her memoirs under the title Mecha Ortiz by Mecha Ortiz. They were published in 1982.[30]
Family
Her husband, Julián Ortiz, was a farmer in Argentina. When she was 29, her husband was injured in a fall from a horse.[1] Some articles have said he became a paraplegic,[8] and others that he spent nearly 3 decades in a coma after the accident.[31] Ortiz was dedicated to him and their privacy, which in many instances escalated the mystery and speculation about her.[1] Their son, Julián, became a translator and playwright. Her brother, José, was a theatre director, and a sister, Amanda, was also an actress.
^"Miguel Faust Rocha". Acceder (in Spanish). Buenos Aires, Argentina: Ministerio de Cultura. Retrieved 28 May 2015.
^"item 52.411". Boletín Oficial de la República Argentina (in Spanish). Ed. 84 (Núm. 13.315). Buenos Aires, Argentina: República Argentina: 16825. 14 December 1938. Retrieved 20 May 2015. Mujeres. Comedia en tres actos. 102 páginas. Mecanografíadas. Versión castellana de Francisco Madrid Alier. Claire Boothe. Dada en el Teatro Smart, por la compañía de Mecha Ortiz. Buenos Aires, 1938.
^Bence, Amelia; Etchelet, Raúl (2011). La niña del umbral: Amelia Bence: memorias (in Spanish). Buenos Aires, Argentina: Corregidor. p. 52. ISBN978-9-500-51934-2.
^Soria, Claudia (Spring 2001). "Los muchachos de antes no usaban gomina: el discurso de una Buenos Aires histérica". Revista Canadiense de Estudios Hispánicos (in Spanish). 25 (3). Canada: Canadian Association of Hispanists: 519–530. JSTOR27763728.
^ abcdeMeccia, Ernesto (18 September 2009). "Mecha encendida" (in Spanish). Buenos Aires, Argentina: Página12. Retrieved 21 May 2015.
^ abcZancada, Ana Maria (16 October 2007). "La Garbo argentina" (in Spanish). Buenos Aires, Argentina: El Litoral. Retrieved 29 May 2015.
^"La rubia Mireya". ACCEDER (in Spanish). Buenos Aires, Argentina: Ministerio de Cultura. Archived from the original on 14 April 2008. Retrieved 25 May 2015.
^Pérez, Jorge (23 December 2013). "Se fue un mito, nació una leyenda" (in Spanish). Buenos Aires, Argentina: Diario El Tiempo. Archived from the original on 22 June 2015. Retrieved 21 May 2015.
^"Deshonra (1952)". Mar del Plata Filmfest (in Spanish). Mar del Plata, Argentina. Retrieved 28 May 2015.