Hortensia Arnaud (stage name: Francinette; July 1, 1901 - ?) was a pioneering Argentine dancer, vedette, and actress of film and stage. Arnaud made significant incursions during the heyday of cinematography and revue theater. Above all, she was a pioneer bataclana and premier dancer in Buenos Aires during the 1920s and 1930s.
Career
Born in Buenos Aires, Argentina, from a very young age, Arnaud began to study classical dance. When she began working as a dancer, she adopted the name "Francinette". In her shows, she wore her hair long, and she caused a sensation by dancing without tights and with socks.[1]
An exclusive figure of the Teatro Porteño, she shone in front of Consuelo Velázquez, Ida Lamas, and Ada Falcón, and with actors of the stature of Alfredo Camiña and León Zárate. She worked with writers such as Ivo Pelay, Manuel Romero, and Luis Bayón Herrera.[2] In 1927, while in Chile, she gave an interview, pointing out that she had been acting in theater for nearly six years, her first professional steps having been taken at the Teatro Colón in Buenos Aires. She came to Chile with the Méndez Company and later changed to another, which bore her name (to attract an audience, as she was not the owner), which performed in Valparaíso, at the Victoria Theater. After a health problem, due to overwork, Arnaud returned to Buenos Aires with her mother and started a theater company there.[a]
Arnaud was part of the first summer show that premiered at the Teatro Lola Membrives, with the Gran Compañía de Grandes Revistas y Vaudevilles, directed by Carlos Pibernat, Joaquín Pibernat, and Sergio Allen. She worked alongside figures with deep roots in the bataclan such as Tito Lusiardo, Adriana Delhort, and Tita Merello.[4] Arnaud also performed abroad such as in Madrid, Spain at the Círculo de Bellas Artes in 1928.[5]
She died in Buenos Aires on an unknown date.
Filmography
1941: La quinta calumnia, with Alí Salem de Baraja and Mario Baroffio
Theatre
1927: El Hotel de los enamorados, with la Gran Compañía Nacional de Vaudevilles Musicales, including Lucía Montalvo, Héctor Calcaño, Soledad León, Viviana Díaz de Mendoza, Alicia Vignoli, and Ángela Pasquett
1931: Ko Ko Ro Ko with Roberto García Ramos, Carlos Casaravilla, Francisco Chiarello, and Raquel Suárez
Judía, with Dora Gález, Carmen Lamas, Encarnación Fernández, and Leopoldo Simari