新規更新September 13, 2018 at 11:55AM
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Eva Limiñana
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[[File:EvaLiminana1917.png|thumb|Eva Limiñana, from a 1917 publication.]]
[[File:EvaLiminana.jpg|thumb|Eva Limiñana as a student, from a 1911 publication.]]
'''Eva Limiñana''' (December 22, 1895 – September 27, 1953), sometimes credited as '''La Duquesa Olga''', was a pianist, screenwriter, and filmmaker, born in Argentina and educated in Chile.
==Early life==
Eva Limiñana Salaverri was born in [[Gualeguaychú]], [[Entre Ríos]], Argentina and raised in Chile. Her mother was Maria Limiñana.<ref>[https://ift.tt/2xchaRI "Young Pianist Here from South America"] ''San Francisco Chronicle'' (November 12, 1916): 23. via [[Newspapers.com]]</ref> She studied piano at the Santiago Conservatory of Music, with further studies in Berlin with [[Martin Krause]], and (when [[World War I]] began)<ref>[https://ift.tt/2QnY5Vr "South Americans Study Here"] ''Musical America'' (December 30, 1916): 35.</ref> in New York with [[Teresa Carreño]].<ref name="Recital">[https://ift.tt/2xaA638 "Eva Liminana to Give New York Recital"] ''Musical Courier'' (September 2, 1920): 30.</ref><ref name="Talented">[https://ift.tt/2QpR8TG "Talented Young Pianist in New York"] ''The South American'' (March 1917): 26.</ref>
==Career==
Limiñana performed in New York as a pianist in 1917,<ref name="Talented" /><ref>[https://ift.tt/2xaA77c "Eva Liminana's Debut"] ''Musical America'' (January 20, 1917): 40.</ref> 1919,<ref>[https://ift.tt/2QpQoxS "New Music from Spain"] ''New York Times'' (December 15, 1919): 15.</ref> and 1920.<ref name="Recital" /> Through the 1920s she played and recorded with Orquesta Criolla Argentina. In 1931 she made several musical recordings providing piano accompaniment for her husband, singer [[José Bohr]].<ref>Discography of American Historical Recordings, s.v. [[https://adp.library.ucsb.edu/index.php/talent/detail/81828/Liminana_Eva_instrumentalist_piano|"Eva Liminana (instrumentalist: piano)"]].</ref> She also wrote songs with Bohr.<ref>Michael R. Pitts, [https://ift.tt/2x6uLtI ''Poverty Row Studios, 1929-1940: An Illustrated History of 55 Independent Film Companies, with a Filmography for Each''] (McFarland 2005): 342. </ref>
Limiñana wrote eight films: ''La sangre manda'' (1933), ''¿Quién mató a Eva?'' (1934), ''Thy Son'' (1935), ''[[Luponini from Chicago]]'' (1935), ''Por mis pistolas'' (1938), ''Una luz en mi camino'' (1939), ''Herencia macabra'' (1940). She wrote and produced all of these films in Mexico, with [[José Bohr]], who also starred and directed. She was credited as "La Duquesa Olga".<ref>Ana M. López, [https://ift.tt/2QpQp4U "Before Exploitation: Three Men of Cinema in Mexico"] in Victoria Ruétalo, Dolores Tierney, eds., ''Latsploitation, Exploitation Cinemas, and Latin America'' (Routledge 2009): 21-24. </ref> She also produced ''Marihuana (El monstruo verde)'' (1936) and ''Such is Woman'' (1936) with him. Their films are described by a recent film historian as "disconcerting, horrifying, chaotic, extravagant, baroque, and confusing".<ref>Federico Dávalos Orozco, [https://ift.tt/2x93J56 "The Birth of the Film Industry and the Emergence of Sound"] in Joanne Hershfield, David R. Maciel, eds., ''Mexico's Cinema: A Century of Film and Filmmakers'' (Rowman & Littlefield 1999): 28. </ref>
In 1942, after the couple divorced, she wrote, directed, and produced her only film without Bohr, ''Mi lupe y mi caballo'' (1944).<ref>Annette Kuhn, Susannah Radstone, eds., [https://ift.tt/2QpRauM ''The Women's Companion to International Film''] (University of California Press 1994): 263. </ref> After that, she retired from filmmaking.<ref>Elissa J. Rashkin, [https://ift.tt/2x9MEaX ''Women Filmmakers in Mexico: The Country of Which We Dream''] (University of Texas Press 2000). </ref>
==Personal life==
Eva Limiñana married German-born filmmaker and composer José Bohr (1901-1994) in 1925. She died in 1953, in [[Mexico City]], aged 57 years.
==References==
==External links==
[[Category:1895 births]]
[[Category:1953 deaths]]
[[Category:Women screenwriters]]
[[Category:Pianists]]
[[File:EvaLiminana.jpg|thumb|Eva Limiñana as a student, from a 1911 publication.]]
'''Eva Limiñana''' (December 22, 1895 – September 27, 1953), sometimes credited as '''La Duquesa Olga''', was a pianist, screenwriter, and filmmaker, born in Argentina and educated in Chile.
==Early life==
Eva Limiñana Salaverri was born in [[Gualeguaychú]], [[Entre Ríos]], Argentina and raised in Chile. Her mother was Maria Limiñana.<ref>[https://ift.tt/2xchaRI "Young Pianist Here from South America"] ''San Francisco Chronicle'' (November 12, 1916): 23. via [[Newspapers.com]]</ref> She studied piano at the Santiago Conservatory of Music, with further studies in Berlin with [[Martin Krause]], and (when [[World War I]] began)<ref>[https://ift.tt/2QnY5Vr "South Americans Study Here"] ''Musical America'' (December 30, 1916): 35.</ref> in New York with [[Teresa Carreño]].<ref name="Recital">[https://ift.tt/2xaA638 "Eva Liminana to Give New York Recital"] ''Musical Courier'' (September 2, 1920): 30.</ref><ref name="Talented">[https://ift.tt/2QpR8TG "Talented Young Pianist in New York"] ''The South American'' (March 1917): 26.</ref>
==Career==
Limiñana performed in New York as a pianist in 1917,<ref name="Talented" /><ref>[https://ift.tt/2xaA77c "Eva Liminana's Debut"] ''Musical America'' (January 20, 1917): 40.</ref> 1919,<ref>[https://ift.tt/2QpQoxS "New Music from Spain"] ''New York Times'' (December 15, 1919): 15.</ref> and 1920.<ref name="Recital" /> Through the 1920s she played and recorded with Orquesta Criolla Argentina. In 1931 she made several musical recordings providing piano accompaniment for her husband, singer [[José Bohr]].<ref>Discography of American Historical Recordings, s.v. [[https://adp.library.ucsb.edu/index.php/talent/detail/81828/Liminana_Eva_instrumentalist_piano|"Eva Liminana (instrumentalist: piano)"]].</ref> She also wrote songs with Bohr.<ref>Michael R. Pitts, [https://ift.tt/2x6uLtI ''Poverty Row Studios, 1929-1940: An Illustrated History of 55 Independent Film Companies, with a Filmography for Each''] (McFarland 2005): 342. </ref>
Limiñana wrote eight films: ''La sangre manda'' (1933), ''¿Quién mató a Eva?'' (1934), ''Thy Son'' (1935), ''[[Luponini from Chicago]]'' (1935), ''Por mis pistolas'' (1938), ''Una luz en mi camino'' (1939), ''Herencia macabra'' (1940). She wrote and produced all of these films in Mexico, with [[José Bohr]], who also starred and directed. She was credited as "La Duquesa Olga".<ref>Ana M. López, [https://ift.tt/2QpQp4U "Before Exploitation: Three Men of Cinema in Mexico"] in Victoria Ruétalo, Dolores Tierney, eds., ''Latsploitation, Exploitation Cinemas, and Latin America'' (Routledge 2009): 21-24. </ref> She also produced ''Marihuana (El monstruo verde)'' (1936) and ''Such is Woman'' (1936) with him. Their films are described by a recent film historian as "disconcerting, horrifying, chaotic, extravagant, baroque, and confusing".<ref>Federico Dávalos Orozco, [https://ift.tt/2x93J56 "The Birth of the Film Industry and the Emergence of Sound"] in Joanne Hershfield, David R. Maciel, eds., ''Mexico's Cinema: A Century of Film and Filmmakers'' (Rowman & Littlefield 1999): 28. </ref>
In 1942, after the couple divorced, she wrote, directed, and produced her only film without Bohr, ''Mi lupe y mi caballo'' (1944).<ref>Annette Kuhn, Susannah Radstone, eds., [https://ift.tt/2QpRauM ''The Women's Companion to International Film''] (University of California Press 1994): 263. </ref> After that, she retired from filmmaking.<ref>Elissa J. Rashkin, [https://ift.tt/2x9MEaX ''Women Filmmakers in Mexico: The Country of Which We Dream''] (University of Texas Press 2000). </ref>
==Personal life==
Eva Limiñana married German-born filmmaker and composer José Bohr (1901-1994) in 1925. She died in 1953, in [[Mexico City]], aged 57 years.
==References==
==External links==
[[Category:1895 births]]
[[Category:1953 deaths]]
[[Category:Women screenwriters]]
[[Category:Pianists]]
https://ift.tt/2QpRbyQ