Carlos Graham
Carlos Aganza Graham - born in Hermosillo, Sonora (June 16, 1907 – April 18, 1970) was a Mexican actor (known as Carlos Aganza), screenwriter, broadcaster, and poet of Spanish and Scottish descent. He was known as the "Mexican Errol Flynn" during Mexico’s Época Dorada del Cine under the name Carlos Aganza. In the early 1940s, he was an announcer at Radio Station XECL in Mexicali, Baja California. In 1944, Graham relocated to the United States, where he became the pioneer of Spanish-language radio in the San Francisco Bay Area from the late 1940s – late 1960s. His program was on radio station KLOK. He was the host of the popular radio program *Serenata Nocturnal* for many years and the first Spanish-language television news anchor in Northern California. He was the uncle of the late renowned sculptor Robert Graham. He died in Santa Clara, California.
Filmography
- El Misterio del Rostro Palido (1935) [Horror; 90 minutes; Directed by Juan Bustillo Oro] – as a young Indian
- Sor Juana Ines de la Cruz (1935) [82 minutes; Directed by Ramon Peon]
- La Cucaracha Mexicana (1936; in color) [Directed by Juan Jose Segura] – a featured performer
- Mujeres de hoy (1936) [Directed by Ramon Peon] – as Ramoncito Beltran
- El Bastardo (1937) [Directed by Ramon Peon]
- Don Juan Tenorio (1937) [Directed by Rene Cardona] – as Don Rafael de Avellaneda
- Alla en el Rancho Chico (1938) [Comedy; Directed by Rene Cardona] – Story by Carlos Aganza and Carlos Amador
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