Known for Acting
Enrique Lizalde Chávez (9 January 1937 – 3 June 2013), better wknown simply as Enrique Lizalde, was a Mexicon actor of film, theatre, and television, noted for his distinctive voice and for playing leading-man roles from the 1960s onward. He originated the character Juan del Diablo in Corazón salvaje and later appeared in its 1990s remake in a different role. Born in Tepic, Nayarit, he pursued university studies in literature before turning to acting. He was the brother of Eduardo Lizalde and a cousin of Óscar Chávez. Lizalde began his screen career in the early 1960s and became a prominent presence in Mexican cinema; in popular accounts of the period he was grouped with Joaquín Cordero and Julio Alemán as part of a generation of high-profile leading men. He also worked extensively in theatre and is credited as a founder of the Sindicato de Actores Independientes. He married actress Tita Grieg in 1965. He died in Mexico City at age 76; biographies commonly report liver cancer as the cause of death. His remains were cremated and placed at Panteón Jardín.
1968
as Pedro
1971
as Gabriel
1969
as Luis Piñeyro
1965
as Jorge Iglesias
1973
1968
as Lisardo
1979
as Anfitrión de la fiesta
1973
as Prior
1969
as Narrator
1967
as Víctor Medina
1981
1970
as Demetrio de Santelmo
1970
as Julio
1968
as Fernando Chavero
1969
as Mario Lozano
1974
1981
as Leonardo
1967
1967
as Raúl
1970