
Orihuela, Alicante, Spain
José Marco Davó (Orihuela, Alicante, May 10, 1895 - Torrevieja, Alicante, September 27, 1974) was a Spanish actor. His first contact with the world of cinema occurred in the mid-1930s with two supporting roles in adaptations of Carlos Arniches' works for the cinema: É My Man (1934), directed by Benito Perojo, and Don Quintin, la amargao (1935) , directed by Luis Buñuel and Luis Marquina. After the conclusion of the Civil War and throughout the 1940s, focused on his theatrical vocation, he founded his own company and worked with Rafael López Somoza and Carlos Garriga, with whom he debuted works of his own and other writings in collaboration with Luis Tejedor and José Alfayate. He returns to the cinema with the film Alba of America (1951), followed by La Guerra de Dios (1953) and El Mayor de Zalamea (1954). In 1955 he participated in Marcelino Pão e Vinho and, during the next fifteen years, he became a habitual secondary actor in Spanish cinematographic productions, until reaching a hundred films. From Wikipedia (es), the free encyclopedia

as El mal ladrón

as Cruz's attacker #3
2018

as Pascual
1955

as El mal ladrón
1959

as Don Román
1958

as Sr. Ferreira
1967

1958

as Director Banco Metropolitano
1959

as Gobernador
1962

as Don Melquiades
1969

as Don Ramón
1961

as Don Rufino
1957

as Man #1
1958
as Don Melquiades
1969

1971

as Juan José
1969

as Don Melquiades
1969

1969

as Sr. Ferreira
1967

as Don Julián
1966

as Don Felipe (as Marco Davó)
1966

as Manolo
1965

as Don Emilio (as Marco Davo)
1965

1965

as Bembo Altieri
1964

as Prestamista
1964

as Don Francisco
1964

as Rafrond
1964

as Don Fernando
1963

as Gobernador
1962

as Don Pedro
1962

as Don Lorenzo
1962

as Gobernador
1962

as Doctor
1962

as Señor Costa
1962

as Don Ramón
1961

as Dr. Luis Medina
1961

1961