
Birthday: August 10, 1918
Death: June 18, 1997
José María Fernández Unsáin (10 August 1918 – 18 June 1997) was an Argentine film director, screenwriter, and playwright. He was exiled to Mexico after the 1955 Revolución Libertadora, because of his cultural relationship with Eva Perón[2] and The National Theatre or Comedy, Cervantes National Theatre (first director), and the Labour Worker Theatre of the General Confederation of Workers (CGT) (founder with others artists and directors). He migrated to Mexico in 1958 and worked on the screenplays of hundreds of films over the next several decades, including Sed de amor directed by Alfonso Corona Blake (1958); La diligencia de la muerte directed by Rogelio A. González (1959); De tal palo tal astilla directed by Miguel M. Delgado (1959); Ladrón que roba a ladrón directed by Jaime Salvador (1959); La nave de los monstruos directed by Rogelio A. González (1959);[1] and Sinful. He also directed a number of films in the 1960s and 1970s. In 1976, Fernández Unsain became the president of the newly formed SOGEM (Sociedad General de Escritores de Mexico), an organization which strives to guarantee the rights of authors. He held this post until his death in 1997.

July 27, 1951

May 13, 1959

October 12, 1961

December 29, 1966

February 15, 1962

May 21, 1964

January 01, 1968

January 01, 1965

January 22, 1960

May 06, 1964

September 24, 1970

April 16, 1970

June 07, 1963

December 06, 1973

December 28, 1967

December 25, 1963

August 22, 1974

May 21, 1970

December 24, 1970

January 18, 1979

November 03, 1952

December 25, 1962

March 01, 1962

July 16, 1970

February 13, 1969

January 01, 1968

January 02, 1967

October 31, 1963

July 03, 1968

March 03, 1965

June 21, 1965

February 03, 1964

June 21, 1966

August 22, 1974

February 16, 1967

December 09, 1965

August 07, 1963

June 21, 1962

May 02, 1962

April 05, 1962

November 30, 1961

November 30, 1961

October 04, 1962

February 02, 1968

December 21, 1960

September 10, 1964

December 01, 2022

November 19, 1975

May 20, 1960

April 25, 1962

May 14, 1975

June 25, 1964

January 01, 1974

December 25, 1960

June 13, 1952

April 06, 1967

April 02, 1964

June 19, 1960

September 02, 1965

September 14, 1967

September 18, 1958

September 10, 1969

July 02, 1968

May 22, 1961

December 08, 1967

May 16, 1968

April 09, 1964

May 02, 1958

September 05, 1957

August 18, 1957

November 04, 1971

April 23, 1973

September 19, 1974

February 02, 1970

December 09, 1954

December 03, 1964

September 24, 1964

November 23, 1950

June 15, 1973

July 18, 1963

October 31, 1963

October 12, 1962

December 11, 1969

March 22, 1963

February 10, 1966

February 03, 1966

August 29, 1959

April 15, 1965

July 14, 1966