Jaime Salvador Valls (November 4, 1901 – October 18, 1976) was a Spanish screenwriter and film director of the Golden era of Mexican cinema.
Lilia Michel (July 30, 1926 – August 10, 2011) was a Mexican television and film actress most active during the Golden Age of Mexican cinema, earning her the nickname of "the jewel" of the film era.
Rosalío Solano (August 30, 1914 – August 20, 2009) was a Mexican award-winning cinematographer of the Golden Age of Mexican cinema, perhaps best known for his work in the film Talpa; which won him the Silver Ariel for Best Cinematography of 1957.
Cinema of India | Cinema of Germany | Bronze Age | Cinema of the United Kingdom | Mexican people | Iron Age | Tamil cinema | Cinema of the United States | Age of Enlightenment | Cinema of France | Golden Gate Bridge | cinema | New Age | Mexican-American War | Viking Age | Malayalam cinema | The Age | Queens of the Stone Age | New Line Cinema | Mexican League | Golden Gloves | Golden Eagle | The Golden Girls | Mexican Revolution | Golden Globe Award | Golden Gate Park | Golden Book of Cycling | Cinema of West Bengal | Cinema of Karnataka | Stone Age |
Pedro Vargas Mata (San Miguel Allende, 29 April 1906 - Mexico City on 30 October 1989) was a Mexican singer and actor, from the golden age of Mexican cinema.
From XEJ, many talented locals were projected, who became legends of Mexican golden era cinema and music: Tin Tan, Lorenzo de Monteclaro, Charro Avitia, and Alberto Aguilera AKA Adan Luna and/or Juan Gabriel.
Among her most important films are, Dos tipos de cuidado (1953) alongside Golden Age-idols Pedro Infante and Jorge Negrete, Llamas Contra el Viento and El Niño y el Muro (1965), the film was about the segregation and violence situation in Western Europe, it was directed by Ismael Rodriguez and filmed in East Berlin, Germany.
In Mexico, one of the greatest singers of falsete was Miguel Aceves Mejía, a singer and actor in the Golden Age of Mexican cinema, known as the "Rey de Falsete", or "Falsetto King".