Margalida Castro

Margalida Castro

1943-11-19 San Gil, Colombia Female 20 Known Credits

Biography

Maria Margalida Castro Rueda (San Gil, Santander, November 19, 1941 - Bogotá, December 19, 2024) was a Colombian actress who stood out for her appearances in numerous Colombian soap operas, films and plays. In 2015 she was awarded the Víctor Nieto Lifetime Achievement Award. Margalida Castro grew up in the city of Bogotá. Coming from a family from Santander, her father was a renowned lawyer and her mother was a governess. She studied at the Colegio Departamental de la Merced where she deepened her knowledge of music. She entered the National University of Colombia to study architecture; she also studied flute and was part of the university orchestra. She never thought of becoming an actress until she was called to play the flute in a children's play. In that play, future actors and directors such as Pepe Sánchez (director), Vicky Hernández and Álvaro Ruiz Zúñiga were already participating. In these plays she would meet her future husband, the playwright Carlos Perozzo. From that moment on, Margalida Castro left her studies to devote herself full time to her acting career.5 She received a scholarship from the French government to study drama. Her debut in Colombian television was in 1967, in the series La tercera palabra, directed by Bernardo Romero Lozano. Since then she appeared in dozens of plays, Colombian soap operas and films. Margalida passed away on December 19, 2024 due to an aggressive cancer. The news was announced by Claudia Serrato, her manager, through her official Instagram account.

Personal Info

Gender

Female

Birthday

1943-11-19

Place of Birth

San Gil, Colombia

Known Credits

20

Known For

Acting

Also Known As

Margalida Castro

Photos

Margalida Castro Photo

Tagged Images

No tagged images available.

Known For Movies

Known For TV Shows

Movie Credits

TV Credits

Heart's Decree

2016

Astrid (131 episodes)

La Venganza

2002

Concepcion Fernandez (127 episodes)

Digging for Love

2016

Adela de Otero (79 episodes)

Dr. Mata

2014

Bertha Montenegro de Matallana (58 episodes)

I love Paquita Gallego

1998

Aunt Chavela (146 episodes)

Mujeres asesinas

2007

(1 episodes)

Ruido Capital

2020

Abue (6 episodes)

María Bonita

1995

Libia Santos Yarsagaray de Carvajales (92 episodes)

Rauzán

2000

Heraclia de Santiño (1 episodes)

Sin límites

1998

(1 episodes)

Mi pequeña mamá

2002

Gertrudís (1 episodes)

La mujer doble

1992

La Bruja Renata, Madre de Marina (1 episodes)

Movie Production Credits

No movie production credits available.

TV Production Credits

No TV production credits available.