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Ángel Tavira Maldonado, star of “The Violin,” dies

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Ángel Tavira Maldonado starred in only one movie, but it’s one that many people will remember for a long time.

The Mexican regional musician whose stirring debut acting performance in ‘El Violin’ (‘The Violin’) moved audiences and won critical acclaim, including a best actor award at the 2006 Cannes Film Festival, died Monday in a Mexico City hospital. He was 83.

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He died of kidney problems, a representative of the company that co-produced ‘El Violin’ told the Associated Press.

A violinist and composer of son calentano, a spry, soulful style of music native to the Tierra Caliente (‘Hot Lands’) region that straddles the Mexican states of Guerrero and Michoacan, Tavira never had acted before director Francisco Vargas Quevedo cast him as the main character in ‘El Violin.’

In the movie, he played Don Plutarco Hidalgo, a farmer and fiddle player secretly supporting a guerrilla peasant revolt against the Mexican government. The movie was widely regarded in Mexico as one of the most socially trenchant films to be made in recent years.

Numerous critics singled out Tavira’s performance as the stoic, taciturn, one-handed musician for its authenticity and persuasiveness. A reviewer for the Guardian of London described Tavira as ‘a natural star of the screen.’

-- Reed Johnson in Los Angeles

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