As we know most of the Euro-westerns were co-productions
from Italy, Spain, Germany
and France
which incorporated British and American actors to gain a worldwide audience.
The films were shot silent and then dubbed into the various languages where
they were sold for distribution. That means Italian, Spanish, German, French
and English voice actors were hired to dub the films. Even actors from the
countries where the film was to be shown were often dubbed by voice actors for
various reasons such as the actors were already busy making another film, they
wanted to paid additional salaries for dubbing their voices, the actor’s voice
didn’t fit the character they were playing, accidents to the actors and in some
cases even death before the film could be dubbed.
I’ll list a Euro-western and the (I) Italian, (S) Spanish,
(G) German and (F) French, (E) English voices that I can find and once in a
while a bio on a specific voice actor as in Europe
these actors are as well-known as the actors they voiced.
Today we’ll cover “Too Much Gold for One Gringo”
[(I) Italian, (S) Spanish, (G) German, (F) French, (E)
English]
Trash Benson –
Anthony Steffen (I) Anthony Steffen, (S) Rogelio Hernández
Paco – Daniel Martin
(I) ?, (S) Ricardo Solans
Jonathan Carver -
Manuel Guitián (I) ?, (S) Luis Posada Mendoza
Preacher - Indio González (I) ?,
(S) Antonio Fernández
Jed Spotless -
Ricardo Moyán (I) ?, (S) César Ojinaga
Maria - Tanya
Alvorado (I) ?, (S) Tanya Alvorado
Ricardo Solans (1939 -
)
Ricardo Solans was born in Barcelona, Spain
on September 8, 1939. He debuted in the theater with Merecedes Sampietro in
Tennessee Williams “The Crystal Zoo”. He made his mark in dubbing with his
Spanish voice for Dustin Hoffman in 1967’s “The Graduate”. He went on to be the usual voice in Spanish of: Robert De Niro, Silverster Stallone,
Al Pacino, Danny DeVito, John Hurt, Richard Gere, Derek Jacobi, Jean-Louis
Trintignant, Bill Murray, Jeremy Irons, Harvey Keitel, Jon Voight, Mickey
Rourke. He was also the voice of the Big Bad
Wolf in the Spanish version of Disney's short film “The Three Little Pigs”. In 1989,
he doubled Michael Keaton in director Tim Burton's blockbuster commercial hit
“Batman”.
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