[These daily posts will cover little known actors or people that have appeared in more recent films and TV series. Various degrees of information that I was able to find will be given and anything that you can add would be appreciated.]
Sergio Dore was a distinguished character actor born in Ciego De Avila, Chile on November 11, 1916. He had his own theatre company and his own cop show on Spanish TV. Dore usually played respectable types (judges, senior policemen, doctors…), an important exception being his drunken sheriff in Juan Bosch’s “Dallas” (1975), where he was barely recognizable except for the nose. He had at least two more Spaghetti western roles: an uncredited appearance as a military judge in Jaime Jesús Balcázar’s “Four Dollars of Vengeance” (1965) and (in the Spanish version, that is) the dubbed voice of the cart driver (Manuel Bronchud) who is waylaid by Miller’s men towards the beginning of Bosch’s “Dig Your Grave, Friend… Sabata’s Coming” (1971).
Sergio Dore also did some voice dubbing on at least twenty films and was also a writer on three films between 1958 and 1980 and directed one Cuban TV film episode for “El derecho de nacer” in 1958.
As mentioned above Sergio Dore appeared in two Spaghetti westerns: “Cuatro dólares de venganza” ($4.00 of Revenge” as a tribunal president in 1966 and “Il mio nome è Scopone e faccio sempre cappotto” (Dallas) as the Brownville Sheriff in 1972.
DORE, Sergio (Sergio Ramon Doré)
[11/11/1916, Ciego De Avila, Cuba – 2/27/1997, Miami, Florida, U.S.A.] –
theater, film, TV, voice actor, married to Mirta Maria Verdeja [1930-2019]
(1943-1997) father of Diana Kay Dore [1948-
], Jorge Antonio Dore [1949- ].
$4.00 of Revenge – 1966 (tribunal judge)
Dig Your Grave Friend... Sabata's Coming – 1971 [Italian
voice of Manuel Bronchud]
Dallas – 1972 (Brownville Sheriff)

No comments:
Post a Comment