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  1. Raúl de la Torre (19 February 1938, in Zárate – 19 March 2010, in Buenos Aires) was an Argentine film director screenwriter and film producer. He was nominated for a Palme d'Or at the 1986 Cannes Film Festival for the film Pobre mariposa .

  2. Raúl de la Torre was born on 19 February 1938 in Zárate, Buenos Aires, Argentina. He was a director and writer, known for Poor Butterfly (1986), El infierno tan temido (1980) and Juan Lamaglia y señora (1970). He died on 19 March 2010 in Buenos Aires, Argentina.

    • Director, Writer, Composer
    • February 19, 1938
    • Raúl de la Torre
    • March 19, 2010
  3. Raúl de la Torre (19 de febrero de 1938 – 19 de marzo de 2010) [1] fue un guionista y director de cine argentino. Obtuvo seis premios internacionales.

  4. May 8, 1986 · Poor Butterfly: Directed by Raúl de la Torre. With Graciela Borges, Lautaro Murúa, Pepe Soriano, Víctor Laplace. In May of 1945, the news of the fall of Berlin spread to Buenos Aires. Clara is the daughter of a socialist leader named Boris who has died unexpectedly.

    • (117)
    • Drama
    • Raúl de la Torre
    • 1986-05-08
    • Early Life and Education
    • Exile; Foundation of The Apra
    • 1931 Presidential Election
    • Presidency of Luis Miguel Sánchez Cerro and The Great Clandestinity
    • Presidency of José Luis Bustamante Y Rivero
    • Political Asylum Case and Thirty Years of Aprismo
    • The Coexistence
    • Final Presidential Bids and First Presidency of Fernando Belaúnde
    • Later Life and Constituent Assembly
    • Death

    Víctor Raúl Haya de la Torre was born in the northern Peruvian city of Trujillo on February 22, 1895. He was the son of Raúl Edmundo Haya y de Cárdenas, also from Trujillo, and Zoila Victoria de la Torre y de Cárdenas, who were also cousins. His birth is commemorated as Fraternity Day every February 22 by the Peruvian Aprista Party. Haya studied hi...

    In Panama, Haya stayed for two weeks, before heading to Cuba. From there he went to Mexico, invited by José Vasconcelos, then Secretary of Public Education, to collaborate as his secretary. He arrived in Mexico City on November 16, 1923. He then made contact with the Mexican Revolution, appreciating the socio-economic changes that took place in tha...

    After having lived in exile as a consequence of his fight against the Leguía administration, Haya de la Torre returned to Peru, having been nominated as presidential candidate for the 1931 general election with the newly founded Peruvian Aprista Party. He first arrived in Talara (July 12, 1931), and was received in his hometown (July 25), and final...

    The Sánchez Cerro government was authoritarian and repressive. Haya de la Torre was subsequently arrested, and the APRA congressional representation was ousted in January 1932, prompting popular protests across the country. In the city of Trujillo, a failed APRA armed uprising took place that led to clashes between the APRA members and the Armed Fo...

    In 1945, the Peruvian Aprista Party returned to legality by participating in the coalition of the National Democratic Front (FDN). Haya de la Torre agreed to launch jurist José Luis Bustamante y Riveroas the presidential nominee for FDN. On May 20, 1945, Haya reappeared in public, after ten years in hiding, on the occasion in which he delivered his...

    Haya de la Torre was persecuted and Bustamante deported. Haya took refuge in the Colombianembassy in Lima where he requested political asylum for sixty-three months since the Odría administration refused to grant the safe-conduct to leave the country, a situation that became an important reference case in international law. In 1954, Haya was author...

    In 1956, the three main presidential candidates assured the return to legality of the APRA party; by virtue of this offer, Haya de la Torre initially supported businessman Hernando de Lavalle, and later Manuel Prado Ugarteche, a symbol of economic power, who, thanks to this support, was successful. Peru would oversee a mega-coalition that buttresse...

    1962 presidential election

    In the 1962 general elections, Haya returned to Peru to launch his second presidential bid with the Peruvian Aprista Party nomination under "Democratic Alliance", which grouped his party with the Pradista Democratic Movement – which represented the largest sectors of power economic-. Haya obtained 33% of the popular vote, compared to the 32% for newcomer Fernando Belaúnde of the reformist Popular Action and 29% for former president Manuel A. Odría of the Odriist National Union. As he did not...

    1963 presidential election

    In 1963, the Military Junta led by Nicolás Lindley López convened new elections for June of that year. The three main presidential nominees from the void 1962 election took over the polls once again. Haya was nominated for a third time to presidency with the Peruvian Aprista Party, while Fernando Belaúnde ran in coalition with Popular Action and the Christian Democrat Party, the latter led by Héctor Cornejo Chávez. The exit polls gave a sound victory for Fernando Belaúnde with 36% of the popu...

    APRA-UNO Coalition

    During the years of the Belaúnde administration, Haya and his party remained in opposition alongside Manuel Odría, forming the APRA-UNO coalition, which by number controlled both houses of Congress and strongly opposed Popular Action. They opposed the measures proposed by the government, causing the first agrarian reform law to have a minimum scope: Congress declared the 'efficient' farms dedicated to export crops unaffected, decided that the damages in the backward areas were supervised by a...

    Armed Forces Revolutionary Government

    After the establishment of the military government of Juan Velasco Alvarado, the political parties – the Peruvian Aprista Partyamong them – were banned and their popular bases persecuted. However, in 1970, on Fraternity Day, Haya claimed the intellectual paternity of the reforms carried out by the military, protesting that they did not recognize the intellectual debt they owed him: "We must be dissatisfied because it is not the way, quickly and furtively, to carry these ideas forward and to h...

    Constituent Assembly

    Haya led the popular pressure exerted against the Francisco Morales-Bermúdez administration for the military to return to their barracks and restore democracy. A Constituent Assembly was ultimately convened on July 28, 1978, after elections on June 18, 1978. The Aprista Party attained 37 seats, including Haya, who was elected with over one million votes nationally. Due for having the highest vote count, he was unanimously elected to preside over the Constituent Assembly on July 28, 1978. In a...

    On July 12, 1979, Haya signed the Constitution on his deathbed. Suffering from lung cancer, Haya died on August 2, 1979, in Mercedes Villa, his home located in the Ate District. On his deathbed he was awarded the Order of the Sun of Peru, in the rank of Grand Cross. At the moment of his death, several party leaders were present, including Luis Albe...

  5. Mar 19, 2010 · Raúl de la Torre nació el 19 de febrero de 1938 en Zárate. Cursó la escuela secundaria en el Colegio Nacional de La Plata y luego continuó su formación en la Escuela Nacional de Bellas Artes ...

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