Carlos Villarías

Carlos Villarías (7 July 1892 – 27 April 1976) was a Spanish actor who was born in Córdoba, Spain and died in California, USA. His most famous role is in the title role of the Spanish language version of Dracula (1931), with Barry Norton and Lupita Tovar filmed at night on the same sets as the English language version starring Bela Lugosi. Description above from the Wikipedia article Carlos Villarías, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

Cast

When Love Laughs

Common Clay

The Last of the Vargas

Estrellados

(Jack Collier)

Decameron Nights

The California Trail

(Gov. Carlos Moreno (as Carlos Villar))

The Men in Her Life

(Bray - abogado defenser)

Nostradamus

(Nostradamus)

The Many Faces of Dracula

(Dracula (archive footage))

Qué hombre tan simpático

(Don Procopio)

Flirting with Fate

(Police Captain)

The Devil of the Sea

(Jose)

Zorina

An Old Spanish Onion

Escape to Paradise

(Gonzales)

Frontiers of '49

(Padre)

Bold Love

Hold Back the Dawn

(Mexican Judge (uncredited))

Mystery of the Ghastly Face

(Dr. Galdino Forti)

El museo del crimen

(Detective)

Mis dos amores

(Don Antonio Santiago)

Los hijos mandan

The Super Madman

(Dr. Dienys)

¡Ora Ponciano!

(Don Luis Martínez del Arco)

Gran Hotel

(Don Pepe)

María Magdalena, pecadora de Magdala

(Pedro)

The Kneeling Goddess

Ave sin rumbo

(Tiburcio Moreno)

The Other

(Lic. Félix Mendoza)

Starlight Over Texas

(Governor Ruiz)

Meet the Wildcat

(Workman)

The Barracks

(Tabernero)

La mujer legítima

(Pedro)

Tropic Holiday

(Commandante (uncredited))

Drácula

(Count Drácula)

Reina de reinas: La Virgen María

La vida íntima de Marco Antonio y Cleopatra

(Septimio)

California Frontier

(Don Pedro Cantova (as Carlos Villarios))

You Have to Marry the Prince

(Counsellor)

Black Jack

An Adventure in the Night

(Don Adolfo)

El hombre de la máscara de hierro

(Colbert)

The Road to 'Dracula'

(Self (archive footage))

Em Nar, la ciudad de fuego

(Sr. Paúl)

Dos noches

(General Sánchez del Valle)

Verbena trágica

(Manuel)

The Bronze Screen: 100 Years of the Latino Image in American Cinema