Narciso Ibáñez Menta


Narciso Ibáñez Menta was a Spanish theatre, film, and television actor.

Biography

Born in Langreo, Asturias, Spain, Ibáñez Menta made his first stage appearance in 1919 at the Teatro La Comedia of Buenos Aires. He worked in both theatre and film in Argentina until 1964, when he returned to Spain and developed a successful television career. In both Argentina and Spain, he was particularly prominent in suspense and horror subjects.
He married the Argentine actress Pepita Serrador, a member of a famous theatre family. In 1935 they had a son, Narciso Ibáñez Serrador, who became a director, writer and actor, and directed the Spanish television series Historias para no dormir, El Televisor and El fin empezó ayer in which his father starred.
Films featuring Ibáñez Menta included Historia de crímenes, La Bestia debe morir, Tres citas con el destino, Obras maestras del terror, Shoot Twice, La saga de los Drácula, Los muchachos de antes no usaban arsénico, Viaje al más allá, Sal gorda, and Más allá de la muerte.
His last film role was in ¡Qué vecinos tan animales!.
His health deteriorated little by little, in 1996 he was implanted with a pacemaker and spent the last few years prostrate in bed. He died on May 15, 2004 at the Hospital de Madrid when he was 91 years old.
It was incinerated in the Cemetery of La Almudena in Madrid on May 16, 2004.
In 2008, Argentine cinema director Gustavo Leonel Mendoza exhibited a documentary about Ibañez Menta's life, titled Nadie inquietó más. In 2010, Argentine writers Leandro D'Ambrosio and Marcelo Rodríguez aka "Gillespi" published a biography of the actor, El artesano del miedo .

Filmography

Films