All MoviesTV ShowsPeopleDiscover

Browse By Genre

ActionAdventureAnimationComedyCrimeDocumentaryDramaFamilyFantasyHistoryHorrorMusicMysteryRomanceScience FictionTV MovieThrillerWarWestern
NextFlixCinematic Explorer

Gigí Ruá

Gigí Ruá profile
Known For: Acting
Birthday: 1955-03-10
Place of Birth: Comodoro Rivadavia, Argentina
Popularity: 0.1

Biography

Gigí Ruá (Gigí Vila Rúa) (Comodoro Rivadavia, March 10, 1955) is an Argentinean actress. He began his career as a model and mannequin due to his beautiful face, his huge green eyes and his slender figure. In the mid-seventies he began to work in television, standing out in cycles of Carlos Lozano Dana and Alma Bressán. In the Eighties its popularity continued in ascent, being the favorite of producers and directors of the time to interpret different roles of ingenuous women, evil or romantic heroines in the cinema, the television and the theater. In 1979 he represented Lucy in the theatrical success Dracula, directed by Sergio Renán and in 1981 he starred Boeng-Boeing in the Provincial theater of Mar del Plata with Osvaldo Miranda, Claudio García Satur and Paulina Singerman. At the end of the decade of 1980 and in full success of his career he had a son and took refuge in Uruguay for a few years. He returned in the early nineties excelling in roles increasingly committed. (Wikipedia translate)

Known For Filmography

Killer Women poster

Killer Women

2005
Milady, la historia continúa poster

Milady, la historia continúa

1997
Primicias poster

Primicias

2000
No Photo

La ley del amor

2006
Me olvidé de vivir poster

Me olvidé de vivir

1980
Muerte dudosa poster

Muerte dudosa

1994
High Class Affair poster

High Class Affair

1985
Tropic Pathway poster

Tropic Pathway

2005
Sin querer, queriendo poster

Sin querer, queriendo

1985
Contragolpe poster

Contragolpe

1979
The great adventure poster

The great adventure

1974
The Patagonic Teacher poster

The Patagonic Teacher

1970
Fisherman poster

Fisherman

2018
Los tigres de la memoria poster

Los tigres de la memoria

1984