
Gerardo de Leon
Known For
Directing
Birthday
September 12, 1913
Day of Death
July 25, 1981 (67 years old)
Place of Birth
Manila, Philippines
Gerardo de Leon
Biography
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Gerardo de León (September 12, 1913 - July 25, 1981) was a Filipino actor turned film director, who made his acting debut in the 1934 movie Ang Dangal. De León, who was born as Gerardo Ilagan, was a member of the Ilagan clan of Philippine motion pictures, which includes Robert Arevalo, Liberty Ilagan and Ronaldo Valdez, and musical scorer Tito Arévalo. De León was a medical doctor by profession, but his ultimate love for film has won him over. He made eight more films as an actor before he became a director. He made his directorial debut in 1939's Bahay-Kubo, starring Fely Vallejo (who he later married). One of his unfinished projects was in the late Fernando Poe, Jr.'s Juan de la Cruz in 1972. Nicknamed "Manong", de León holds the sole distinction of being the most awarded film director in the history of the Filipino Academy of Movie Arts and Sciences' FAMAS Awards, the Philippines' Oscars. From 1952 to 1971, he was awarded seven FAMAS Awards, three of them he received three years in a row. All of the films in which he won for Best Director also won for Best Picture at the FAMAS: Sawa sa Lumang Simboryo (1952), Hanggang sa Dulo ng Daigdig (1958), Huwag Mo Akong Limutin (1960), Noli Me Tangere (1961, adaptation of the novel Noli Me Tangere ), El Filibusterismo (1962), Daigdig ng mga Api (1965), Lilet (1971). Description above from the Wikipedia article Gerardo de León, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia
Known For
Women in Cages
1971
Mad Doctor of Blood Island
1969
Brides of Blood
1968
Terror Is a Man
1959
The Blood Drinkers
1964
Curse of the Vampires
1966
The Day of the Trumpet
1958
The Walls of Hell
1964
Noli me Tángere
1961
Sanda Wong
1955
Banaue: Stairway to the Sky
1975
Lilet
1971
48 Hours
1950
Fe, Esperanza, Caridad
1974
Ang Bagong Maestra
1953