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・ Fantaisie in F minor (Chopin)
・ Fantaisie militaire
・ Fantaisie-Impromptu
・ Fantamady Keita
・ Fanny Rabel
・ Fanny Rask
・ Fanny Riberot
・ Fanny Rinne
・ Fanny Rodríguez
・ Fanny Ronalds
・ Fanny Rose Howie
・ Fanny Rowe
・ Fanny Rush (artist)
・ Fanny Salvini-Donatelli
・ Fanny Sanín
Fanny Schiller
・ Fanny Schnelle
・ Fanny Schreck
・ Fanny Sidney
・ Fanny Smith
・ Fanny Stevenson
・ Fanny Stollár
・ Fanny Straw Hair
・ Fanny Street
・ Fanny Stål
・ Fanny Sundström
・ Fanny Sunesson
・ Fanny Tacchinardi Persiani
・ Fanny Talbot
・ Fanny Tarnow


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Fanny Schiller : ウィキペディア英語版
Fanny Schiller

Fanny Schiller Hernández (1901–1971) was an award-winning Mexican character actress, television star and also acted in operettas and musicals in the Golden Age of Mexican cinema. She won two best supporting actress awards from the Ariels and was nominated for two additional films. She was a social activist, creating the Actor's Union and inspiring the creation of “Rosa Mexicano”. She was accomplished at dubbing and was the voice of many animated characters as well as the official voice of several other notable Mexican actresses.
==Biography==
Fanny Schiller Hernández was born on August 3, 1901 in Mexico City, Mexico. At the age of 16, she began performing in the comedy company of
Rosita Arriaga touring around the country. She then worked as a dancer with José María Topete, Consuelo Vivanco, María Conesa, before joining the company of her future mother-in-law, Virginia Fábregas.
She made her starring film debut in the movie ''El Cristo de oro'' (''The Christ of Gold'') with Manuel R. Ojeda in 1926,〔 but did not make another film for approximately ten years.〔 Instead, she was touring the country performing in vaudeville and comedy shows. Most of her film work in the 1940s was completed in Mexico.〔 In the 1950s, she worked for several periods in Hollywood.〔 〕〔 〕〔 〕
Schiller was primarily known for character acting, portraying eccentric elderly women. She received a Herald Award for her role in ''Los cuervos están de luto'' (''The Crows are in Mourning'') (1965)〔 and was nominated four times for an Ariel Award. She won the Ariel Award for Best Supporting Actress twice in both 1947 and 1951.〔
Schiller was well respected for her work at voice-overs and dubbing; Edmundo Santos, voice director of Disney's releases in Spanish, was so impressed with her that he hired her to dub the Fairy Godmother in ''Cinderella'' (1950.〔 She also was the voice of Snapdragon (the purple flower) in ''Alice in Wonderland'', Aunt Sara in ''Lady and the Tramp'', and the fairy Flora in the 1959 version of ''Sleeping Beauty''.〔 In the 1960s she did dubbing work for Hanna-Barbera and was the voice of Fred Flintstone's mother in the animated series.〔
In 1955 Schiller ran for a seat in the Chamber of Deputies. This was the first time that women had been eligible to run for office in Mexico and the first time that women in Mexico would be able to participate in a national election, having won the right to vote in 1952. She was defeated, but attended the PRI Civic Day of Mexican Women on April 6, 1955 to celebrate the gains in women's rights.
Shortly before her death in the early 1970s, Schiller pushed the National Association of Actors (ANDA) to form nurseries for actress's children. Several of her acting friends, including Socorro Avelar, Anita Blanch, Dolores del Rio, Irma Dorantes, Gloria Marín, Carmen Montejo, Silvia Pinal, and Amparo Rivelles joined to form a group called “Rosa Mexicano”. The idea was that by establishing a nursery, actresses could continue working, and by establishing a Montessori education system, their children would receive a strong educational foundation. After operating in temporary spaces, the first stones for the formal location were laid on 30 April 1972, shortly after her death.

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