José Marco Davó (Orihuela, Alicante, May 10, 1895 - Torrevieja, Alicante, September 27, 1974) was a Spanish actor.
His first contact with the world of cinema occurred in the mid-1930s with two supporting roles in adaptations of Carlos Arniches' works for the cinema: É My Man (1934), directed by Benito Perojo, and Don Quintin, la amargao (1935) , directed by Luis Buñuel and Luis Marquina.
After the conclusion of the Civil War and throughout the 1940s, focused on his theatrical vocation, he founded his own company and worked with Rafael López Somoza and Carlos Garriga, with whom he debuted works of his own and other writings in collaboration with Luis Tejedor and José Alfayate.
He returns to the cinema with the film Alba of America (1951), followed by La Guerra de Dios (1953) and El Mayor de Zalamea (1954). In 1955 he participated in Marcelino Pão e Vinho and, during the next fifteen years, he became a habitual secondary actor in Spanish cinematographic productions, until reaching a hundred films.
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Cruz's attacker #3
Pascual
Fray Francisco
Alcalde
Gobernador
Antonio Canovas del Castillo
Antonio Cánovas del Castillo
Fulgencio
Don Pedro
Man #1
Don Ramón
Don Emilio
Don Felipe
Don Fernando
El mal ladrón
Bembo Altieri
Don César
Judge
Director Banco Metropolitano
Don Román
Don Lope de Figueroa
Don Melquiades
Padre Flores
Police Inspector
Sr. Ferreira
Rafrond
The Police Commissioner (uncredited)
Juan José
Prestamista
Dr. Luis Medina
Nicasio
Barea
Martín Alonso Pinzón
Don Julián
Doctor
Don Luis, armador
Inspector
Don Lorenzo
Don Ángel
Gobernador
Mari's Father
Manolo
Don Fabián Mouriz
General Vegas (as Marco Davo)
Portero
Fernando Aguilar
Don Emilio (as Marco Davo)
Don Rufino
Michel
Don Francisco
Señor Costa