Alita Román

[citation needed] Román began her career in theater in the early 1930s, debuting with Narciso Ibáñez Menta and later joining the company of Lola Membrives.

[3] Her next film La Barra Mendocina (1935), written and directed by Mario Soffici,[4] was followed by El alma del bandoneón (1935) with Libertad Lamarque and Alicia Barrié.

[7] One of the programs they aired was a radio drama called Reviviendo la emoción de los más bellos poemas, on which Román, along with Delia Garcés, Paul Lagarde, and Hugo Pimentel, among others, recited poems.

[8] Her first major success came with Mujeres que trabajan (1938), which starred Mecha Ortiz, Pepita Serrador, Alicia Barrié, Sabina Olmos, Niní Marshall,[9] and Hilda Sour, along with others.

[15] Román won Best Supporting Actress from the Argentine Academy of Cinematography Arts and Sciences for her work in Concierto de almas.

[24] In 1960, she appeared in the Antonio Cunill Jr. film Los Acusados and[25] in 1969 she was in the comedy El Profesor hippie alongside actors such as Luis Sandrini and Roberto Escalada.