Ivonne Coll
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Ivonne Coll (born June 18, 1947) is a former Miss Puerto Rico turned actress.
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[edit] Early years
Coll was born in Fajardo, Puerto Rico where she received her primary and secondary education. She was an honor student and graduated from "Nuestra Señora del Pilar" school. She then enrolled in the University of Puerto Rico (Universidad de Puerto Rico) where she studied Social Sciences.
Coll started her career as a fashion model. In 1966, she represented the town of Fajardo in the Miss Puerto Rico pageant and won. In 1967, she represented the island as Miss Puerto Rico in the "Miss Universe" pageant which was celebrated in Miami, Florida.
[edit] Artistic debut
In 1969, Coll was a back-up singer for Lucecita Benitez when Benitez won the first prize in the "First Latin Song Festival of the World" which took place in Mexico. She also served as back-up for Chucho Avellanet, a popular teen idol in Latin America during the 1960s and 1970s.
In 1971, Coll debuted as an actress in a local soap opera (telenovela), called "El Sirviente" (The Servant). In the same year she also debuted as a solo singer in the "Club Ocho Puertas (Eight Doors Club)" located in San Juan.
[edit] "Yo Soy Ivonne Coll" (I am Ivonne Coll)
At the end of 1971, the owner of television channel 11 in Puerto Rico, Mr. Rafael Perez Perry spotted Ivonne's talent. Channel 11's competitor had a show with a young starlet by the name of Iris Chacon. Mr. Perry believed that Coll could have a show of her own that would be able to compete with the other channels and with Chacon's show. Therefore, he sponsored the show which was called "Yo Soy Ivonne Coll" (I am Ivonne Coll) and which ran from 1971 to 1975.
In 1976, Coll moved to Los Angeles, California, where she took dance and singing classes in the Academy of Stage and Cinema Arts. She landed a part in a theater play called "Burning Beach", which was presented in the American Place Theater.
[edit] In the United States
In 1979, Coll moved to New York, where she participated in various Off Broadway productions such as:
- "Spain 1980",
- "As You Like It",
- "Romeo and Juliet" and
- "Macbeth".
It was in New York that movie director Francis Ford Coppola recruited her for the role of "Yolanda", a Havana night club singer in the movie The Godfather II. Even though her role was a small one, the experience gained would serve her well in the future. She was credited as "Yvonne Coll".
Coll also participated in the following productions:
- "Orinoco",
- "The Masses are Asses",
- "Medio Comuñas",
- "Goodbye Castro", and
- "Pancho Diablo" with Fernando Allende and Sully Diaz.
She won an A.C.E. Award for best actress for "Orinoco". When Coll wasn't acting, she was taking classes. She attended the H.B. Studios and the Lee Strasberg Acting Studio.
Among the television appearances which she made in the U.S. were:
- "Pacific Blue",
- "Crisis Center",
- "An American Family",
- "The Bold and the Beautiful",
- "Chicago Hope",
- "Malibu Shores",
- "NYPD Blue",
- "L.A. Law", and
- "Under Cover".
[edit] Later years
When Coll returned to Puerto Rico, she was invited to participate in the following productions: "La verdadera historia de Pedro Navaja" and "Paper Flowers". She also had a role in the locally produced movie "La gran Fiesta" (The Grand Party) and in the TV show "Cuqui". In 2002 she was in the movie "Besos de Fuego".
AS of October, 2006, she has played the title role in Berthold Brecht's "MOTHER COURAGE" at the Berkeley Rep Theater in Berkeley, California.