they-confirm-that-the-actor-xavier-marc-left-a-letter-after-throwing-himself-from-a-balcony

The National Association of Interpreters (ANDI) of Mexico announced last February 19 in its social networks that the actor Xavier Marc had died, at 74 years, managing as a possibility that he had committed suicide.

“The National Association of Interpreters communicates the sensitive death of interpreting partner Xavier Marc. Mexican actor, director and teacher, with extensive television experience,” said the statement in which actress Laura Zapata spoke. and stated in a tweet that Xavier left a farewell letter.

“Actor Xavier Marc ended his life. He was very sick, he left a letter that said: ‘We’ll still be with God.’ May God receive him in his Holy Glory. We said goodbye to him with applause a few days ago when we saw him outside the ANDA”, assured Zapata.

According to police reports, the actor threw himself from the balcony of his apartment, and was found by his family.

The National Association of Interpreters (ANDI) mourned his death, as did friends and colleagues who worked with him, such as Érika Buenfil, Victoria Ruffo, Alejandro Tommasi, and María Sorté.

Born in Guadalajara in 1948, trained in the School of Theater Arts of the National Institute of Fine Arts and his debut was in 1962 in the movie ‘The Time and the Touch’ , directed by Benito Alazraki.

He stood out as Andrés in ‘Los Signos del Zodiaco’, by Sergio Véjar, which gave way to films like ‘Las Figuras de Arena’ (1970) by Roberto Gavaldón and ‘The Other Crime’ (1988), part his 47 credits recorded in film and television.

He even made it to Hollywood with movies like ‘Two Mules for Sister Sara’ (1970), starring Clint Eastwood, as well as ‘The Legend of Zorro’ (2022), with Antonio Banderas and Catherine Zeta-Jones.

But Where people perhaps remember him most is in telenovelas like ‘Mundo de Juguete’, ‘La Fiera’, ‘María Belén’, ‘Amarte es mi Pecado’ and ‘Barrera de Amor’.

His The last recorded credit was in ‘La Mexicana y el Güero’, issued a year and a half ago.

By Scribe