Lucha Villa lyrics
Artist · 729 930 listeners per month
Artist's albums
Lucha Villa y Aida Remastered
2023 · album
Mi Mexico Querido Remastered
2023 · album
Interpreta a Juan Gabriel
2023 · album
Vol. 3
2023 · album
Popurrí Jalisco
2021 · single
La Gira (Popurrí)
2021 · single
Mi Mexico Querido
2020 · album
No Discutamos
2018 · single
Que viva Chihuahua!
2014 · album
Imposible Olvidarte
2012 · album
Éxitos
2012 · album
La Rueda
2010 · album
Mala Noche
2010 · album
Ojitos Pajaritos
2010 · album
Parece Que Fue Ayer
2010 · album
Qué te Falta Mujer
2010 · album
Colección De Oro: Con Mariachi, Vol. 1
2009 · album
Colección De Oro: Con Mariachi, Vol. 2
2009 · album
Colección De Oro: Con Mariachi, Vol. 3
2009 · album
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Biography
Mexico's most famous ranchera singer, Lucha Villa earned more notice than Lola Beltran thanks to a long, successful film career in addition to her recording work. Born in the Chihuahua state town of Ciudad Camargo in the mid-'30s, young Luz Elena Bejarano entered a number of talent contests and was dubbed Lucha Villa by television producer Luis Dillon (the name is a contraction of Pancho Villa and the Chihuahua village where he spent time). Her biggest early hit was a version of the José Alfredo Jiménez standard "Media Vuelta," and after several minor film roles, she became a star with the 1965 cockfighting feature El Gallo de Oro. As with her music, Villa specialized in rural and ranchera pictures, a genre especially connected to American audiences familiar with Westerns. During the 1960s, '70s, and '80s, she recorded dozens of albums and appeared in dozens of pictures, including the 1973 screwball comedy Mecánica Nacional, which won the Ariel award (Mexico's version of the Oscar). She also recorded songbook tributes to Jiménez and Juan Gabriel, and was saluted herself by Gabriel for his 1996 Las Tres Señoras (with Lola Beltran and Amalia Mendoza). Villa continued performing even after suffering a heart attack during surgery in 1997. ~ John Bush, Rovi