
Duncan Renaldo
To most audiences, Duncan Renaldo will always be identified as film and TV's "The Cisco Kid." However, this role occurred late in his career, which consisted of much more than just this western character. Not much is known about Renaldo's early life. In fact, his date and place of birth is still questioned. The usual given birth date is April 23, 1904. His birthplace has been generally stated as Spain--he has said that his first memories as a child were in Spain--although Romania and even New Jersey have been mentioned as well. An orphan, he never knew his actual parents and was never able to ascertain the exact date and place of his birth. He was raised and educated in various European countries and arrived in the US in the early 1920s as a stoker on a Brazilian coal ship. Entering the country on a 90-day seaman's permit, he stayed when his ship caught fire at the dock and burned to the waterline. A paltry existence as a portrait painter forced him to seek other work, and he somehow found his way into films as a producer of short features, which in turn led to on-camera work as an actor with MGM in 1928. The studio capitalized on his dashing Hispanic looks and initially typed him as a "Latin lover", but it didn't last long. In the early 1930s his career was interrupted when he was arrested and faced deportation due to his illegal immigrant status. The actor was eventually pardoned by President Franklin D. Roosevelt--his wife, Eleanor Roosevelt, had bought one of Renaldo's paintings, looked into his case and persuaded her husband to pardon him. He returned to minor films for both Republic and Monogram, alternating as heroic sidekick and villain. He co-starred as one of the Three Mesquiteers in the revamped film series, and showed up regularly in 1930s and 1940s cliffhangers, including The Painted Stallion (1937), Jungle Menace (1937), Zorro Rides Again (1937), King of the Mounties (1942), Secret Service in Darkest Africa (1943) The Tiger Woman (1944). In 1945 he began the Cisco Kid film series and transferred the character successfully to TV in the early 1950s, with Leo Carrillo as faithful sidekick Pancho. Renaldo made the character clean-shaven and more of a do-gooder than the roguish bandit who actually was in the books. Renaldo retired soon after the series' demise and died years later at Goleta Valley Community Hospital in California of lung cancer in 1980.
68 acting credits
Acting · 68
The Cisco Kid
1950

Western von gestern
1978

For Whom the Bell Tolls
1943

Mission to Moscow
1943

The Capture
1950

Hollywood: The Dream Factory
1972

The Fighting Seabees
1944

The Lone Ranger Rides Again
1939

Down Mexico Way
1941

Gaucho Serenade
1940

Moonlight Murder
1936

Bad Men of Missouri
1941

Border Patrol
1943

The Tiger Woman
1944

The Painted Stallion
1937

Tropic Holiday
1938

Hands Across the Border
1944

Jungle Menace
1937

Outlaws of the Desert
1941

Rough Riders' Round-up
1939

Jungle Flight
1947

Trader Horn
1931

The Bridge of San Luis Rey
1929

Spawn of the North
1938

Lady Luck
1936

Sky Racket
1937

South of the Border
1939

Clothes Make the Woman
1928

Cowboys from Texas
1939

Secret Service In Darkest Africa
1943

Two Minutes to Play
1936

Sheriff of Sundown
1944

Around the World
1943

Satan's Cradle
1949

Tiger Fangs
1943

The Gay Amigo
1949

Call of the South Seas
1944

Rocky Mountain Rangers
1940

South of the Rio Grande
1945

Gauchos of El Dorado
1941

The Valiant Hombre
1948

Oklahoma Renegades
1940

Jungle Terror
1946

Rebellion
1936

Zorro Rides Again
1937

A Yank in Libya
1942

Public Stenographer
1934

King of the Texas Rangers
1941

The Girl from San Lorenzo
1950

The Kansas Terrors
1939

King of the Mounties
1942

The Mad Empress
1939

Covered Wagon Days
1940

Sword of the Avenger
1948

Heroes of the Saddle
1940

San Antonio Kid
1944

Rose of the Rio Grande
1938

Trapped in Tia Juana
1932
South of Panama
1941

Ten Laps to Go
1936

Mile a Minute Love
1937

Pioneers of the West
1940

The Daring Caballero
1949

The Moth
1934

Special Agent K-7
1936

In Old New Mexico
1945
Pals of the Prairie
1929

The Cisco Kid Returns
1945