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Cuban actress found drowned in Miami

The prominent Cuban actress Broselianda Hernández died today in Miami, Florida, at the age of 56, according to sources close to the family confirmed to various press sites. The body of the actress was found, according to reports, in Miami Beach, allegedly drowned, although other details are unknown.

In the morning hours of Wednesday, the discovery of a lifeless body of an unidentified woman had been reported.

Diario Las Américas published that the Miami Beach police were investigating the cause of death of the woman whose body was found on the sand on the beach, very close to 79th Street.

 

According to the authorities, a person who was walking by the place saw the body and called the police. After the call, rescue teams of firefighters and police officers appeared on the scene to confirm the death of the woman, later they removed him from the scene.

 

The police are investigating what could have caused the death of actress Broselianda Hernández, although some media report that it was a drowning.

Hernández was a graduate of the Higher Institute of Art (ISA) in Havana in 1987, where she was a student of Vicente Revuelta, Isabel Moreno and Miriam Lezcano, among other essential figures on the Cuban scene. He was a member of the cast of the theater group Buscón, directed by the actor José Antonio Rodríguez, where he worked until 1994.

 

Later she became part of the company El Público, directed by Carlos Díaz, in which she participated until 1999. Later, she was a guest actress of the Buendía theater group, under the direction of Flora Lauten.

 

In 2000 she worked as a guest actress at the Spanish Gala Theater Company in Washington.

 

Cubans remember their participation in television dramatizations, among which the soap operas “When the water returns to earth” and “Las honradas” stand out.

 

His filmography includes titles such as “Cosas que dejé en la Havana” (1997), by Manuel Gutiérrez Aragón; “Las profecías de Amanda” (1999), by Pastor Vega; “Nada” (2000), by Juan Carlos Cremata; “Barrio Cuba” (2005), by Humberto Solás; “La anunciación” (2009), by Enrique Pineda Barnet; and José Martí; “El ojo del canario” (2010), by Fernando Pérez, among other films.

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