
Raul Salvador Intini Pepe Roulien (7 October 1904 – 8 September 2000), known professionally as Raul Roulien, was a Brazilian actor, singer, screenwriter and film director.[1] He is widely considered the first male Brazilian star in Hollywood.
He worked briefly in Hollywood in the waning days of the American movies' embrace of the "Latin lover" (a title invented for the Italian actor Rudolph Valentino), a phenomenon that encouraged the Jewish-American actor Jacob Krantz to change his name to Ricardo Cortez.
Raul began recording in 1928 and grew in reputation as a theater actor and composer as well, being the greatest Brazilian heartthrob of his time. That same year, he formed the theatrical company Abigail Maia-Raul Roulien, with then wife, actress Abigail Maia, authoring a genre called "frivolity theater", which were quick shows that took place between breaks in the cinema.
In 1931, at the age of 29, with his talent and good looks, he went to the United States and was signed to 20th Century Fox, where he worked between 1931 and 1934. His career spanned a total of 18 films, including Delicious (1931) and Flying Down to Rio (1933), the latter starring Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers in their first dance together.
In 1933 his second wife, Diva Tosca (née Tosca Izabel Querze), was hit and killed as a pedestrian on Sunset Boulevard by John Huston.[2]
Description above from the Wikipedia article Raul Roulien.

Flying Down to Rio
1933 · as Julio Rubeiro

Brasileiros em Hollywood
1970 · as Self (archive footage)

Careless Lady
1932 · as Luis Pareda

State's Attorney
1932 · as Señor Alvarado

The World Moves On
1934 · as Carlos Girard (1825) / Henri Girard (1914)

O Grito da Mocidade
1937

Insure Your Wife
1935 · as Ricardo Randall

Delicious
1931 · as Sascha

The Painted Woman
1932 · as Jim Kikela

No dejes la puerta abierta
1933

It's Great to Be Alive
1933 · as Carlos Martin

There Were Thirteen
1931 · as Max Minchin

Piernas de seda
1935 · as Frank Alton