
From Wikipedia
Federico Arturo Guízar Tolentino (April 8, 1908 – December 24, 1999) was a Mexican singer and actor. Born in Guadalajara, Jalisco, he
performed under the name of Tito Guízar. Together with Dolores del Río, José Mojica, Ramón Novarro and Lupe Vélez, Guízar was among the few Mexican people who made history in the early years of Hollywood. In a career that spanned over seven decades, Guízar trained
early as an opera singer and traveled to New York in 1929 to record the songs of Agustín Lara.
In addition, Guízar performed both operatic and Mexican popular songs at Carnegie Hall, but he succeeded with his arrangements of popular Mexican and Spanish melodies such as Cielito Lindo, La Cucaracha, Granada, and You Belong to My Heart (English version of Solamente una Vez). In 1936, his song Allá en el Rancho Grande launched the singing charro in Mexico after appearing in the film of the same name, succeeding as well in the United States.
He also starred in dozens of films, including The Big Broadcast of 1938 (1938), Tropic Holiday (1938), St. Louis Blues (1939), The Llano Kid (1939), Brazil (1944), and The Gay Ranchero (1948), playing with such stars as Evelyn Keyes, Dorothy Lamour, Ray Milland, Ann Miller, Martha Raye, Roy Rogers, Mae West and Keenan Wynn. In the 1990s, he continued playing series parts in Mexican television.

Brazil
1944 · as Miguel Soares

Tropic Holiday
1938 · as Ramón

Música en la noche
1958

Blondie Goes Latin
1941 · as Manuel Rodrigueu

The Big Broadcast of 1938
1938 · as Specialty

El plagiario
1955

Como México no hay dos
1945

The Time and the Touch
1962 · as Max

Reclusorio
1997 · as Tito Iriarte (segment "Eutanasia o asesinato")

The Llano Kid
1939 · as Enrique Ibarra aka The Llano Kid

Mexicana
1945 · as 'Pepe' Villarreal

On the Old Spanish Trail
1947 · as The Gypsy

Ahí viene Vidal Tenorio
1949

The Gay Ranchero
1948 · as Nicci Lopez

Huéspedes Famosos
1954

Allá en el Rancho Grande
1936 · as José Francisco Ruelas

Sindicato de telemirones
1954

Locos por la televisión
1958 · as Self