
Nina Quartero
Biography
From Wikipedia Nina Quartero (March 17, 1908 - November 23, 1985) was a motion picture actress from New York City, whose career spanned the years 1928 - 1943. Often she played supporting roles and sometimes a diversive love interest for the lead male actor. In One Stolen Night (1929) Quartero was cast with Betty Bronson and William Collier. The story concerns a British World War I soldier who comes to the assistance of an enslaved dancer. In Frozen River (1929) she was paired with Raymond McKee as the motion picture's romantic leads. Wonder dog Rin Tin Tin, is the most unlikely of heroes in the screen drama. In 1931 Quartero appeared in Arizona, an early John Wayne movie. Playing "Conchita," she is a source of strife in Wayne's relationship to the characters depicted by Laura La Plante and June Clyde. She performed again with Wayne in The Man from Monterey (1933). Her final screen performances show Quartero playing smaller parts, such as the role of a Cuban dancer in Torchy Blane In Panama (1938), a native dancer in Green Hell (1940) and a bar-girl in A Lady Takes A Chance (1943). Nina Quartero died in Woodland Hills, California in 1985.
Also Known As
Movie Appearances

Driftin' Sands
as Nita Aliso
1928

Isle of Escape
as Loru
1930

Frozen River
as Jane
1929
All Parts
1928

Ruby Lips
1929

Loud Soup
as Professor Brown
1929

The Man from Monterey
as Anita Garcia
1933

The Cyclone Ranger
as Nita Garcia
1935

Arizona
as Conchita
1931

Golden Dawn
as Maid-in-Waiting
1930

Men of the North
as Woolie-Woolie
1930

New Moon
as Vadda - Tanya's Maid
1930

The Arizona Terror
as Lola
1931

The Bachelor Father
as Maria Credaro
1931

God's Gift to Women
as Suzanne, a Party Girl (uncredited)
1931
Under Secret Orders
as Carmencita Alverez
1933

The Red Mark
as Zelie
1928
Phantom of Santa Fe
as Teresa Valardi
1936
Trapped
as Sally Moore
1931

Green Hell
as Native Girl (uncredited)
1940