# Cuban actor Óscar Álvarez, star of ICAIC cinema and experimental theater, dies in Miami

**Date:** 06/18/2026

Cuban actor &Oacute;scar &Aacute;lvarez died in Miami on June 13, 2026, at age 85, from cardiorespiratory arrest. The news was confirmed by his wife, Isabel Cancio, a former actress at Cuba's National Puppet Theater, through journalist Wilfredo Cancio Isla.


&Aacute;lvarez was a prominent figure in Cuban theater and cinema. He was a member of the Teatro Estudio and Los Doce groups, landmark theatrical experiences of the 1960s under the direction of Vicente Revuelta. Los Doce, active between 1968 and 1970, brought together performers such as Flora Lauten, Ren&eacute; Ariza, Ada Nocetti, and Carlos Ruiz de la Tejera, under the influence of the physical theater of Polish director Jerzy Grotowski.


In film, his career was defined by his collaboration with director Tom&aacute;s Guti&eacute;rrez Alea. His most celebrated role came in Hasta cierto punto (1983), where he played a liberal theater director who falls for a female dock worker, portrayed by Mirtha Ibarra. The film explored machismo and the social contradictions of Cuba at the time.


His filmography also includes Aquella larga noche (1979), directed by Enrique Pineda Barnet; Clandestinos (1987), by Fernando P&eacute;rez; short films La cadena (1978) and Dolly Back (1986), by Juan Carlos Tab&iacute;o; and the co-production Tesoro (1987), by Diego de la Texera.


Before leaving Cuba, &Aacute;lvarez joined the dissident movement and the Cuban Commission for Human Rights and National Reconciliation, founded by activist Elizardo S&aacute;nchez Santa Cruz. He emigrated to the United States in 1989. He is survived by his wife Isabel Cancio, in Miami, and his son &Oacute;scar &Aacute;lvarez Holt-Seeland.

