Family roots , 1955 Leo Carrillo was a member of the
Carrillo family of California, a prominent
Californio family, and traced his ancestry through California, Mexico, and Spain to the year 1260. His great-great grandfather
José Raimundo Carrillo (1749–1809), was a soldier in the Spanish
Portolá expedition colonization of
Las Californias, arriving in San Diego on July 1, 1769.
Franciscan Friar Junípero Serra performed the marriage ceremony for Don Jose Raimundo and Tomasa Ignacia Lugo in 1781. His great-grandfather
Carlos Antonio Carrillo (1783–1852) was
governor of Alta California (1837–38). His great-uncle,
José Antonio Carrillo, was a three-time mayor of Los Angeles and twice married to sisters of Governor
Pío Pico. His paternal grandfather, Pedro Carrillo, who was educated in Boston, was a writer.
Early history The family moved from San Diego to Los Angeles then to Santa Monica, where Carrillo's father
Juan José Carrillo (1842–1916), served as the city's police chief and later the first mayor. His cousin was Broadway star
William Gaxton (real name Arturo Antonio Gaxiola). Proud of his heritage, Carrillo wrote the book
The California I Love, published shortly before his death in 1961.
Career A university graduate, Carrillo worked as a newspaper cartoonist for the
San Francisco Examiner, then turned to acting on Broadway. In Hollywood, he appeared in more than 90 films, often as a dialect specialist—although in real life, he had a baritone speaking voice without a trace of an accent. He usually used the dialect for comic effect, liberally salting his speech with malaprops: "My ears, they are para-loused!" or "Why you wanna put your dirty face in my horse's water? I got a healthy horse and you put Germans in the water!" When his screen character left any scene, Carrillo always exclaimed, "Let's went!" for the
Cincinnati Post, 1926 by Leo Carrillo 1922 Leo Carrillo could play sympathetic and villainous roles with equal skill. In 1951 he took the starring role in the feature film
Pancho Villa Returns, which was filmed in both English-dialogue and Spanish-dialogue versions. However, he is best remembered as Pancho, good-natured sidekick of
The Cisco Kid, opposite
Duncan Renaldo as Cisco. Renaldo and Carrillo were teamed for a series of feature films in 1949, and then for a syndicated television series that ran from 1950 until 1956.
The Cisco Kid was notable as the first TV series filmed in color. After
The Cisco Kid ended production, Carrillo appeared in the episode "Rescue at Sea" of the syndicated military drama
Men of Annapolis. ==Civic contributions==