Biography
Ramón Bravo (21 October 1925 – 21 February 1998) was a Mexican diver, photographer and underwater filmmaker. Bravo was the person who made the phenomenon of Sleeping sharks known to the world. Bravo was born in Piedras Negras, Coahuila in northern Mexico from his parents Juan Bravo, a railroader, and María del Rosario Prieto. Bravo was first known as a famous Mexican swimmer and competed in the 1948 Summer Olympics. Also played as Wide receiver in UNAM football team. Thanks to his close friend Apolonio Castillo in the late 50s, Bravo began to dedicate himself to diving and underwater photography– gaining him fame in both in the United States and Europe as an oceanographer. Bravo developed a fascination for sharks and devoted a large portion of his life to filming and studying sharks. He is widely known for the discovery, study, and photography of "sleeping sharks" near Isla Mujeres in the Caribbean where sharks were seen there to be "sleeping" on the ocean floor.
Bravo was the first person to dive and film with orcas in their natural state without a protective cage in the frosty waters of Islas San Benito in Baja California, Mexico or polar bears swimming at the North Pole, where even one bit his left heel.
Filmography
all 12
Movies 12
Director 3
Writer 2
self 1
Licence to Kill (1989)
Leviathan (1989)
The Shark Hunter (1979)
Zombie Flesh Eaters (1979)
Mar Asesino (1979)
Cyclone (1978)
The Bermuda Triangle (1978)
The Edge (1977)
Chanoc (1967)
Information
Known ForCamera
GenderMale
Birthday1925-10-21
Deathday1998-02-21 (72 years old)
Birth PlacePiedras Negras, Mexico
CitizenshipsMexico
This article uses material from Wikipedia.
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