
Actor
Jairo
Born 1949 · Cruz del Eje, Córdoba, Argentina
Jairo, pseudonym of Mario Rubén González Pierotti (born June 16, 1949) is an Argentine singer-songwriter and composer. Throughout his career, he has performed more than 500 songs in Spanish, French and Italian. Among its most widespread songs they are: «Tu alma golondrina», «Por si tú quieres saber», «Tristezas», «De pronto sucedió», «El valle y el volcán», «Si vuelves será cansancio», «Amigos míos me enamoré», «Hoy dejó la ciudad», «Nos verán llegar», «Revólver» and «Me encanta esta hora del día». Mario Rubén González Pierotti was born in Cruz del Eje, on June 16, 1949. His beginnings as a singer were at school, where the band "The Twisters Boys" joined and finally adopted the name Marito González in game shows media hometown. In 1970, together with a friend from high school, he distributed a twelve demo songs to different music producers; thus it managed to record a single disc with two songs. The artist Luis Aguilé sent him a job offer, signing a distribution agreement with CBS and moving to Spain. In 1971 he won first Premio de la Crítica Española and second prize in the Festival of the Costa del Sol. That same year he was hired by the Ariola label. With the establishment of the National Reorganization Process in power, he chose to go into exile in Spain and later in France. He recorded with Astor Piazzolla in 1981 several songs composed especially for him by Piazzolla himself and the Uruguayan poet Horacio Ferrer, among which stands out «Milonga del trovador» and «Hay una niña en el alba». Towards the end of the military dictatorship, he returned to Argentina and gave a recital on the Avenida 9 de Julio, where he played to 1.2 million people their version of «We Shall Overcome». Throughout his career, he shared scenarios both their country and hospitalization stages with artists such as: Ana Belén, Ariel Ramírez, Eladia Blázquez, Graciela Borges, Jaime Torres, Juan Carlos Baglietto, La Mona Jiménez, Lito Vitale, Mercedes Sosa, Pedro Aznar, Piero and Víctor Heredia. Source: Article "Jairo (singer)" from Wikipedia in English, licensed under CC-BY-SA.
Acting

Locos por la música
Self · 1980

Midi Première
Self · 1975

Don't Die Without Telling Me Where You're Going
Carlitos (voice) · 1995

Champs-Elysées
Self · 1982

Numéro un
Self · 1975

Fan School
Self · 1977

Argentina
Self · 2015

La Chance aux chansons
Self · 1984

Sacrée Soirée
Self · 1987

Les Rendez-vous du dimanche
Self · 1975
40° à l'ombre
Self · 1987

Peor es nada
Self - Guest · 1990

Téléthon
Self · 1987

Jairo: Imágenes Recobradas
Self · 2018

Tango in Paris: Memories of Astor Piazzolla
Self (archive footage) · 2017

Echoes of Silence
Man who sings · 2025
Gracias, Maestra
Self
El Buscador en Red
Self · 2024