Rio Diaz
{{short description|Filipino actress and model}}
{{One source|date=October 2020}}
{{Philippine name|Aspillera|Díaz|Cojuangco|ph=married}}
{{Use Philippine English|date=April 2023}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=April 2023}}
{{Infobox officeholder
| name = Rio Díaz
| image =
| caption =
| office = Vice Mayor of Pontevedra, Negros Occidental
| term_start = June 30, 1998
| term_end = June 30, 2004
| 1blankname = Mayor
| 1namedata =
| predecessor =
| successor =
| birth_name = Rosario Aspillera Díaz
| birth_date = {{Birth date|1959|8|14}}
| birth_place = Manila, Philippines
| death_date = {{Death date and age|2004|10|4|1959|8|14}}
| death_place = Daly City, California, U.S.
| resting_place = Mount Carmel Shrine columbarium, Quezon City
| nationality = {{PHI}}
| other_names =
| occupation = Model, presenter, actress, politician
| known_for =
| spouse = Charlie Cojuangco
}}
Rio Díaz Cojuangco ({{IPA|tl|ˈɾijo ˈdɪas kɔˈhwaŋkɔ|lang}}; born Rosario Aspillera Díaz; August 14, 1959 – October 4, 2004), was a Filipino beauty queen, television presenter, actress and politician. The sister of former Miss Universe 1969 Gloria Díaz, she was diagnosed with stage four colon cancer and died in the United States in 2004. She was an aunt of Georgina Wilson, through another sister Aurora who is Wilson's mother.
Biography
Born in Manila, Díaz was the youngest of twelve children born to Jaime Díaz and Teresa Aspillera. A ramp and commercial model, she was crowned Mutya ng Pilipinas in 1977 and won Fourth Runner-up in the Miss Asia Pageant that same year.
Díaz began a relationship with musician Hajji Alejandro, and together they emigrated to Los Angeles, California, where they operated a small restaurant along Melrose Avenue. They had a son named Ali Alejandro.
After separating from Alejandro, Díaz returned to the Philippines and resumed her career in entertainment. She co-hosted Eat Bulaga! in 1991 and stayed for a couple of years before meeting Charlie Cojuangco on a blind date in 1993 and marrying him the following year. For the greater part of the 1990s, Díaz worked for television and starred in several films. They had 2 children, Jaime Diaz Cojuangco and Claudia Diaz Cojuangco.
=Politics=
Diaz, similar to her first husband Hajji Alejandro, was a supporter of former President Ferdinand Marcos, even after his deposition in the People Power Revolution.{{cite news|title=Top advertisers withdraw from movie talk shows|url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=8cBNEdFwSQkC&dat=19870317&printsec=frontpage&hl=en|access-date=May 20, 2021|work=Manila Standard|publisher=Standard Publications, Inc.|date=March 17, 1987|page=13|quote=Marcos loyalist couple Rio Diaz and Hadji Alejandro [sic] were spotted by our staff in Laoag, Ilocos Norte a few days ago.}}
She was elected vice-mayor of Pontevedra, Negros Occidental, in the 1998 elections, while her husband won a seat in Congress. Díaz later became president of the vice-mayors' league of Negros Occidental.
=Illness and death=
File:Rio Díaz Cojuangco Rosario Aspillera Díaz Mount Carmel Shrine and Basilica (Quezon City) 07.jpg columbarium in Quezon City]]
During a routine checkup in December 1998, her American doctors informed her of a small growth in her left abdomen. After a six-hour surgery, they found a malignant tumour in its fourth stage, and Díaz was given three months to live. She underwent another operation, and received chemotherapy for three months.
In 1999, Stanford oncologist Dr George Fisher, declared she had been cured. When the cancer cells returned in May 2000, Rio travelled back to Stanford for an eight-hour surgical procedure and another round of chemotherapy sessions. Díaz stopped the sessions in 2002, citing her body's inability to cope further, but her physicians later that year said she had no recourse but to continue treatment.
Six years after the original diagnosis, Díaz died on October 4, 2004, at Seton Medical Center in Daly City, California, at the age of 45. Her remains were cremated and inurned at the Cojuangcos' Hacienda Balvina in Pontevedra, Negros Occidental.{{cite news|url=https://www.philstar.com/nation/2004/10/14/266204/thousands-pay-final-tribute-rio |title=Thousands pay final tribute to Rio |work=The Philippine Star|date=October 14, 2004 |accessdate=April 8, 2019}} These were later moved to the columbarium of Mount Carmel Shrine in Quezon City.{{cite AV media|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lZU9NAwRRv0|title=Gravetour of the Famous E226ph {{!}} Rio Diaz/Danding Cojuangco {{!}} Our Lady of Mt Carmel Columbary -QC|date=December 27, 2021|accessdate=September 21, 2023|publisher=Graveyard Pinoy TV}}
Filmography
=Film=
- Sísingilín Ko ng Dugo (1990)
- Sam & Miguel (Your Basura, No Problema) (1992) as Mila
- Tunay Na Magkaibigan, Walang Iwanan...Peksman (1994)
=Television=
- Eat Bulaga! (1992-1996)
- Sarap TV (1998-1999)
- Maalaala Mo Kaya, "Pictures": The Rio Díaz-Cojuangco Story - as herself (in a part of her story; mostly played by Eula Valdez; 2003)
References
{{reflist}}
External links
- [http://www.newsflash.org/2004/02/sb/sb003453.htm Rio is Safely Home]
{{authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Diaz, Rio}}
Category:Actresses from Manila
Category:Deaths from colorectal cancer in California
Category:Filipino film actresses
Category:Filipino Roman Catholics
Category:Filipino television actresses
Category:Filipino television personalities
Category:Mutya ng Pilipinas winners
Category:Nationalist People's Coalition politicians
Category:People from Ilocos Norte