Blanca Portillo

Blanca Portillo

Blanca Portillo as Segismundo in Life is a Dream
Born (1963-06-15) 15 June 1963
Madrid, Spain
Occupation Actress

Blanca Portillo (born 15 June 1963) is a Spanish actress.

Career

Portillo started as an actress in several small theater productions before graduating in drama from the Real Escuela Superior de Arte Dramatico.

One of her most important performances afterwards was her role of Carol in Oleanna by David Mamet, directed by Joaquín Kremel in 1994.

She made her film debut in Entre rojas (1995). In 1996, Luis San Narciso cast her for the hit Telecinco TV series 7 vidas,.[1] The series lasted for ten years and ran for 204 episodes. Portillo played the role of Carlota, an insecure but brassy hairdresser who married Gonzalo, the owner of a bar which functioned as the central set of the show.

During the same period Portillo was nominated for the Goya Awards and Unión de Actores Awards for her role in El color de las nubes in 1997 in which she played a divorced mother who neglected her child. At the same Goyas, she won Best Supporting Actress for the play Eslavos, which focused on the fall of the Soviet Union and the end of the century. She also participated in the Castilian dubbing of Finding Nemo. In spite of her success in TV and movies, she has never left theater and she has taken part in several plays both as an actress and as a director.

In 2004, she left 7 vidas to undertake a theatrical project in Argentina named La hija del aire (The daughter of Air) based on a book by Calderón de la Barca. She combined her work on this play with the film Elsa y Fred (2005) in which she plays a woman suspicious of the relationship between her elderly father and his Argentinian neighbor.

In the 2005 film Alatriste, based on a book by Arturo Pérez Reverte,[2] she played a male role, specifically that of a member of the Spanish inquisition. She shaved her head for the role. The following year, Pedro Almodóvar cast her in his 2006 film Volver. She played Agustina, a friend of the central family who is terminally ill and looking for her missing mother.

She then appeared in Goya's Ghosts by Miloš Forman, playing the 18th century Spanish Queen Mari Luisa of Parma, and landed her first starring role in a movie in Gracia Querejeta's film Seven Billiard Tables. Here she played the lover of the owner of a billiard club and the daughter of Amparo Baró, her former co-star from 7 Vidas. In 2009, she featured again in a film by Pedro Almodóvar, Broken Embraces playing the role of Judit.

Her work in recent years has seen a return to Spanish television, including a role in Hospital Central, and directing roles in the theater. She had a small role in the 2010 Javier Bardem feature Biutiful and the 2011 film La Chispa de la Vida, starring alongside Salma Hayek.

Filmography

Theatre

Actress

Director

TV

Films

Year Film Director
2011 La chispa de la vida Álex de la Iglesia
2009 Los abrazos rotos Pedro Almodóvar
2007 Siete mesas de billar francés Gracia Querejeta
2006 Alatriste Agustín Díaz Yanes
2006 Volver Pedro Almodóvar
2006 Goya's Ghosts Miloš Forman
2005 Elsa y Fred Marcos Carnevale
2003 Finding Nemo (voice / Spanish version) Andrew Stanton and Lee Unkrich
2001 Sólo mía Javier Balaguer
1997 El color de las nubes Mario Camus

Awards

2006 Cannes Film Festival

Best actress shared with Penélope Cruz, Chus Lampreave, Carmen Maura, Lola Dueñas and Yohana Cobo.[3]

Goya Awards
Candidatura al premio de Mejor Actriz Revelación (1997). Unión de Actores

Fotogramas de Plata

References

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