WINNER OF A GOLDEN BEAR, TWO SILVER SEASHELL , AND A GOYA AMONG OTHER AWARDS, THE ACTRESS, WHO IS CELEBRATING 50 YEARS IN THE PROFESSION, WILL BE IN THE CAPITAL OF ALTO ARAGON BEFORE PREMIERING “MEDUSA” THIS SUMMER AT THE MÉRIDA THEATER
THE AWARD CEREMONY AND A PUBLIC TALK WITH LUIS ALEGRE WILL TAKE PLACE ON JUNE 11th
THE FESTIVAL HIGHLIGHTS THAT “IN AN EDITION WHERE FRANCE IS THE GUEST COUNTRY, NO ONE COULD REPRESENT THE CULTURAL CONNECTION BETWEEN BOTH TERRITORIES BETTER”
The Huesca International Film Festival will award the Luis Buñuel Award of its 52nd edition to actress Victoria Abril. One of the prominent names in cinema in Spain, France, and throughout Europe, the Spanish actress has amassed more than a hundred works in film, theater, and television, earning critical and public acclaim. The Madrid-born actress’s filmography includes titles that are part of continental film history, such as Lovers, Tie Me Up! Tie Me Down!, Nobody Will Speak of Us When We’re Dead, El Lute: Run for Your Life, Lovers, and The 7th Day. “She is a force of nature in front of the camera, and in an edition where France is the Guest Country, no could one better represent the cultural connection between both territories,” explains Estela Rasal, director of the Huesca festival.
The gala will take place on June 11th at the Teatro Olimpia, a significant event within the program of the Huesca festival, which runs from June 7th to 15th. But this will not be the only opportunity for the public to show their appreciation for the actress. On that same Tuesday at midday, a conversation between Abril and writer and film professional Luis Alegre will take place in the central Plaza López Allué. This intimate and public event will allow attendees to listen to anecdotes, experiences, and confidences shared between the two.
Abril joins a list of personalities who have received this tribute, including Terry Gilliam, Bertrand Tavernier, Marisa Paredes, Stephen Frears, Carlos Saura, Ángela Molina, Jean-Claude Carrière, Costa-Gavras, Álex de la Iglesia, the Taviani brothers, Isabel Coixet, and last year’s honoree, Aitana Sánchez-Gijón.
EUROPE AT THE FEET OF HER TALENT
Victoria Abril (Madrid, 1959) showed her passion for the arts from a young age and at just 14, she made her acting debut in Francisco Lara Polop’s Obsesión. She later appeared in titles such as Richard Lester’s Robin and Marian, starring Sean Connery and Audrey Hepburn. In the second half of the 1970s, her popularity skyrocketed as part of the historic Spanish quiz show “Un, dos, tres… responda otra vez” by Narciso Ibáñez Serrador for Televisión Española. During this period, she worked under the direction of Vicente Aranda in Change of Sex, leading to a fruitful collaboration that produced some of her most notable titles such as Tiempo de silencio, Si te Dicen que Caí, El Lute: Run for Your Life, and Lovers. In fact, for the last two films, she received the Silver Shell in San Sebastián and the Golden Bear in Berlin respectively.
In the 1980s, her name became a reference both in Spain, Italy, and France, where she developed a prolific career that earned her two César Award nominations. From this period, works such as Mater Amantissima, La Colmena, Bicycles are for the Summer, El Lute: Run for Your Life, and La Noche más Hermosa became part of the history of European cinema. She also appeared in television series such as Los Pazos de Ulloa.
During the last decade of the 20th century, she continued adding successes to her career with great directors like Pedro Almodóvar with High Heels or her iconic performance in Kika, Intruders by the aforementioned Aranda, and alongside Manuel Gómez Pereira in Between Your Legs. Her collaboration with Agustín Díaz Yanes resulted in Nobody Will Speak of Us When We’re Dead, a film that won her the Goya for Best Actress, one of the eight awards this production received, making it one of the most awarded in the history of these prizes.
The new millennium remained fruitful with projects such as Don’t Tempt Me by Agustín Díaz Yanes and her last project with Vicente Aranda, Tirant lo Blanc. For the first time, she worked with the director from Huesca, Carlos Saura, in The 7th Day, earning her another Goya nomination. Additionally, she demonstrated her versatile talent by surprising the music industry with an album of bossa nova classics, “Putcheros do Brasil”, followed by her second album, “Olala!.” “Six years of touring, 600 concerts worldwide, except in Spain, made me the happiest forty-something in the northern hemisphere!” claimed the artist herself.
Film, television, and theater both in Spain and France have been her main focuses in recent years, continuing to enrich a career decorated with honors such as the title of “Knight” of the French Legion of Honor, the Gold Medal for Fine Arts, and the Honorary Award from the European Film Awards.
HER GOLDEN ANNIVERSARY STARRING IN “MEDUSA”
The year 2024 marks the professional golden anniversary for Victoria Abril, a milestone she will celebrate by returning to the stage, headlining the play “Medusa” under the direction of José María del Castillo. After 45 years away from the Spanish stage, this summer she will star in this spectacular ephemeral superproduction (10 days) at the Roman Theater of Mérida, alongside other notable talents like Adrián Lastra (Perseus), Mariola Fuentes (Athena), and the debut of singer Ruth Lorenzo as an actress. This unique opportunity will see Abril, from a place of acceptance, pouring all her magnetism and passion into leaving no one indifferent, “because I am like Medusa, up to the very last scale of Equitea, fed up with the distortion and manipulation of facts,” as she herself declared.
This reinterpretation of the classic myth about the feared ancient monster with snake hair and a petrifying gaze will be shown from July 31 to August 11 at the famous Mérida Festival, and will then move to the Sagunto Festival (August 17 and 18) and the Niebla Festival in Huelva (August 24). A multidisciplinary production with 30 people on stage. It begins with Ruth Lorenzo accompanied by the Extremadura Chamber Choir, directed by Amaya Añua, and supported by 10 dancers (choreography by Alex Mañé), elevating the tragedy of Medusa to an epic level as the myth and the Mérida Theater demand. The character of Medusa will break the fourth wall to speak directly to the audience; humor, tragedy, irony, music, and visual art will delve into social-induced thinking, appearances, fear of the different, and the value of integrity in a society that has not changed much despite the passage of centuries.