Antonio Larreta
Uruguayan writer, critic and actor
Antonio Larreta | |
---|---|
Born | Gualberto José Antonio Rodríguez Larreta Ferreira (1922-12-14)December 14, 1922 Montevideo, Uruguay |
Died | (2015-08-19)August 19, 2015 (aged 92) Montevideo, Uruguay |
Nationality | Uruguay |
Occupation(s) | writer, critic, actor |
Awards | Premio Bartolomé Hidalgo Premio Planeta Premio Casa de las Américas Goya Awards Iris Award |
Gualberto José Antonio Rodríguez Larreta Ferreira (14 December 1922 – 19 August 2015), better known as Antonio Larreta or Taco Larreta, was a Uruguayan writer, critic and actor.[1]
Born in Montevideo, he attended Elbio Fernández School.[2] During his career he was active in both Uruguay and Spain.[3]
Selected works
- 1976-1979: screenplay of Curro Jiménez (TVE1)
- 1980, Volavérunt (Planeta)
- 1986, Juan Palmieri Librosur)
- 1988, The last portrait of the Duchess of Alba (Adler & Adler)
- 1988, Las maravillosas (Ediciones Trilce)
- 1999, A todo trapo. A propósito de Villanueva Saravia (Ediciones de la Plaza)
- 2002, El Guante (Planeta)
- 2002, El jardín de invierno
- 2004, Ningún Max (Planeta)
- 2005, El sombrero chino (Editorial Fin de Siglo)
- 2007, Hola, che (Editorial Fin de Siglo)
Awards
- 1961: Premio Larra in Madrid for staging Lope de Vega's Porfiar hasta Morir
- 1971: Premio Casa de las Américas for his play Juan Palmieri
- 1980: Premio Planeta de Novela for his novel Volavérunt.
- 1992: Goya Award for Best Adapted Screenplay for The Fencing Master.
References
- ^ El País (19 August 2015). "Falleció el actor Antonio "Taco" Larreta" (in Spanish). Uruguay.
- ^ "Exalumnos Destacados". 2022-11-28. Archived from the original on 2022-11-28. Retrieved 2023-02-12.
- ^ El País (8 October 2009). "Estrenan una Película Argentina que Protagoniza Antonio Larreta" (in Spanish). Uruguay. Archived from the original on 4 February 2011. Retrieved 14 April 2015.
External links
- Antonio Larreta at IMDb
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- 1986: Fernando Fernán Gómez[1]
- 1987: Rafael Azcona[1]
- 1988: Manuel Gutiérrez Aragón and Antonio Giménez-Rico
- 1989: Fernando Trueba, Manuel Matji, and Menno Meyjes
- 1990: Carlos Saura and Rafael Azcona
- 1991: Juan Potau and Gonzalo Torrente Malvido
- 1992: Francisco Prada, Antonio Larreta, Pedro Olea, and Arturo Pérez-Reverte
- 1993: José Luis García Sánchez and Rafael Azcona
- 1994: Imanol Uribe
- 1995: Montxo Armendáriz and José Ángel Mañas
- 1996: Pilar Miró and Rafael Pérez Sierra
- 1997: Bigas Luna and Cuca Canals
- 1998: Luis Marías
- 1999: Rafael Azcona, Manuel Rivas, and José Luis Cuerda
- 2000: Fernando Fernán Gómez
- 2001: Jorge Juan Martínez, Juan Carlos Molinero, Clara Pérez Escrivá, and Lola Salvador Maldonado
- 2002: Adolfo Aristarain and Kathy Saavedra
- 2003: Isabel Coixet
- 2004: José Rivera
- 2005: Marcelo Piñeyro and Mateo Gil
- 2006: Lluís Arcarazo
- 2007: Félix Viscarret
- 2008: Rafael Azcona and José Luis Cuerda
- 2009: Jorge Guerricaechevarría and Daniel Monzón
- 2010: Agustí Villaronga
- 2011: Ángel de la Cruz, Ignacio Ferreras, Paco Roca, and Rosanna Cecchini
- 2012: Javier Barreira, Gorka Magallón, Ignacio del Moral, Jordi Gasull, and Neil Landau
- 2013: Alejandro Hernández and Mariano Barroso
- 2014: Javier Fesser, Claro García, and Cristóbal Ruiz
- 2015: Fernando León de Aranoa
- 2016: Alberto Rodríguez and Rafael Cobos
- 2017: Isabel Coixet
- 2018: Álvaro Brechner
- 2019: Benito Zambrano, Daniel Remón, and Pablo Remón
- 2020: David Pérez Sañudo and Marina Parés Pulido
- 2021: Daniel Monzón and Jorge Guerricaechevarría
- 2022: Fran Araújo, Isa Campo, and Isaki Lacuesta
- 2023: Pablo Berger
[1] Awarded as Best Screenplay (including both original and adapted)
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