Glória Pires
Glória Pires | |
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Glória Pires at the Palácio do Planalto on 25 March 2011 | |
Born |
Glória Maria Cláudia Pires August 23, 1963 Rio de Janeiro, Rio de Janeiro |
Occupation | Actress |
Years active | 1969–present |
Spouse(s) |
Fábio Júnior (1979–1983) Orlando Morais (1987–present) |
Website | |
http://www.gloriapires.com.br |
Glória Maria Cláudia Pires de Moraes (Portuguese pronunciation: [ˈɡlɔɾjɐ mɐˈɾi.ɐ ˈklawdʒɐ ˈpiɾiʒ dʒi moˈɾajʃ]), known simply as Glória Pires (born August 23, 1963), is a Brazilian actress. She is best known for her roles in Rede Globo telenovelas such as Dancin' Days, Cabocla, Vale Tudo, Mulheres de Areia and O Rei do Gado. She is also known for starring in films such as Academy Award-nominated O Quatrilho, box-office hit Se Eu Fosse Você and its sequel, and the recent Lula, o filho do Brasil, which is the second most expensive Brazilian film of all time, after Nosso Lar.[1]
In 2013, she starred the movie Reaching for the Moon along with Miranda Otto, and directed by Bruno Barreto.
Biography
Pires was born on August 23, 1963 in Rio de Janeiro. She is the daughter of producer Elza Pires and actor Antônio Carlos Pires. She has a sister named Linda Pires, a therapist.[2]
Career
1970s
Glória made her debut as an actress at the age of 5, on the telenovela A Pequena Órfã, broadcast on the now defunct TV Excelsior. She initially participated only in the show's opening sequence, but director Dionísio Azevedo would later cast her to play a minor character. On her first day of shooting, however, she experienced a nasal hemorrhage and was removed from the telenovela. Later, when the lead actress Patrícia Ayres dropped out due to contractual reasons, Glória had a second chance by dubbing Ayres' voice.[3]
In 1971, Glória made a screen test for the role of Zizi in the Globo telenovela O Primeiro Amor, but is rejected. In 1972 she made her debut in the network's Caso Especial episode "Sombra de Suspeita". That same year she made her telenovela debut starring in a minor role in Janete Clair's Selva de Pedra. It became the only telenovela in the history of Brazil to reach 100 percent of share.[3] In 1973 Glória landed a tiny role in Clair's O Semideus. She also acted alongside her father and Chico Anysio on the comedy program Chico City, broadcast on Rede Globo. She would act in several other comedy programs. In 1976, Glória starred in Clair's Duas Vidas, where she learned a lot from senior actor Luiz Gustavo, which played her father in the telenovela. In 1977, disappointed with the roles offered to her, she decided to take a break from acting.[3]
In 1978, Glória learned from her father that director Daniel Filho was searching for an actress to play Sônia Braga's teenager daughter in his telenovela Dancin' Days. After much deliberation, she decided to take the screen test for the role. The telenovela was a big hit and Glória won the Best Newcomer Award from the São Paulo Association of Art Critics. During the telenovela's original broadcast, she faced censorship from the Juvenile Court, which prohibited her from giving interviews based on her controversial opinions about the school system. In June 1979 Glória landed the lead role in Cabocla opposite her husband Fábio Júnior. She was unable to shoot the final scenes of the telenovela due to a harsh stress crisis that kept her hospitalized for two weeks.[3]
1980s
In 1980, after she left the hospital, Glória decided to change her visual, cutting and lightening her hair. Her next telenovelas were Água Viva and As Três Marias, an adaptation of Clarice Lispector's novel of the same name. She made a deal with Globo so that she could act in her first feature film after the end of this telenovela. In 1981, Glória starred in Fábio Barreto's Índia, a filha do Sol as Putkoy, a Native Brazilian who falls in love with a white soldier played by Nuno Leal Maia.[3] This was also Barreto's first feature film.
In 1982, Glória took a break from acting due to her first pregnancy. In 1983 she returned to telenovelas with Louco Amor as newly graduated journalist Cláudia. During this telenovela, Nelson Pereira dos Santos invited her to play Heloísa, Graciliano Ramos' wife, in his film Memórias do Cárcere. This was her second collaboration with Fábio Barreto, which starred as Siqueira Campos. Glória attended the film's premiere alongside real life Heloísa. In 1984, she acted in the telenovela Partido Alto. The following year would mark Globo's 20th anniversary, and the mini-series O Tempo e o Vento, an adaptation of Érico Veríssimo's novel, would be produced to celebrate it. After she learned of the intentions of Paulo José, the director of the mini-series, to cast her as the main lead Ana Terra, Glória convinced Globo's head director Daniel Filho that she could reconcile the shooting of the telenovela and the mini-series.[3]
After O Tempo e o Vento, Glória starred in her second film, Francisco Ramalho Júnior's Bésame Mucho, alongside Antônio Fagundes and José Wilker. She moved to São Paulo for two months with daughter Cléo in order to shot the film. In 1987 she starred in the telenovela Direito de Amar and in the film Jorge, Um Brasileiro. In 1988, she postponed her honeymoon with second husband Orlando Moraes in order to play Maria de Fátima, Regina Duarte's daughter and antagonist, in Vale Tudo.[3]
1990s and 2000s
In 1990, Glória starred in Mico Preto, followed by O Dono do Mundo. In 1993, after the bith of her second daughter, Glória starred in a remake of Mulheres de Areia playing twin sisters. She received the Troféu Imprensa Award for Best Actress for her performance in the telenovela. In 1994 she starred in the mini-series Memorial de Maria Moura, adapted from the Raquel de Queiroz' novel of the same name. It won Glória another award from the São Paulo Association of Art Critics and was shown in various international markets under the international title Merciless Land. In 1995 she starred in O Quatrilho, her third collaboration with Fábio Barreto. Glória received several best actress awards and the film was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film.[3]
In 1996, Glória starred in O Rei do Gado with Patrícia Pillar, her co-star in O Quatrilho. In 1997 she starred as the main lead in Anjo Mau. It was one of the highest-rating telenovelas ever in the 6 p.m. timeslot. The following year, Glória moved to Los Angeles with her family to seek privacy. After living a whole year in California, Glória starred in Suave Veneno.[3]
In 2000, Glória gave birth to her third daughter. The following year she starred in the film adaptation of A Partilha, a play by Miguel Falabella. Just like the play, the film was also a critical and commercial success. In 2002, Glória starred in Desejos de Mulher, one of the lowest-rating telenovelas in the history of Globo. The following year, she moved with her family to Goiás, the native state of her husband, living among a ranch and an apartment. In 2004, she gave birth to Bento, her fourth child and first son.[3]
In 2005, Glória's father died as an implication of Parkinson's disease. That same year she filmed Daniel Filho's Se Eu Fosse Você alongside Tony Ramos. It became one of the highest-grossing Brazilian films since the Retomada, selling more than 4 million tickets. After the flop of Desejos de Mulher, she returned to telenovelas with the 2005 hit Belíssima, alongside Fernanda Montenegro.[3]
In 2007 she starred in the Daniel Filho-directed Primo Basílio, an adaptation of the José Maria de Eça de Queiroz novel O Primo Basílio. The following year she starred opposite Tony Ramos in Paraíso Tropical. In early 2008, once again seeking privacy, she moved to Paris with her family. In 2009 she released Se Eu Fosse Você 2, which became the highest-grossing Brazilian film of the decade, and starred in Lula, o filho do Brasil, a biopic about President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, marking her fourth collaboration with Fábio Barreto and the first with her daughter Cléo. She also starred in É Proibido Fumar[3]
Glória recently announced that she will release her biography before returning to Paris on March 8, 2010. The book 40 Anos de Glória, written by Eduardo Nassife and Fábio Fabrício Fabretti, will mark the 40 years of her career.[4]
In 2013, she starred the movie Reaching for the Moon along with Miranda Otto, the film follows the real love story between the American poet Elizabeth Bishop and Brazilian architect Lota de Macedo Soares.[5] Set in Petrópolis, during the years of 1950 and 1960, the story coincides with the emergence of Bossa Nova and the construction and inauguration of the capital Brasilia. The film deals with the story of these two women and their trajectories.[6]
Personal life
In the 1970s, Glória dated Chico Anysio's son Nizo Neto. From 1979 to 1983 she was married to singer and actor Fábio Júnior, father of her oldest daughter, Cléo Pires (born October 2, 1982), also an actress. She has been married to singer Orlando Moraes since April 1988, with whom she had Antônia (born August 7, 1992), Ana (born July 10, 2000), and Bento (born October 4, 2004).[2]
Awards
Over the 40 years of her professional career, Glória Pires has won numerous awards. In 1979 she won the São Paulo Association of Art Critics Award (Portuguese: Associação Paulista dos Críticos de Arte - APCA) for Most Promising Television Actress for Dancin' Days. In 1989, 1992, and 1994, she won the APCA trophy for Best Television Actress for Vale Tudo, O Dono do Mundo, and Mulheres de Areia, respectively. In 1995 Glória won the Havana Film Festival Best Actress Award for her performance in O Quatrilho. In 1996 she received the APCA trophy for Best Film Actress for O Quatrilho, a feat she would repeate in 2010 with É Proibido Fumar. In 2009 Glória won the Brasília Film Festival Candango Award for Best Actress for her performance in É Proibido Fumar.
Filmography
- 2013 - Reaching for the Moon as Lota de Macedo Soares
- 2010 - Lula, o filho do Brasil as Dona Lindu
- 2009 - É Proibido Fumar as Baby
- 2008 - Se Eu Fosse Você 2 as Helena/Cláudio
- 2007 - Primo Basílio as Juliana
- 2006 - Se Eu Fosse Você as Helena/Cláudio
- 2001 - A Partilha as Selma
- 1997 - Pequeno Dicionário Amoroso as fortune teller
- 1996 - O Guarani as Isabel
- 1995 - O Quatrilho as Pierina
- 1988 - Jorge, um Brasileiro as Sandra
- 1987 - Besame Mucho as Olga
- 1984 - Memórias do Cárcere as Dona Heloísa
- 1982 - Índia, a Filha do Sol as Indian
TV work
- 2012: Guerra dos Sexos as Roberta Leone
- 2012: As Brasileiras as Ângela Cristina
- 2011: Insensato Coração as Norma Amaral
- 2007: Paraíso Tropical as Lúcia Vilela
- 2005: Belíssima (Beauty) as Júlia Assumpção
- 2002: Desejos de Mulher as Julia Miranda Moreno
- 1999: Suave Veneno as Inês Fragonard / Lavínia Stuart
- 1997: Anjo Mau (Bad Angel) as Nice Noronha
- 1996: O Rei do Gado as Rafaela Berdinazzi/Marieta
- 1994: Memorial de Maria Moura as Maria Moura
- 1993: Mulheres de Areia as Ruth/Raquel Araújo
- 1991: O Dono do Mundo as Estela Maciel
- 1990: Mico Preto as Sarita
- 1988: Vale Tudo as Maria de Fátima Acioly Roitman
- 1987: Direito de Amar as Rosália Medeiros
- 1984: Partido Alto as Celina
- 1983: Louco Amor as Cláudia
- 1980: Água Viva as Sandra
- 1979: Cabocla as Zuca
- 1978: Dancin' Days as Marisa
- 1976: Duas Vidas as Letícia
- 1973: O Semideus as Ione
- 1972: Selva de Pedra as Fatinha (Fátima)
References
- ↑ "Astral City: A Spiritual Journey (2010) - Trivia - IMDB", at the Internet Movie Database.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Glória Pires - Biography, at the Internet Movie Database.
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 3.6 3.7 3.8 3.9 3.10 3.11 (Portuguese) Biography at official website
- ↑ http://oglobo.globo.com/cultura/kogut/posts/2009/12/27/gloria-pires-lancara-sua-biografia-em-marco-de-2010-252097.asp
- ↑ Crítica: Filme 'Flores Raras' é corajoso, mas não tão arrojado como pede a trama
- ↑ Flores Raras - Cinema Brasileira
External links
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