Osvaldo Laport

Osvaldo Laport
Born Rubens Osvaldo Jesús Udaquiola Laport
August 12, 1956
Uruguay Juan Lacaze, Uruguay
Years active 1983-present
Spouse(s) Viviana Sáez (1980-present)
Children Jazmín
Awards Martin Fierro in 1999.
Martin Fierro in 2005.
Website
Osvaldo Laport

Rubens Osvaldo Jesús Udaquiola Laport (born August 12, 1956, in Juan Lacaze, Uruguay) is a Uruguayan-Argentine actor and UNHCR Goodwill Ambassador. In 2000, he earned Martín Fierro Award for his portrayal in television comedy Campeones de la Vida.

Career

Osvaldo Laport moved to Buenos Aires in 1976 and started to study drama at Luis Tasca's Drama School. In order to support his acting classes and pay his room in a hotel downtown he had to work in some jobs as clown, warehouse employee and bricklayer. In 1979, he met Viviana Sáez in the same school, whom he married the following year (they have one daughter, Jazmín, born in 1995).

Then, Osvaldo's drama teacher, Luis Tasca, called him for to work in the play Adiós Juventud. His acting performance got the attention of Santiago Doria, who offered him the leading role in Oscar Wilde's The Importance of Being Earnest, another important play in Argentina. In 1983, Luis Tasca supported Osvaldo again for him get a bit part in the soap opera Cara a Cara, starring Verónica Castro. His works in TV during the 1980s brought him success and in 1990 he was cast in a leading role opposite Jeanette Rodríguez in the remake of Pobre diabla.

The following year, another hit in Argentina and Europe Cosecharás Tu Siembra with Luisa Kuliok gave him a successful career for the rest of the decade. His major achievement was a Martin Fierro Award (1999/2000) as Best Actor in a Comedy for his performance as Guido Guevara in Campeones.

In 2006, Laport became UNHCR Goodwill Ambassador.

One of his most successful roles is Martín Fierro in television sitcom Son de Fierro (2007–2008), which is one of the most successful television series in Argentina in history.

In 2009, Laport was the first Goodwill Ambassador to visit internally displaced camps and urban refugees in the Democratic Republic of Congo. The trip had an extensive coverage in the media and a prime-time TV documentary shown in Argentina and Uruguay.

Filmography

Television

Film

Awards

External links