Ana Lúcia Torre
Ana Lúcia Torre | |
---|---|
Ana Lúcia in 2010 | |
Born |
Ana Lúcia Torre Rodrigues April 21, 1945 São Paulo , Brazil |
Occupation | Actress |
Years active | 1977–present |
Spouse(s) | José Luiz Maffei Rosa (m. 1989) |
Ana Lúcia Torre Rodrigues (born April 21, 1945) is a Brazilian actress of cinema, theater and television.[1][2]
Biography
Ana Lúcia Torre was born in São Paulo. As a child, his family moved to the city of Rio de Janeiro, in search of a better life. Shortly afterwards they went looking for a job in São Paulo, where the actress was created. His family is a Kardecist spiritist. The actress believes in reincarnation. Her family was converted when Ana Lucia was 5 years old and began to suffer with fainting and depression. When she was taken to a kardecist center and taken to the pass, her frame improved at once, and all these disorders were attributed to an obsessive spirit who took care of Ana Lucia when she was a child, but who had soon been removed from her, and Indoctrinated. The actress tells in interviews to remember until today that during her childhood, she remembers when her father incorporated a caboclo and began to work like medium kardecista in a center of white table.[3]
She passed the university entrance examination, and began to study social sciences at Pontifical Catholic University of São Paulo in 1965. At the university there were theater groups, in which she soon became interested. The institution's directory wanted only one theater group, and it raffled it out with the subscribers, and Ana Lucia passed the tests that involved text decoration and creation of scenes and interpretation. The group assembled and reproduced the show 'Morte e Vida Severina'. Among his university theater colleagues are Chico Buarque de Hollanda, one of the greatest musicians, playwrights and writers in Brazil, and Cláudio Tozzi, one of the most renowned painters and artists of today.
Passionate about the artistic world, Ana Lúcia closed the course of social sciences in 1966, and decided to do a professional course of theater in Lisbon, where many young people of the time went to study performing arts. There, she lived in a student republic and received money from her parents to stay. After a year and a half studying, creating pieces and introducing herself, Ana Lucia met a Brazilian who became her first boyfriend and would be her future first husband in 1967. Soon they began dating and after a year and a half of dating, in 1968, her boyfriend revealed that she wanted to study maritime law in Norway, and asked her to marry him. Ana Lúcia accepted, and they went to São Paulo, where they married officially in a small civil ceremony, and from there, they went to live in Oslo, the Norwegian capital. In the distant, icy country, Ana Lucia had to learn the local language besides English, and to help her husband with the expenses, she worked as a hotel maid, a store saleswoman, and later as a secretary of the Brazilian Embassy. At age four in Norway, and with her husband already formed, the couple moved in 1972 to London, where her husband would do a specialization in his area of study, where the couple lived for a year. At the time she lived in England, Ana Lucia worked as an administrative executive at the Brazilian Aeronautics Commission. Upon arriving back in Brazil in 1973, they moved to São Paulo. Ana Lúcia and her husband reunited a great pair of friends: Celso Nunes and Regina Braga, parents of the actor Gabriel Braga Nunes. Celso, the theater director, invited Ana Lucia to act in the play Equus, and at the age of 30, Ana Lúcia Torre entered the theater professionally. After a few years, due to constant quarrels, the couple divorced. After him, Ana Lucia married twice more.[4]
He has performed in several theater plays throughout Brazil and abroad. In television he began his career in 1977, in Dona Xepa, where he lived the glamorous futile and bankrupt Glorita. One of his greatest roles in television was the unforgettable and devilish villain Debora, in the novel Soul Mate. He also participated in several productions such as the first version of Ciranda de Pedra, Tieta, Renascer, A Indomada, Cravo and Rosa, Alma Gêmea, The Prophet, Seven Sins, Faces & Bocas, Foolish Heart, where he got a lot of attention. Acted in Amor Eterno Amor as the millionaire Verbena Borges, who seeks to rediscover the missing child 30 years ago. In 2013 he appeared in Joia Rara, playing the co-star of Frau Gertrudes. In 2015 he plays the humble retired teacher Hilda in the novel of the Eleven Secret Truths. In the assembly for the theater of Death and Vida Severina, by João Cabral de Mello Neto, he won first place at the International Festival of University Theater in Nancy, France.
After living seven years in Europe, back in Brazil, Ana Lúcia stars in several pieces as Seria Cômico se não Fosse Sério, a show that earned her the nomination for best actress for the 2010 Shell award.
Filmography
Television
Year | Title | Role |
---|---|---|
1977 | Dona Xepa | Glorita Camargo |
Sinhazinha Flô | Ermelinda | |
1979 | Memórias de Amor | Princesa Isabel |
Marron Glacé | Stela | |
1980 | As três Marias | Norma |
1981 | Ciranda de Pedra | Celina |
1982 | O Homem Proibido | Olívia |
1984 | Corpo a Corpo | Olga |
1987 | Corpo Santo | Marta |
1989 | Tieta | Juraci Pitombo |
1990 | Brasileiras e Brasileiros | Clara |
1993 | Renascer | Quitéria |
1995 | As Pupilas do Senhor Reitor | Zefa Das Graças |
1997 | A Indomada | Cleonice Williams Mackenzie |
1998 | Serras Azuis | Dona Osória |
2000 | O Cravo e a Rosa | Leonor Fernandes (Neca) |
2001 | Porto dos Milagres | Salete |
2004 | Um Só Coração | Sálua |
2005 | Alma Gêmea | Débora Ávilla Saboya |
2006 | O Profeta | Inspetora Hilda Vieira |
2007 | Sete Pecados | Anja Guilhermina |
2008 | Casos e Acasos | Regina |
Xuxa e as Noviças | Sumara | |
2009 | Caras & Bocas | Esther Abraham |
2011 | Insensato Coração | Anita Brandão (Tia Neném)[5] |
2012 | Amor Eterno Amor | Verbena Borges |
Louco por Elas | Dra. Olga | |
2013 | Joia Rara | Frau Gertrude Ducker Hauser[6] |
2015 | Verdades Secretas | Hilda Brito[7] |
2016 | Êta Mundo Bom! | Dona Camélia Batista[8] |
Cinema
Year | Title | Role |
---|---|---|
1981 | Um Menino...Uma Mulher[9] | Dona Rita |
1982 | Retrato Falado de uma Mulher sem Pudor | |
1988 | Romance da Empregada | |
1991 | Manobra Radical | |
A Revolta dos Carnudos | ||
2000 | Através da Janela | Tomasina |
2001 | Os Xeretas | Alana |
2004 | O Vestido | Tia Adélia |
Como Fazer um Filme de Amor | Mãe de Laura | |
Francamente... | Ângela | |
2005 | Quanto Vale Ou é Por Quilo? | |
O Retrato da Felicidade | Psiquiatra | |
2006 | Paid | Empregada |
2007 | Primo Basílio | Vizinha |
2009 | Os Inquilinos | Diretora da Escola |
2010 | Reflexões de um Liquidificador[5] | Elvira |
2012 | E a Vida Continua... | Brígida |
Meus Dois Amores | Vó Lindelena[10] | |
O Mundo de Ulim e Oilut | Bruxa[11][12] | |
2017 | Bingo: O Rei das Manhãs | Marta Mendes |
Através das Sombras | Dona Geraldina[13] |
Stage
- Morte e Vida Severina[9]
- Eles não Usam Black-tie
- Rose Rose
- Tartufo
- Norma
- Arsênico e Alfazema
- Seria Cômico Se Não Fosse Sério
- Suburbano Coração (1989–1990)
- Como se Tornar uma Super Mãe
Awards
Year | Award | Category | Indication | Results | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1998 | Prêmio APCA | Best Supporting Actress | Cleonice Williams in A Indomada | Won | |
2006 | Prêmio Qualidade Brasil | Best Supporting Actress | Débora Ávilla Saboya in Alma Gêmea | Nominated | |
2011 | Prêmio Extra de TV | Best Supporting Actress | Tia Neném in Insensato Coração | Nominated | [14] |
37º SESC Festival de Filmes | Best Actress | Elvira in Reflexões de um Liquidificador | Won | ||
Prêmio Contigo! de TV | Best Supporting Actress | Tia Neném in Insensato Coração | Nominated | [15] | |
2017 | 43º SESC Festival de Filmes | Best Actress | Dona Geraldina in Através das Sombras | Nominated |
References
- ↑ "Ana Lúcia Torre – Vida". Contigo! – Famosos. Retrieved august 13, 2011. Check date values in:
|access-date=
(help) - ↑ "Ana Lúcia Torre relembra início de carreira na televisão e no cinema – Depois de ser homenageada pelo 9º Amazonas Film Festival, a atriz Ana Lúcia Torre relembrou com alegria e saudosismo seu início de carreira na televisão e no cinema". Revista Caras. 7 November 2012. Retrieved 21 February 2016. line feed character in
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at position 71 (help) - ↑
- ↑ Não posso temer a morte, diz Ana Lúcia Torre
- 1 2 Jamal, Kelly (9 August 2010). "Ana Lúcia Torre conta como foi filmar Reflexões de um Liquidificador". R7. Retrieved 3 January 2011.
- ↑ João Gabriel Batista. "Joia Rara repete parte do elenco de Cordel Encantado". Retrieved 23 June 2013.
- ↑ Flávio Ricco (15 May 2015). "Drica Moraes grava nesta sexta primeiras cenas de "Verdades Secretas"". UOL Televisão. Retrieved 15 May 2015.
- ↑ Gshow (27 November 2015). "Veja o elenco da nova novela das 6, 'Êta Mundo Bom!'". TV – Gshow. Retrieved 14 December 2015.
- 1 2 Caras – UOL. "CARAS – Perfil:Ana Lúcia Torre". Caras. Retrieved 23 January 2013.
- ↑ "Meus Dois Amores". Globo Filmes. Retrieved 19 December 2016. Check date values in:
|access-date=
(help) - ↑ "O Mundo de Uilim e Oilut". Porta Curtas. Retrieved 2016-12-19.
- ↑ "O Mundo de Ulim e Oilut -Elenco". Tangerina Entretenimento. Retrieved 2016-12-19.
- ↑ "Através das Sombras". Globo Filmes. Retrieved 2016-12-19.
- ↑ "Prêmio Extra de TV: Deborah Secco fica com o prêmio de melhor atriz coadjuvante". Extra. Retrieved 19 December 2016.
- ↑ "Indicados ao 14ª Prêmio Contigo de TV". Contigo.com.br. Retrieved 26 January 2017.