Alfredo Landa
Biography
Alfredo Landa (3 March 1933 – 9 May 2013) was a Spanish actor.
Alfredo Landa Arena born in Pamplona (Navarre), Spain. He finished his pre-university studies in San Sebastián. He then began university studies on Law, where he began to work with university school groups. He left university to work in the theater. After working as a dubbing actor for a short time in the 1950s, he debuted with his first considerable role in film in José María Forqué's Atraco a las tres in 1962. When Francisco Franco died in 1975, censorship began to disappear. This led to a growth of erotic comedies on Spanish cinema. Landa became the "sexually repressed" role of that trend, especially under directors Mariano Ozores and Pedro Lazaga. He even created his own trend, that some people called landismo.[2]
Afterwards, Landa changed his image, taking much deeper roles, like his bandit in El Bosque animado. Landa, along with Francisco Rabal, won Best Actor award at 1984 Cannes Film Festival for his memorable performance in Los santos inocentes. He is now widely recognized as a great dramatic actor. After a career with more than one hundred and twenty movies, one dozen of television series, and several stage successes, with a great amount of Spanish and European awards, 74-year-old Landa announced his retirement at the X Festival de Cine de Málaga (10th Movie Festival of Málaga) while receiving a new award. Description above from the Wikipedia article Alfredo Landa (actor), licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.
Filmography
The Executioner
as Sacristán 1963
The Holy Innocents
as Paco, El Bajo 1984
The Heifer
as Brigada Castro 1985
Moscow Gold
as Faustino Peláez 2003
La ciudad no es para mí
as Genaro 1966
El crack
as Areta 1981
Robbery at 3 O'clock
as Castrillo 1962
The Enchanted Forest
as Malvís 1987
Profesor eróticus
as Profesor Mussy 1981
Cateto a babor
as Miguel Cañete Moste 1970
El crack dos
as Areta 1983
The Sow
as Bartolomé 1992
¿Qué hacemos con los hijos?
as Enrique 1967
¡Vente a Alemania, Pepe!
as Pepe 1971
Miracle of Marcellino
as Brother Pappina 1991
Pero… ¡en qué país vivimos!
as Rodolfo Sicilia 1967