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Mónica Villa is a Actor born on 16 december 1954

Mónica Villa

Mónica Villa
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Birth name Mónica Villa
Birth 16 december 1954 (69 years)

Mónica Villa (born 1954) is an award-winning Argentine actress of stage, screen, and TV, as well as a researcher and educator. She earned a Best Actress award for her role as "Susana" in cult classic "Esperando la Carroza at the 1985 Festival de Cine Iberoamericano, in Huelva, Spain. She won an ACE Golden award for best leading actress in the 2002 comedy "Ojos traidores", a 2004 Premios Trinidad Guevara for best Actress of a Repertoire Company, a Premios Carlos de Oro for her 2011 performance as best lead actress in the theater production "Jardín De Otoño", and in 2015 a Premios Estrella de Mar for Best Female Performance in a Repertoire Company for "La Nona". In addition, she has been nominated for a Best Actress in a TV Special for the 2003 Premios Martín Fierro, making her acting work recognized in all three major media.

She was the first actor in Argentina to earn a Master's Degree and has published and had performed an opera for children. In addition, she has written and performed in the play “Raren bicho raro”.

Biography

Mónica Villa was born 16 December, 1954 in Buenos Aires, Argentina. She grew up in Villa Urquiza and dreamed of becoming a veterinarian or guitar player. At 13 or 14, she changed directions and began to pursue acting. She began to study acting and enrolled in the classes of Hedy Crilla. In an unusual move for Argentinian actors, she enrolled in the Argentine and Latin American Theater Program at Buenos Aires University (UBA) and qualified for the Master’s Degree in Argentine and Latin American Theater, with a thesis titled "José González Castillo, Militante de lo Popular". She became the first actor to attain a Master's degree in Argentina in 2011 and has plans to publish her thesis as a book.




Theater work
Villa made her theater debut in 1974 as Nancy in the comedy "The Knack", written by British playwright Ann Jellicoe directed by Augustín Alezzo. In 1976, she acted in the play "Como quien dice Adellach" in the Teatro de La Fábula in Buenos Aires under the direction of Rolando Revagliatti. In 1980, Villa had a starring role in "Fando y Lys" and her performance was well received leading to additional work in the theater and television offers. She participated in 1982 in both the production of "El estupendo cornudo" at the Museo del Cine Pablo C. Ducrós Hicken, and the Teatro Abierto in "Prohibido no pisar el cesped" by Rodolfo Paganini, After a five year break for TV and film, in 1987 she performed in "Gasalla es el Maipo y el Maipo es Gasalla" with Antonio Gasalla and "Dando pasos".

After her son was born, Villa took a hiatus from theater for about a decade. When she returned in 1998, her first presentation was "Rarem bicho raro", a comedy which she co-wrote with Silvia Kanter. In 2002, she performed in "Ojos traidores" for which she won an ACE de Oro for Best Comedy Actress. In 2004 and 2005, Villa performed in "De cirujas, putas y suicidas" for which she won the 2004 Premios Trinidad Guevara for best Actress of a Repertoire Company. She received praise for her performance in "Pan de piedra" from 2007 and the comedy "8 mujeres", which began touring in 2011 and performed around the country through 2012.

In 2011, she performed "Jardín De Otoño", for which she won Best Lead Actress in a Drama from Carlos de Oro Awards. When Mujers ended, Villa began touring "La Nona". In 2015, she was nominated for a Premios Estrella de Mar for Best Female Performance in a Repertoire Company for it and won the award.


TV work
In 1981, Villa began performing in a series of Specials for ATC, including episodes "Sanatorium", "Una cuestión de familia" and "Abuso de confianza". In 1986, she performed in "Soñar sin Límite" and participated in TV specials like "Chantecler" and "Los especiales de Alejandro Doria". She also played in weekly serials including "Atreverse", "Fiscales", and "Chiquititas", among many others, as she preferred to work in television while she was on hiatus from the theater and raising her son. She also worked in episodes of "Los Simuladores", one of which she was nominated as Best Actress in a TV Special for the 2003 Premios Martín Fierro.


Film work
"El pasajero del jardín" (1982), "El desquite" (1983), and "Darse cuenta" (1984) were Villa's first three films. With her fourth film, she earned popular acclaim as "Susana" in cult movie "Esperando la Carroza" (1985) filmed by Alejandro Doria, for which she won the Best Actress Award at the XI Festival de Cine Iberoamericano, in Huelva, Spain—a corollary prize was awarded to American actor William Hurt in that year's edition of the festival. The film has been called the "most important film made by the National Cinema" and in fact, the sequel was not filmed as long as Alejandro Doria was living, as he did not want to "compete with a myth". The sequel, "Esperando la carroza 2" was released after his death, in 2009, 23 years after the original film.

In 1985, Villa co-starred in "Tacos Altos" directed by Sergio Renán. In 1993, she played "Señora Zamildio" with Italian actor Marcelo Mastroianni in "De Eso no se Habla" written by María Luisa Bemberg. In 2004 she made "Niña santa" directed by Lucrecia Martel and in 2010 she appeared in "Largo viaje del día hacia la noche". The film was shot with minimal equipment and relied primarily on its staging and the talent of its leading trio of actors. In 2014 she participated in the film, "Wild Tales" directed by Damián Szifrón.


Other artistic endeavors
Villa wrote an opera, “Tortita” (Pancake) for children which was staged in 1983. It was co-authored by Marta Merajver-Kurlat and the score was written by the late composer Carlos Constantini. The set was designed by Rosa Buk and it was performed under the direction of Jorge Roca at the Stained Glass Theater in Buenos Aires.

In an effort to help rising young actors, Villa also teaches. She has offered seminars on the "History of Argentine Theater" for the Sociedad Argentina de Gestión de Actores Intérpretes (SAGAI) (Management Company of Argentinean Interpretive Actors), and at La Casa de Moreira.

Usually with

Source : Wikidata

Filmography of Mónica Villa (6 films)

Display filmography as list

Actor

Wild Tales
Wild Tales (2014)
, 2h2
Origin Argentine
Genres Drama, Thriller, Comedy, Comedy-drama
Themes Films about terrorism
Actors Ricardo Darín, Leonardo Sbaraglia, Darío Grandinetti, Nancy Dupláa, María Onetto, Érica Rivas
Roles Professor Leguizamón (segment "Pasternak")
Rating80% 4.048444.048444.048444.048444.04844
Two plane passengers discover that they know a man named Pasternak: the woman is his former girlfriend, and the man is a music critic who savagely reviewed his work. They discover that everybody on the flight is connected to Pasternak. An air stewardess reveals that Pasternak is the plane's pilot and has locked himself into the cockpit. Pasternak crashes the plane into his parents' house.
The Holy Girl, 1h46
Directed by Lucrecia Martel
Origin Argentine
Genres Drama
Themes Films about sexuality, LGBT-related film, Lesbian-related films
Actors Mercedes Morán, Mía Maestro, María Alché, Julieta Zylberberg, Mónica Villa
Roles Madre de Josefina
Rating66% 3.348643.348643.348643.348643.34864
The film takes place in the small town of La Ciénaga, at the Hotel Termas, a dilapidated Argentine hotel, during a medical conference. Two young teenage girls, Amalia (María Alché) and her best friend Josefina (Julieta Zylberberg), begin to explore their new sexuality and, at the same time, have Catholic religious passion. Amalia lives with her attractive divorced mother (Mercedes Morán), who owns the hotel, and her uncle Freddy (Alejandro Urdapilleta). During this time, in Amalia's mind, spiritual and sexual impulses are seeming to converge.
I Don't Want to Talk About It, 1h46
Directed by María Luisa Bemberg
Origin Argentine
Genres Drama, Romance
Actors Marcello Mastroianni, Betiana Blum, Roberto Carnaghi, Mónica Villa, Fito Páez
Roles Miss Zamildio
Rating68% 3.4314053.4314053.4314053.4314053.431405
Une petite fille jolie et intelligente vit en Argentine, protégée par sa mère parce qu'elle est naine. Un riche célibataire en tombe amoureux.
Waiting for the Hearse, 1h27
Directed by Alejandro Doria
Origin Argentine
Genres Comedy
Actors China Zorrilla, Antonio Gasalla, Betiana Blum, Mónica Villa, Enrique Pinti, Darío Grandinetti
Roles Susana
Rating79% 3.998283.998283.998283.998283.99828
Musicardi's octogenarian widow, Ana María de los Dolores Buscaroli, called Mamá Cora by everybody (Antonio Gasalla), has four children: Antonio (Luis Brandoni), Sergio (Juan Manuel Tenuta), Emilia (Lidia Catalano) and Jorge Musicardi (Julio De Grazia) with whom she lives and goes through financial troubles. This situation, plus lack of space and constant generational conflicts, makes Susana (Jorge's wife) ask desperately for the siblings to take their mother with any of them for a while.