Sílvia Marsó

Sílvia Marsó
Born
Sílvia Cartañá Ortega

(1963-03-08) 8 March 1963
Barcelona, Spain
Websitehttp://www.silviamarso.com

Sílvia Cartañá Ortega (Barcelona, 8 March 1963), better known as Sílvia Marsó is a Spanish film, stage and television actress and theatre producer. She started her career in the Televisión Española's game show Un, dos, tres... responda otra vez.

Biography

At the age of 14, he enrolled in the Pantomime School at the Barcelona Institut del Teatre, and his first public appearance was in the Gothic Quarter of Barcelona with a street performance alongside some of his classmates, including Paco Mir from Tricicle and Jürgen Müller from La Fura dels Baus. It was then that he adopted his stage name in homage to the French mime Marcel Marceau.[1]

Television

Filmography

  • 1985: El donante, by Tito Fernández.
  • 1994: La madre muerta, by Juanma Bajo Ulloa.
  • 2001: Amor, curiosidad, prozak y dudas, by Miguel Santesmases
  • 2002: Nosotras, by Judith Colell
  • 2005: Cuadrilátero, by José Carlos Ruíz
  • 2007: Ángeles S.A. by Eduard Bosch, with María Isabel, Pablo Carbonell and Anabel Alonso
  • 2007: Freedomless, by Xoel Pamos
  • 2007: Myway, by Toni Salgot
  • 2008: Pájaros muertos, by Guillermo and Jorge Sempere
  • 2018: Sin novedad by Miguel Berzal de Miguel with Silvia Espigado, Fernando Guillen Cuervo, Gonzalo Castro, Esmeralda Moya.

Theatre

References

  1. ^ "Admiro a Tierno Galván porque no fue un político".
  2. ^ "Búscame un tenor « Silvia Marsó". www.silviamarso.com. Archived from the original on 2 July 2015.
  3. ^ "La loca de Chaillot".
  4. ^ Hecuba silviamarso.com
  5. ^ "La dama de alba « Silvia Marsó". www.silviamarso.com. Archived from the original on 2 July 2015.
  6. ^ Image silviamarso.com
  7. ^ Image silviamarso.com
  8. ^ Image silviamarso.com
  9. ^ Image silviamarso.com
  10. ^ Yerma silviamarso.com
  11. ^ "Capitalismo, hazles reír".
  12. ^ Image silviamarso.com
  13. ^ "La puerta de al lado". silviamarso.com.
  14. ^ "24 horas en la vida de una mujer - Teatro Abadía".