Fernando Fernández Gómez OAXS MMT (28 August 1921 – 21 November 2007), better known as Fernando Fernán Gómez, was a Spanish actor, screenwriter, film director, theater director, novelist, and playwright. Prolific and outstanding in all these fields, he was elected member of the Royal Spanish Academy in 1998. He was born in Lima, Peru while his mother, Spanish actress Carola Fernán-Gómez, was making a tour in Latin America. He would later use her surname for his stage name when he moved to Spain in 1924.
Fernando Fernán Gómez | |
---|---|
Born | Fernando Fernández Gómez 28 August 1921 Lima, Peru |
Died | 21 November 2007 Madrid, Spain | (aged 86)
Resting place | Cementerio de la Almudena, Madrid |
Citizenship |
|
Occupations |
|
Years active | 1943–2006 |
Spouse(s) |
|
Children | 2 |
Parents |
|
Relatives | Fernando Díaz de Mendoza (grandfather) María Guerrero (grandmother) |
Seat B of the Real Academia Española | |
In office 30 January 2000 – 21 November 2007 | |
Preceded by | Emilio Alarcos Llorach |
Succeeded by | José Luis Borau |
Fernán Gómez was regarded as one of Spain's most beloved and respected entertainers, winning two Silver Bears for Best Actor at the Berlin International Film Festival for The Anchorite and Stico. He was also the recipient of the Prince of Asturias Award for the Arts, the National Theater Award, the Gold Medal of Merit in the Fine Arts, the Gold Medal of the Spanish Film Academy, and six Goya Awards. He starred in 200 films between 1943 and 2006,[1] working with directors including Carlos Saura (Ana and the Wolves, Mama Turns 100), Víctor Erice (The Spirit of the Beehive), Fernando Trueba (Belle Époque), José Luis Garci (The Grandfather), José Luis Cuerda (Butterfly's Tongue) and Pedro Almodóvar (All About My Mother).
He directed over 25 films, among them El extraño viaje (1964), and Life Goes On (1965), both great classics of the Spanish cinema that were very limited distribution due to Franco's censorship[2][3] and made him a "cursed" filmmaker in his country.[4] His film Voyage to Nowhere (1986) earned critical acclaim, becoming the most awarded Spanish film at the 1st Goya Awards ceremony.[5]
Early life
editAccording to his memoir,[6] he was probably born in Lima on 28 August 1921, even though his birth certificate indicates that he was born in the Argentine capital, Buenos Aires. His mother, the theater actress Carola Fernán Gómez, was touring South America when he was born in Lima, and his birth certificate was issued days later in Argentina, a country whose nationality he retained, in addition to Spanish nationality, which was granted to him in 1984. He was an extramarital son, his father was also the actor Luis Fernando Díaz de Mendoza y Guerrero, whose mother, the prominent theater actress María Guerrero, prevented the marriage between Fernando Fernán Gómez's parents.[7]
Career
editActing and filmmaking
editAfter some performing school works, he decided to study Philosophy and Letters in Madrid, which he subsequently abandoned when the Spanish Civil War began, but his true vocation led him to the theater. During the Civil War he received classes at the CNT School of Actors, making his professional debut in 1938 at the Laura Pinillos' company.[8] There he was discovered by the Spanish playwright Enrique Jardiel Poncela, who offered him his first major opportunity in 1941, the role as "Redhead" in the play We Thieves Are Honourable.[9]
In 1943, Fernán Gómez joined the film studio Cifesa and made his first movie appearance in Cristina Guzmán, directed by Gonzalo Delgrás.[10] Between the 1940s and 1960s, he established himself as a leading actor in the Spanish film industry, mostly in comic roles: El destino se disculpa (1945), Anchor Button (1948), The Last Horse (1950), I Want to Marry You (1951), Captain Poison (1951), The Pelegrín System (1952), That Happy Couple (1953), Airport (1953), The Other Life of Captain Contreras (1955), Faustina (1957), and La becerrada (1963). He also revealed his abiliy to play drama in Carnival Sunday (1945), Life in Shadows (1948), Reckless (1951), The Tenant (1957), and Rififi in the City (1964). During his career he occasionally play supporting roles in such foreign films as Voice of Silence (1953), The Bachelor (1955), starring Alberto Sordi, The Pyjama Girl Case (1977), with Ray Milland, and Marcellino pane e vino (1991).
In the 1950s he began to direct movies, earning a nomination for Best Film at the Mar del Plata International Film Festival for his 1958 comedy La vida por delante,[11] a story about the difficulties that a newly married couple has in moving forward with their housing, work and economic life. The film pioneered in Spain in breaking the fourth wall and telling the plot in the form of flashbacks[12] and its success led him to made a sequel, La vida alrededor (1959).[13] His first films tended to be humorous satires, including The Wicked Carabel (1956), For Men Only (1960), and Don Mendo's Revenge (1962). In 1964 he filmed El extraño viaje, a dark portrait of Spanish rural repression.[14] It was voted seventh best Spanish film by professionals and critics in 1996 Spanish cinema centenary,[15] and included in a British Film Institute list published in 2016 by film director Pedro Almodóvar among the 13 great Spanish films that inspired him.[16] The latter was followed by Life Goes On (1965), one of the most terrifying and merciless moral portraits of Francoist Spain,[17][18]
He was very much in demand as an actor in the 1970s and 1980s, expanding his range in many films of the new Spanish cinema: starring alongside Geraldine Chaplin in Carlos Saura's Ana and the Wolves (1973) and its sequel Mama Turns 100 (1979), The Love of Captain Brando (1974), Pim, pam, pum... ¡fuego! (1975), The Remains from the Shipwreck (1978), Maravillas (1981), Feroz (1984), The Court of the Pharaoh (1985), Requiem for a Spanish Peasant (1985), Half of Heaven (1986), Moors and Christians (1987), and in the role as Leopoldo de Gregorio, 1st Marquess of Esquilache in Esquilache (1989). In 1973 he starred in Víctor Erice's The Spirit of the Beehive, reaching an international audience for his role as a mournful intellectual father who has a small beehive inside his house.[19][20] That same year he played Don Quixote in the Spanish-Mexican comedy Don Quijote cabalga de nuevo, co-starring Cantinflas as Sancho Panza. In 1977, he won the Silver Bear for Best Actor at the 27th Berlin International Film Festival for his role as a middle-aged man who decides one day to live in the bathroom and never leave it in The Anchorite,[21] and again at the 35th Berlin International Film Festival in 1985 for his role as a broke Roman law professor who offers himself as a slave to an old student in exchange for house and food in Stico.[22] He also won the Pasinetti Prize for Best Actor for his role in Carlos Saura's film Los zancos at the 1984 Venice Film Festival.[23]
He directed and starred in two notable productions for Televisión Española: the fantasy TV movie Juan soldado , which he won the Grand Prix for Best Director at the 9th International Television Festival Golden Prague in 1973,[24] and the 1974 miniseries El pícaro , a historical comedy set in the 17th Century which was based on the picaresque novel. As a filmmaker he made, among others, My Daughter Hildegart (1977), a film inspired in the life of Spanish activist Hildegart Rodríguez Carballeira, which turned out to be a box office hit in Spain,[25] Mambru Went to War (1986), that gave him his first Goya Award for Best Actor,[26] Voyage to Nowhere (1986), based on his own novel which describes a troupe of impoverished actors traipsing from village to village, achieving the Goya Awards for Best Film, Best Director and Best Adapted Screenplay in 1987,[27][28] and The Sea and Time (1989), winner of the Special Jury Prize at the 1989 San Sebastián International Film Festival.[29]
The 1990s was a less active acting period for him, but he enjoyed something of a revival, featuring in five major projects: the historical co-production The Dumbfounded King (1991), the two winners of the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film Belle Époque (1992) and All About My Mother (1999),[30] The Grandfather (1998), which he won a second Goya Award for Best Actor in 1999 for his praised role as Don Rodrigo, Count of Albrit, an old Spanish aristocrat,[31][32] and the hit Butterfly's Tongue (1999), playing Don Gregorio, a republican schoolteacher. In between, he was part of the cast of the comedy show Los ladrones van a la oficina (The thieves go to the office, 1993-1996), awarded an Onda Award in 1993.[33]
In 1999 the San Sebastián International Film Festival granted to him the Donostia Award, which made him the first Spanish movie-maker to receive this distinction.[34]
In the 2000s he appeared in Plenilune (2000), Visionaries (2001), the popular prime time television series Cuéntame cómo pasó (Remember When, 2001), The Shanghai Spell (2002), Tiovivo c. 1950 (2004), and Something to Remember Me By (2005). One of his last great performances was in the film In the City Without Limits (2002), again with Geraldine Chaplin, where he plays a dying man who suffered fearful delusions.[35] The last film he directed was Lázaro de Tormes (2001), from which he received his second Goya Award for Best Adapted Screenplay.[36]
In 2005 he was awarded with the Honorary Golden Bear at the 55th Berlin International Film Festival for his lifetime achievement.[37][38]
Stage and literary work
editIn addition to his extensive career in front and behind the screen, Fernán Gómez wrote numerous stage plays, novels, memoirs, articles, and poems. The most successful was the play Las bicicletas son para el verano (Bicycles Are for the Summer) in 1977,[39] showing the sufferings of a family and their neighbours in besieged Madrid during the Civil War. He won the Lope de Vega Prize for that work in 1978,[40] and it has been adapted into a popular film in 1984, directed by Jaime Chávarri.
As theater director he staged plays such as Dear Liar (1962), by Bernard Shaw; The Kreutzer Sonata (1963), by Leo Tolstoy; Thought (1963), by Leonid Andreyev; and Juan José Alonso Millán's comedies Gravemente peligrosa (1962), Mayores con reparos (1965) and La vil seducción (1967).[41]
He was runner up of the Premio Planeta de Novela for his 1987 historical novel El mal amor.[42] In 1993 he won the Premio de Novela Espasa-Humor for his comedy novel El ascensor de los borrachos.[43]
On October 27, 1995, he received the Prince of Asturias Award for the Arts from the hands of Prince Felipe.[44] In 1998 he published his memoir titled El Tiempo Amarillo: memorias ampliadas (1921-1997). The work has 700 pages and was presented at the Círculo de Bellas Artes in Madrid.[45]
On January 30, 2000, he entered the Royal Spanish Academy for his artistic accomplishments, where he took possession of Seat B with the speech titled "Aventura de la palabra en el siglo xx".[46]
Personal life, death and legacy
editHe married the Spanish, and singer María Dolores Pradera in 1945, with whom he had a daughter, the actress Helena Fernán Gómez, and a son, Fernando. They divorced in 1957. Later then, he had a long relationship with actress Emma Cohen, marrying in 2000.[47]
Fernando Fernán Gómez died in Madrid on 21 November 2007 from a heart failure aggravated by pneumonia and colon cancer.[48] On 19 November 2007, he was admitted to the Oncology area of the Madrid University Hospital La Paz to be treated for pneumonia. Carmen Caffarel, head of the Instituto Cervantes, said "We've lost the great man of Spanish theater and film of the second half of the 20th century".[49]
Pedro Almodóvar highlighted him as "an artist who represents the history of Spanish cinema from its beginnings to the present day." The "excellence" in all his work, Almodóvar noted, was felt in his work as an actor: "He made the difficult as easy as possible, thanks to limitless versatility". That made him capable of "going from Don Mendo's Revenge on Bertolt Brecht". But he was also an "essential director in both film and theater", to the point of being "a complete and irreplaceable artist." "With delightful comedies such as La vida por delante and La vida alrededor, or the very scathing and masterpiece El extraño viaje". Concluding "I will always remember him, and I will continue watching his films".[50]
After the President of the Government José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero announced the death of the actor, the Government of Spain posthumously awarded Fernán Gómez the Grand Cross of the Civil Order of Alfonso X, the Wise on 23 November.[51] The mayor of Madrid, Alberto Ruiz-Gallardón, also announced that the Cultural Center of the Villa de Madrid would be renamed the Fernán Gómez Theater.[52] As he was a lifelong anarchist, his coffin was covered in a black and red anarchist flag and was later cremated in the Almudena Cemetery in Madrid.[53]
In 2017, in commemoration of the 10 years since his death, the exhibition Fernando Fernán Gómez “El Ilustrado” was inaugurated by the graphic artists of the Association of Cadiz Illustrators at the University of Cádiz.[54]
On 3 March 2022, the Instituto Cervantes received the “in memoriam” legacy of Fernán Gómez: his 1938 CNT card and the pen that was given to him when he entered the Royal Spanish Academy in 2000. The legacy was introduced into Box number 1003 of the Caja de las Letras by Fernán-Gómez's granddaughter, Helena de Llanos.[55][56]
In 2023, the Spanish Government acquired the archive of Fernando Fernán Gómez and his wife Emma Cohen, which is made up of 250 boxes and other objects that are already kept in the facilities of the Filmoteca Española, entity dependent on the Institute of Cinematography and Audiovisual Arts (ICAA).[57]
Filmography
editFilm
editWriter and Director
editYear | Title | Director | Writer | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1954 | Manicomio | Yes | Yes | Co-directed with Luis María Delgado |
1955 | El mensaje | Yes | Yes | |
1956 | El malvado Carabel | Yes | Yes | |
1958 | La vida por delante | Yes | Yes | |
1959 | La vida alrededor | Yes | Yes | |
1960 | Sólo para hombres | Yes | Yes | |
1961 | La venganza de Don Mendo | Yes | Yes | |
1964 | El mundo sigue | Yes | Yes | |
Los palomos | Yes | Yes | ||
El extraño viaje | Yes | No | ||
1965 | Ninette y un señor de Murcia | Yes | Yes | |
1966 | Mayores con reparos | Yes | Yes | |
1970 | Crimen imperfecto | Yes | No | |
1971 | Cómo casarse en 7 días | Yes | Yes | |
1974 | Yo la vi primero | Yes | Yes | |
1976 | La querida | Yes | No | |
¡Bruja, más que bruja! | Yes | Yes | ||
1977 | Mi hija Hildegart | Yes | Yes | |
1979 | Gulliver | No | Yes | |
1980 | Cinco tenedores | Yes | No | |
1984 | Los Zancos | No | Yes | |
1985 | Stico | No | Yes | |
1986 | Mambrú se fue a la guerra | Yes | No | |
El viaje a ninguna parte | Yes | Yes | Also based on his novel | |
1987 | Mi General | No | Yes | |
1989 | El mar y el tiempo | Yes | Yes | Also based on his novel |
1991 | Fuera de juego | Yes | Yes | |
1994 | Siete mil días juntos | Yes | Yes | |
1997 | Pesadilla para un rico | Yes | Yes | |
2001 | Lázaro de Tormes | Yes | Yes | Co-directed with José Luis García Sánchez Final film |
Acting roles
editYear | Title | Role | Director | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1943 | Cristina Guzmán | Bob | Gonzalo Delgrás | |
Autumn Roses | Adolfo Barona | Juan de Orduña and Eduardo Morera | ||
Fantastic Night | Enamorado | Luis Marquina | ||
La chica del gato | Paco | Ramón Quadreny | ||
Viviendo al revés | Ignacio F. Iquino | |||
A Palace for Sale | Ladislao Vajda | |||
Fin de curso | Himself (uncredited) | Ignacio F. Iquino | ||
1944 | Turbante blanco | Ignacio F. Iquino | ||
Una chica de opereta | Salvador Viana | Ramón Quadreny | ||
Mi enemigo y yo | Antonio Aguilar 'Tony' | Ramón Quadreny | ||
Empezó en boda | Raffaello Matarazzo | |||
1945 | El destino se disculpa | Teófilo Dueñas | José Luis Sáenz de Heredia | |
The Road to Babel | Marcelino Pastor | Jerónimo Mihura | ||
Espronceda | Mister Wilde | Fernando Alonso Casares | ||
Bambú | Antonio | José Luis Sáenz de Heredia | ||
Domingo de carnaval | Matías | Edgar Neville | ||
Se le fue el novio | Miguel Novak | Julio Salvador | ||
1946 | Es peligroso asomarse al exterior | Silvio | Alejandro Ulloa, Arthur Duarte | |
Eres un caso | Inocencio | Ramón Quadreny | ||
Los habitantes de la casa deshabitada | Gregorio | Gonzalo Delgrás | ||
1947 | Noche sin cielo | Emilio | Ignacio F. Iquino | |
1948 | Botón de ancla | Enrique Tejada y Sandoval | Ramón Torrado | |
Embrujo | Mentor | Carlos Serrano de Osma | ||
La muralla feliz | Don Fulgencio Ríos | Enrique Herreros | ||
The Black Siren | Gaspar de Montenegro | Carlos Serrano de Osma | ||
La próxima vez que vivamos | Pablo | Enrique Gómez | ||
Pototo, Boliche y compañía | Ramón Barreiro | |||
Hoy no pasamos lista | Don Manuel | Raúl Alfonso, Rafael Alonso | ||
Encrucijada | Pedro Lazaga | Short | ||
La mies es mucha | Padre Santiago Hernández | José Luis Sáenz de Heredia | ||
1949 | Vida en sombras | Carlos | Lorenzo Llobet Gracia | |
Rosas de otoño | Adolfo Barona | Eduardo Morera and Juan de Orduña | ||
Wings of Youth | Rodrigo | Antonio del Amo | ||
1950 | Saturday Night | Carlos | Rafael Gil | |
Ninety Minutes | Sr. Marchand | Antonio del Amo | ||
Tiempos felices | Enrique Gómez | |||
El último caballo | Fernando | Edgar Neville | ||
La noche del sábado | Director de orquesta (uncredited) | Rafael Gil | ||
1951 | Balarrasa | Javier Mendoza 'Balarrasa' | José Antonio Nieves Conde | |
I Want to Marry You | Ramón | Jerónimo Mihura | ||
La trinca del aire | Zanahoria | Ramón Torrado | ||
Captain Poison | Jorge de Córdoba | Luis Marquina | ||
1952 | The Pelegrín System | Héctor Pelegrín | Ignacio F. Iquino | |
Facultad de letras | Fernando | Pío Ballesteros | ||
The Eyes Leave a Trace | Agente Díaz | José Luis Sáenz de Heredia | ||
Cincuenta años del Real Madrid | Himself | Rafael Gil | ||
1953 | La voce del silenzio | Fernando Layer - assistente spirituale | Georg Wilhelm Pabst | |
Esa pareja feliz | Juan Granados Muñoz | Juan Antonio Bardem, Luis García Berlanga | ||
Airport | Luis | Luis Lucia Mingarro | ||
Nadie lo sabrá | Pedro Gutiérrez | Ramón Torrado | ||
Manicomio | Carlos | Fernando Fernán Gómez, Luis María Delgado | ||
1954 | Rebellion | Federico Lanuza | José Antonio Nieves Conde | |
El mensaje | ||||
Morena Clara | Ramsés 45 / Don Lope de Baena y Carrasco / Don Enrique de Baena Rodríguez | Luis Lucia Mingarro | ||
1955 | The Other Life of Captain Contreras | Alonso Contreras | Rafael Gil | |
El guardián del paraíso | Manuel | Arturo Ruiz Castillo | ||
Congress in Seville | Dr. Guillermo Kroll | Antonio Román | ||
Lo scapolo (El soltero) | Armando | Antonio Pietrangeli | ||
1956 | La gran mentira | Fernando Fernán Gómez (uncredited) | Rafael Gil | |
El fenómeno | Claudio Henkel | José María Elorrieta | ||
Viaje de novios | Juan Torregrosa Orózco | León Klimovsky | ||
El malvado Carabel | Amaro Carabel | |||
1957 | La ironía del dinero | Frasquito (segment "Sevilla") | Edgar Neville and Guy Lefranc | |
Un marido de ida y vuelta | Ramírez (uncredited) | Luis Lucia Mingarro | ||
Faustina | Mogon | José Luis Sáenz de Heredia | ||
Un marido de ida y vuelta | Pepe López Garcerán | |||
Los ángeles del volante | Juanito | Ignacio F. Iquino | ||
Las muchachas de azul | Juan Ferrandis | Pedro Lazaga | ||
1958 | The Tenant | Evaristo González | José Antonio Nieves Conde | |
La vida por delante | Antonio Redondo | Fernando Fernán Gómez and José Luis de la Torre | ||
Ana dice sí | Juan | Pedro Lazaga | ||
1959 | Luna de verano | Juan | Pedro Lazaga | |
Soledad | Manuel | Mario Craveri | ||
Bombas para la paz | Alfredo | Antonio Román | ||
La vida alrededor | Antonio Redondo | |||
1960 | Crimen para recién casados | Antonio Menéndez | Pedro Luis Ramírez | |
Les Trois etc. du Colonel (Los tres etc. del coronel) | Le guérillo Lorenzo | Claude Boissol | ||
Sólo para hombres | Pablo Meléndez | |||
1961 | Adiós, Mimí Pompón | Heriberto Promenade | Luis Marquina | |
La vida privada de Fulano de Tal | José María Forn | |||
Fantasmas en la casa | Pedro Luis Ramírez | |||
1962 | La venganza de Don Mendo | Don Mendo Salazar - Marqués de Cabra | ||
¿Dónde pongo este muerto? | Manuel Carrasco | Pedro Luis Ramírez | ||
1963 | La becerrada | Francisco Rodríguez 'Juncal' | José María Forqué | |
Rififi in the City | Sargento Detective Miguel Mora | Jesús Franco | ||
Benigno, hermano mío | Arturo González hijo | |||
1965 | El mundo sigue | Faustino | ||
Un vampiro para dos | Baron de Rosenthal | Pedro Lazaga | ||
1966 | Ninette y un señor de Murcia | Andrés Martínez Segura | ||
La Mujer de tu prójimo | Enrique Carreras | |||
Mayores con reparos | Fernando/ Miguel/ Manuel | |||
1968 | La vil seducción | Ismael Bolante | José María Forqué | |
1969 | Carola de día, Carola de noche | Hombre del motocarro | Jaime de Armiñán | |
Un adulterio decente | Dr. Leopoldo Cumberri | Rafael Gil | ||
Estudio amueblado 2.P. | Miguel Aguirrezabala | José María Forqué | ||
Las panteras se comen a los ricos | José | Ramón Fernández | ||
1970 | De profesión, sus labores | Federico | Javier Aguirre | |
¿Por qué pecamos a los cuarenta? | Dr. Alejandro Quesada | Pedro Lazaga | ||
Crimen imperfecto | Salomón | |||
Growing Leg, Diminishing Skirt | Amadeo - Duque de Daroca | Javier Aguirre | ||
1971 | Cómo casarse en 7 días | Uncredited | ||
Las Ibéricas F.C. | Federico | Pedro Masó | ||
Los gallos de la madrugada | Afilador | José Luis Sáenz de Heredia | ||
1972 | El triangulito | Lázaro López | José María Forqué | |
1973 | Don Quijote cabalga de nuevo | Don Quijote / Alonso Quixano | Roberto Gavaldón | |
La leyenda del alcalde de Zalamea | Don Lope | Mario Camus | ||
Ana y los lobos | Fernando | Carlos Saura | ||
The Spirit of the Beehive | Fernando | Víctor Erice | ||
1974 | Vera, un cuento cruel | Roger | Josefina Molina | |
Yo la vi primero | Doctor | |||
El amor del capitán Brando | Fernando | Jaime de Armiñán | ||
1975 | Pim, pam, pum... ¡fuego! | Julio | Pedro Olea | |
Yo soy Fulana de Tal | Rodolfo Pellejo | Pedro Lazaga | ||
Jó, papá | Julio | Jaime de Armiñán | ||
Sensualidad | Carlos Baena | Germán Lorente | ||
1976 | Imposible para una solterona | Manuel | Rafael Romero Marchent | |
La querida | Eduardo | |||
El anacoreta | Fernando Tobajas | Juan Estelrich | ||
1977 | Más fina que las gallinas | Don Enrique | Jesús Yagüe | |
Parranda | Escribiente | Gonzalo Suárez | ||
Bruja, más que bruja | Tío Justino | |||
Las cuatro novias de Augusto Pérez | Augusto Pérez | José Jara | ||
Gulliver | Martín | Alfonso Ungría | ||
Chely | Nicolás | Ramón Fernández | ||
Reina Zanahoria | J. J | Gonzalo Suárez | ||
The Pyjama Girl Case (La ragazza dal pigiama giallo) | Forensics detective | Flavio Mogherini | ||
1978 | ¡Arriba Hazaña! | Hermano Prefecto | José María Gutiérrez Santos | |
Los restos del naufragio | Ricardo Franco | |||
1979 | Madrid al desnudo | Baltasar | Jacinto Molina | |
Milagro en el circo | Macario | Alejandro Galindo | ||
Mamá cumple cien años | Fernando | Carlos Saura | ||
1980 | Cuentos eróticos | Don Enrique (segment "Tiempos rotos") (voice) | ||
Yo qué sé | Emma Cohen | Short | ||
1981 | Maravillas | Fernando | Manuel Gutiérrez Aragón | |
Apaga... y vámonos | Prof. Benjamín Rodero | Antonio Hernández | ||
127 millones libres de impuestos | Félix | Pedro Masó | ||
1982 | Copia cero | Carlos | Eduardo Campoy | |
Bésame, tonta | Director general | Fernando González de Canales | ||
1983 | Interior roig (Interior rojo) | Eugenio Anglada | ||
Soldados de plomo | Don Dimas | José Sacristán | ||
Juana la loca... de vez en cuando | Sir Henry | José Ramón Larraz | ||
1984 | Feroz | Luis | Manuel Gutiérrez Aragón | |
Los zancos | Ángel | Carlos Saura | ||
La noche más hermosa | Luis | Manuel Gutiérrez Aragón | ||
1985 | Stico | Don Leopoldo Contreras de Tejada | Jaime de Armiñán | |
De hombre a hombre | Silvestre | Ramón Fernández | ||
Luces de bohemia | Ministro | Miguel Ángel Díez | ||
Réquiem por un campesino español | Don Valeriano | Francisco Betriú | ||
La corte de Faraón | Roque | José Luis García Sánchez | ||
Marbella, un golpe de cinco estrellas | Germán | Miguel Hermoso | ||
1986 | Pobre mariposa | Exiliado español | Raúl de la Torre | |
Mambrú se fue a la guerra | Emiliano | |||
El viaje a ninguna parte | Don Arturo | |||
La mitad del cielo | Don Pedro | Manuel Gutiérrez Aragón | ||
Delirios de amor | Antonio González Vigil, Luis Eduardo Aute, Cristina Andreu and Félix Rotaeta | |||
1987 | Cara de acelga | Madariaga | José Sacristán | |
Mi general | General Mario del Pozo | Jaime de Armiñán | ||
Moros y cristianos | Don Fernando | Luis García Berlanga | ||
El gran Serafín | Padre Bellot | José María Ulloque | ||
1989 | Esquilache | Esquilache | Josefina Molina | |
El río que nos lleva | Don Ángel | Antonio del Real | ||
El mar y el tiempo | Eusebio | |||
1991 | Fuera de juego | Don Aníbal | ||
El rey pasmado | Gran Inquisidor | Imanol Uribe | ||
Marcellino (Marcelino, pan y vino) | Il priore | Luigi Comencini | ||
1992 | Chechu y familia | Don José | Álvaro Sáenz de Heredia | |
Belle Époque | Manolo | Fernando Trueba | ||
1993 | Cartas desde Huesca | Mainar | Antonio Artero | |
1995 | Así en el cielo como en la tierra | Dios Padre | José Luis Cuerda | |
1996 | El sueño de los héroes | Taboada | Sergio Renán | |
Tranvía a la Malvarrosa | Catedrático | José Luis García Sánchez | ||
Pesadilla para un rico | Presidente | |||
1997 | La hermana | Don Julián | Juan José Porto | |
Pintadas | José | Juan Estelrich Jr. | ||
1998 | El abuelo | Don Rodrigo de Arista Potestad | José Luis Garci | |
1999 | Todo sobre mi madre | Padre de Rosa | Pedro Almodóvar | |
Pepe Guindo | Manuel Iborra | |||
Plenilunio | Padre Orduña | Imanol Uribe | ||
La lengua de las mariposas | Don Gregorio | José Luis Cuerda | ||
2000 | Voz | Javier Aguirre | ||
2001 | Visionarios | Gobernador | Manuel Gutiérrez Aragón | |
2002 | En la ciudad sin límites | Max | Antonio Hernández | |
El embrujo de Shanghai | Capitán Blay | Fernando Trueba | ||
2003 | Variaciones 1/113 | Voice | ||
Bibliofrenia | Profesor Arturo Fuentes | Marcos Moreno | ||
2004 | Tiovivo c. 1950 | Tertuliano | José Luis Garci | |
¡Hay motivo! | Self (segment: Epílogo) (voice) | Various | ||
2005 | Para que no me olvides | Mateo | Patricia Ferreira | |
Pablo G. del Amo, un montador de ilusiones | Himself | Diego Galán | ||
2006 | Medea 2 | Mensajero | ||
Mia Sarah | Paul | Gustavo Ron | Final film role |
Television
editWriter and Director
editYear | Title | Director | Writer | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1973 | Juan soldado | Yes | No | TV movie |
1974-1975 | El pícaro | Yes | Yes | TV Miniseries; 13 episodes |
1992 | Cuentos de Burgos | No | Yes | Episode "La Intrusa" |
1994 | La Mujer de tu Vida 2 | Yes | Yes | Episode "Las Mujeres de mi Vida" |
Acting roles
edit
|
|
Theater
editPlaywright
edit- Pareja para la eternidad (1947)
- Marido y medio (1950)
- Las bicicletas son para el verano (1977)
- Los domingos, bacanal (1980)
- Del Rey Ordás y su infamia (1983)
- La coartada (1985)
- Ojos de bosque (1986)
- El Pícaro. Aventuras y desventuras de Lucas Maraña (1992)
- Lazarillo de Tormes (Adaptation) (1994)
- Los invasores del palacio (2000)
- Defensa de Sancho Panza (2002)
- Morir cuerdo y vivir loco (2004)
Director
edit- La vida en un bloc (1953)
- Con derecho a fantasma (1958)
- Gravemente peligrosa (1962)
- Dear Liar (1962)
- The Kreutzer Sonata (1963)
- Thought (1963)
- Mayores con reparos (1965)
- La vil seducción (1967)
- El alcalde de Zalamea (1979)
Actor
edit- Los ladrones somos gente honrada (1941)
- El amor sólo dura 2.000 metros (1941)
- Madre (el drama padre) (1941)
- Es peligroso asomarse al exterior (1942)
- El caso del señor vestido de violeta (1954)
- Mayores con reparos (1965)
- La vil seducción (1967)
- La pereza (1968)
- Un enemigo del pueblo (1972)
- El alcalde de Zalamea (1979)
Bibliography
editNovels
edit- El vendedor de naranjas (1961)
- El viaje a ninguna parte (1985)
- El mar y el tiempo (1988)
- El ascensor de los borrachos (1993)
- La Puerta del Sol (1995)
- ¡Stop! novela de amor (1997)
- El tiempo de los trenes (2004)
Historical novels
edit- El mal amor (1987)
- La cruz y el lirio dorado (1998)
- Oro y hambre (1999)
- Capa y espada (2001)
Memoirs
edit- Diario de Cinecittà (1952) (Published by International Film Magazine, No. 6, November 1952 and No. 7, December 1952)
- El olvido y la memoria. Autobiografía de Fernando Fernán-Gómez (1981) (Published in Triunfo, No. 3, 6th period, January 1981)
- El tiempo amarillo. Memorias. I (1921-1943) (1990)
- El tiempo amarillo. Memorias. II (1943-1987) (1990)
- El tiempo amarillo: memorias ampliadas (1921-1997) (1998)
Articles and essays
edit- El actor y los demás (1987)
- Impresiones y depresiones (1987)
- Historias de la picaresca (1989)
- Las anécdotas del teatro: ¡aquí sale hasta el apuntador! (1991)
- El arte de desear (1992)
- Imagen de Madrid (1992)
- Tejados de Madrid (1992)
- Desde la última fila: cien años de cine (1995)
- Nosotros, los mayores (1999)
- Puro teatro y algo más (2002)
Poetry
edit- A Roma por algo (1954) (First published in the poetry collection "Poesía Española" (1954) and then separately in 1982)
- El canto es vuelo (2002) (Complete poetry collection)
Children's Literature
edit- Los ladrones (1986)
- Retal (1988)
Published plays
edit- Pareja para la eternidad (1947)
- Las bicicletas son para el verano (1977)
- La coartada (1985) (published with "Los domingos, bacanal")
- Los domingos, bacanal (1985) (published with "La coartada")
- Lazarilo de Tormes (Adaptation) (1994)
- Defensa de Sancho Panza (2002) (Published on the magazine "Acotaciones 20")
Published screenplyas
edit- Mi querido general (1986)
- La Intrusa (1991) (Teleplay for the anthology TV series "Cuentos de Burgos")
- Fuera de juego (1991)
Collections
edit- La coartada/Los domingos, bacanal (1985) (two plays published together in one book)
- La escena, la calle y las nubes (2000) (short stories collection)
- Variedades (2019) (articles recopilation published postmothusly)
- Teatro (2019) (plays recopilation published postmothusly)
Interviews
edit- La buena memoria (1997) (Conversation by Fernando Fernán-Gómez & Eduardo Haro Tecglen transcripted by Diego Galán)
- Conversaciones con Fernando Fernán-Gómez (2002) (Interview with Fernando Fernán-Gómez by Enrique Brasó)
Accolades
editNational Theater Award
editYear | Result |
---|---|
1985 | Won[58] |
National Cinematography Award
editYear | Result |
---|---|
1989 | Won[59] |
Goya Awards
editYear | Award | Film | Result |
---|---|---|---|
1987 | Best Actor | Mambru Went to War | Won |
1987 | Best Director | Voyage to Nowhere | Won |
1987 | Best Screenplay | Voyage to Nowhere | Won |
1993 | Best Supporting Actor | Belle Époque | Won |
1999 | Best Actor | The Grandfather | Won |
2001 | Best Adapted Screenplay | Lázaro de Tormes | Won |
Fotogramas de Plata
editYear | Award | Film | Result |
---|---|---|---|
1952 | Best Spanish Movie Performer | Reckless | Won |
1970 | Best TV Performer | La última cinta | Won |
1974 | Best TV Performer | Juan soldado | Won |
1987 | Best Movie Actor | Delirios de amor Mambru Went to War Half of Heaven Voyage to Nowhere |
Won |
1998 | Lifetime Achievement Award | — | Awarded |
CEC Awards
editYear | Award | Film | Result |
---|---|---|---|
1951 | Best Actor | The Last Horse | Won |
1952 | Best Actor | Reckless | Won |
1959 | Best Original Story | La vida por delante | Won |
1974 | Best Actor | The Spirit of the Beehive Ana and the Wolves |
Won |
1979 | Best Actor | The Remains from the Shipwreck | Won |
1992 | Best Original Screenplay | Fuera de juego | Won |
1999 | Best Actor | The Grandfather | Won |
2007 | Best Supporting Actor | Mia Sarah | Won |
Sant Jordi Awards
editYear | Award | Film | Result |
---|---|---|---|
1985 | Best Spanish Actor | Feroz La noche más hermosa Los zancos |
Won[60] |
1987 | Best Film | Voyage to Nowhere | Won[61] |
1990 | Best Spanish Film | The Sea and Time | Won[62] |
TP de Oro
editYear | Award | Film | Result |
---|---|---|---|
1975 | Best National Actor | El pícaro | Won[63] |
New York Latin ACE Awards
editYear | Award | Film | Result |
---|---|---|---|
2000 | Best Supporting Actor | All About My Mother | Won[64] |
Actors and Actresses Union Awards
editYear | Award | Film | Result |
---|---|---|---|
1992 | Lifetime Achievement Award | — | Awarded[65] |
Berlin International Film Festival
editYear | Award | Film | Result |
---|---|---|---|
1977 | Silver Bear for Best Actor | The Anchorite | Won |
1985 | Silver Bear for Best Actor | Stico | Won |
2005 | Honorary Golden Bear | — | Awarded |
Venice Film Festival
editYear | Award | Film | Result |
---|---|---|---|
1984 | Pasinetti Prize for Best Actor | Los zancos | Won |
San Sebastián International Film Festival
editYear | Award | Film | Result |
---|---|---|---|
1989 | Special Jury Prize | The Sea and Time | Won |
1999 | Donostia Lifetime Achievement Award | — | Awarded |
Mar del Plata International Film Festival
editYear | Award | Film | Result |
---|---|---|---|
1959 | Best Film | La vida por delante | Nominated |
Gramado Film Festival
editYear | Award | Film | Result |
---|---|---|---|
1993 | Golden Kikito for Best Supporting Actor | Belle Époque | Won[66] |
Biarritz International Festival of Audiovisual Programming
editYear | Award | Film | Result |
---|---|---|---|
1999 | Honorary Euro-FIPA | — | Awarded[67] |
International Television Festival Golden Prague
editYear | Award | Film | Result |
---|---|---|---|
1973 | Grand Prix for Best Director | Juan soldado | Won |
Honours
edit- Gold Medal of Merit in the Fine Arts (1981)[68]
- Prince of Asturias Award for the Arts (1995)
- Gold Medal of the Academy of Cinematographic Arts and Sciences of Spain (2001)[69]
- Gold Medal of Merit in Labour (2001)[70]
- Grand Cross of the Civil Order of Alfonso X, the Wise (2007)
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ Michael Eaude (11 December 2007). "Fernando Fernán-Gómez Obituary". The Guardian.
- ^ Meredith Taylor (12 March 2021). "Strange Journey - El Extrano Viaje (1964)". Filmuforia: The Voice of Indie Cinema.
- ^ "El mundo sigue - Life Goes On". Amsterdam Spanish Film Festival. Retrieved 29 January 2024.
- ^ Philipp Engel (27 August 2021). "Fernando Fernán-Gómez, cineasta maldito". Economia Digital. Retrieved 18 November 2024.
- ^ Concha García (16 March 2022). ""El viaje a ninguna parte": el triunfo de Fernán Gómez en la primera gala de los Goya". La Razón.
- ^ FERNÁN GÓMEZ, Fernando, El tiempo amarillo: memorias ampliadas (1921-1997). Editorial Debate, Barcelona, 1998. ISBN 84-8306-139-2, pp. 33-35.
- ^ Torres, Rosana (22 November 2007). "La feroz María Guerrero y la saga familiar del cómico". El País (in Spanish). ISSN 1134-6582. Retrieved 17 July 2021.
- ^ Diario Sur (21 November 2007). "Una figura versátil y rotunda".
- ^ Guillermo Martínez (28 August 2021). "Nueve claves para entender quién fue Fernando Fernán Gómez cuando se cumplen 100 años de su nacimiento". Público.
- ^ Zenda. Autores, libros y compañía. (28 August 2021). "Los cien años de Fernando Fernán Gómez".
- ^ Cine (1959). "Ganadores Premios Festival Internacional de Cine de Mar del Plata 1959".
- ^ Diego Manresa Bilbao (26 May 2017). "Fernán-Gómez y su trilogía sobre la España de los Sesenta". Le Miau Noir. Retrieved 17 November 2024.
- ^ Sardá, Juan (12 August 2016). "Clásicos españoles (II): Fernando Fernán Gómez".
- ^ Marsh, Steven. “The Pueblo Travestied in Fernán Gómez's El Extraño Viaje (1964).” Hispanic Research Journal 4, no. 2 (2003): 133–49.
- ^ "El extraño viaje". SensaCine (in Spanish).
- ^ British Film Institute. (17 June 2016). "Pedro Almodóvar: 13 great Spanish films that inspire me".
- ^ Torreiro, Mirito (22 June 2015). "El mundo sigue (50 aniversario)". Fotogramas.
- ^ Sally Faulkner (9 January 2017). "Delayed Cinema and Feminist Discourse in Fernando Fernán-Gómez's El mundo sigue (1963/1965/2015)". Bulletin of Hispanic Studies. 94 (8): 831–845. doi:10.3828/bhs.2017.51. hdl:10871/30347.
- ^ "El Espiritu de la Colmena". Variety. 1 January 1973. Retrieved 1 May 2020.
- ^ Derek Malcolm (11 December 1999). "Victor Erice: The Spirit of the Beehive". The Guardian.
- ^ "Berlinale 1977: Prize Winners". Internationale Filmfestspiele Berlin. Archived from the original on 28 April 2014. Retrieved 22 July 2010.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link) - ^ "Berlinale: 1985 Prize Winners". Internationale Filmfestspiele Berlin. Archived from the original on 29 April 2014. Retrieved 12 January 2011.
- ^ "Los Zancos - I trampoli". CinemaSpagna - Il Festival di Cinema Spagnolo e Latinoamericano (in Italian).
- ^ "Golden Prague International Television Festival. Previous years". International Television Festival Golden Prague. 1973.
- ^ Barrenetxa Marañón, Igor (2019). "El imaginario de la Segunda República española en el cine de ficción (1940-2011)". Filmhistoria Online. 29 (1–2). Barcelona: Universitat de Barcelona: 7–26. doi:10.1344/fh.2019.1-2.7-26. ISSN 1136-7385. S2CID 212824036. Archived from the original on 25 April 2023. Retrieved 25 April 2023.
- ^ "Mambrú se fue a la guerra". Premios Goya. Academia de las Artes y las Ciencias Cinematográficas de España. Retrieved 3 December 2019.
- ^ "El viaje a ninguna parte". Premios Goya. Academia de las Artes y las Ciencias Cinematográficas de España. Retrieved 3 December 2019.
- ^ "To Mark Spanish Cinema Day 2021". India International Centre. 2021.
- ^ "Premios 37 edición. 1989". 72 Festival de San Sebastián. 1989.
- ^ The New York Times (24 November 2007). "Fernando Fernan-Gomez, 86, Spanish Actor and Director, Dies". The New York Times.
- ^ "El abuelo". Premios Goya. Academia de las Artes y las Ciencias Cinematográficas de España. Retrieved 3 December 2019.
- ^ Kevin Thomas (8 October 1999). "'Grandfather' a Heartfelt Story of Love and Honor". Los Angeles Times.
- ^ "Julio Medem, Arguiñano, Gila y Encarna Sánchez galardonados con los Ondas". El País (in Spanish). 3 November 1993. ISSN 1134-6582. Retrieved 24 April 2020.
- ^ Periódico de Ibiza (25 July 1999). "Fernando Fernán-Gómez, Premio Donostia del Festival de San Sebastián".
- ^ Ali Catterall (18 August 2004). "The City Of No Limits (En La Ciudad Sin Límites) (2004)". BBC.
- ^ "Lázaro de Tormes". Premios Goya. Academia de las Artes y las Ciencias Cinematográficas de España. Retrieved 3 December 2019.
- ^ "Berlinale: 2005 Prize Winners". Internationale Filmfestspiele Berlin. Retrieved 8 June 2015.
- ^ Berlinale 2005: Honorary Golden Bears for Im Kwon-Taek and Fernando Fernán Gómez, pdf, 55. Internationale Filmfestspiele Berlin, 10.–20. 02. 2005.
- ^ Tzvetana Panayotova (2006). La memoria histórica en el teatro de la transición (in Spanish) (GRIN Verlag, Universität des Saarlandes ed.). GRIN Verlag. p. 26. ISBN 978-3-638-48547-0.
- ^ El País (15 May 1978). "Fernando Fernán Gómez premio Nacional de Teatro Lope de Vega". El País.
- ^ "Fernando Fernán-Gómez cumple 100 años" (in Spanish). Centro Cultural de España en Buenos Aires. Retrieved 29 January 2024.
- ^ "Finalista Premio Planeta 1987. El mal amor - Fernando Fernán-Gómez". Premio Planeta. Edición 1987. (in Spanish).
- ^ El País (7 September 1993). "Fernando Fernán-Gómez obtiene el Premio de Novela Espasa-Humor". El País.
- ^ EFE (12 May 1995). "Premios Príncipe de Asturias - Fernando Fernán Gómez".
- ^ Miguel Mora (22 October 1998). "Fernán-Gómez regresa a su "tiempo amarillo"". El País.
- ^ "Fernando Fernán Gómez" (in Spanish). Royal Spanish Academy. Retrieved 18 January 2024.
- ^ Javi Sánchez (28 August 2021). "La historia de amor de 37 años entre Emma Cohen y Fernando Fernán Gómez: "Quería ser libre, ser ella y estaba sola y no quería estar sola"". Vanity Fair.
- ^ "Fallece Fernando Fernán Gómez". El País (in Spanish). Madrid: Prisa. 21 November 2007. Archived from the original on 9 July 2008. Retrieved 2 December 2018.
- ^ Rolfe, Pamela (22 November 2007). "Spain's Fernando Fernan-Gomez dies at 86". The Hollywood Reporter. Archived from the original on 22 July 2010. Retrieved 5 July 2010.
- ^ 20 minutos (22 November 2007). "Almodóvar: "Fernán-Gómez representa la historia del cine español"".
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - ^ "Fernando Fernán-Gómez, condecorado con la Gran Cruz de la Orden Civil de Alfonso X el Sabio". Europa Press. 23 November 2007. Retrieved 14 August 2023.
- ^ "El Centro Cultural de la Villa se llamará Teatro Fernando Fernán-Gómez". El País (in Spanish). 22 November 2007. ISSN 1134-6582. Retrieved 17 July 2021.
- ^ "Diario Rojo y Negro Digital". 24 November 2007. Archived from the original on 24 November 2007. Retrieved 17 July 2021.
- ^ "Exposición Fernando Fernán Gómez "El Ilustrado"". University of Cádiz. 2 May 2017. Retrieved 17 November 2024.
- ^ "Caja de las Letras: Fernando Fernán Gómez". www.cervantes.es.
- ^ "Objetos personales de Fernán Gómez en La Caja de las Letras". Revista de Arte. 3 March 2022. Retrieved 17 November 2024.
- ^ EFE (11 August 2023). "El Estado adquiere el archivo de Fernando Fernán Gómez y su esposa, Emma Cohen". Público. Retrieved 17 November 2024.
- ^ El País (6 June 1985). "Núria Espert y Fernando Fernán Gómez, galardonados con los Premios Nacionales de Teatro". El País.
- ^ Ángel Fernández-Santos (6 May 1989). "Fernando Fernán-Gómez y José Luis Alcaine, premios nacionales de Cine". El País.
- ^ "1985 (29 edición)" (in Spanish). Premios Sant Jordi. Retrieved 29 January 2024.
- ^ "1987 (31 edición)" (in Spanish). Premios Sant Jordi. Retrieved 29 January 2024.
- ^ "1990 (34 edición)" (in Spanish). Premios Sant Jordi. Retrieved 29 January 2024.
- ^ "El Pícaro (1974-1975)" (in Spanish). AlohaCriticón. Retrieved 29 January 2024.
- ^ "> Todo sobre mi madre" (in Spanish). El Deseo. Retrieved 29 January 2024.
- ^ "2 Edición Premios 1992" (in Spanish). Unión de Actores y Actrices. Retrieved 29 January 2024.
- ^ "Festival de Cinema de Gramado". Festival de Gramado. 1993.
- ^ Octavi Marti (23 January 1999). "El FIPA 99 reconoce "los mil rostros de Fernán-Gómez"". El País.
- ^ Ministerio de Cultura: "Real Decreto 1181/1981, de 8 de mayo, por el que se concede la Medalla al Mérito en las Bellas Artes, en su categoría de Oro, al Actor y Director don Fernando Fernán-Gómez". Madrid: Boletín Oficial del Estado. p. 14139.
- ^ El País (6 March 2001). "La Academia de Cine otorga su medalla de oro a Fernando Fernán-Gómez". El País.
- ^ ABC (19 April 2001). "Fernán-Gómez y Juanjo Menéndez, Medallas de Oro al Mérito en el Trabajo".