Marília Pêra
Marília Pêra | |
---|---|
Born | Marília Soares Pêra 22 January 1943 Rio de Janeiro, Brazil |
Died | 5 December 2015 Rio de Janeiro, Brazil | (aged 72)
Occupation | Actress, singer, stage director |
Years active | 1948–2015 |
Spouse(s) | Paulo Graça Mello (sep.)Paulo Villaça
(m. 1969; sep. 1971)Bruno Faria (m. 1998) |
Children | 3 |
Parent(s) |
|
Relatives | Sandra Pêra (sister) Abel Pêra (uncle) |
Marília Soares Pêra (22 January 1943 – 5 December 2015) was a Brazilian actress, singer, and stage director.[1][2] Hailed as "one of the decade's [1980s] ten best actresses" by Pauline Kael, Pêra won the National Society of Film Critics Award for Best Actress in 1982 for her role in Hector Babenco's acclaimed Pixote, and received Best Actress awards at the Gramado Film Festival (Triple Award Winner) and at the Cartagena Film Festival for Carlos Diegues' Better Days Ahead. Other films include Bar Esperança, Angels of the Night, and Diegues' Tieta do Agreste.[3]
Biography[]
Marília Soares Pêra (Marilia Pera da Graça Mello, after she married), was born on January 22, 1943 in the neighborhood of Rio Comprido, in Rio de Janeiro.
From 14 to 21 years, works as a dancer in musicals and revue as Minha Querida Lady (1962), starring Bibi Ferreira, and O Teu Cabelo Não Nega (1963) biography of Lamartine Babo, as Carmen Miranda - role that would repeat a few times in her career.[4] Her father Manoel Pear enrolled her in a classical ballet school and took her to the television, to dance. Perâ participated in programs such as Espetáculos Tonelux, Grande Teatro Tupi, Grande Teatro da Imperatriz das Sedas, Teatrinho Troll and Câmera Um. In 1959, she left school to marry the actor . At 18, in 1961, she toured Brazil and Portugal with the play 's Society em Baby-Doll. A year later, starred in the musical Como Vencer na Vida sem Fazer Força alongside , and Berta Loran.
Career in television[]
In 1965, Pêra was hired by director Abdon Torres to join the cast that would usher in the Rede Globo, and starred in the telenovelas Rosinha do Sobrado and Padre Tião, both written by . Also acted in A Moreninha, an adaptation of novel's Joaquim Manuel de Macedo written by , who was director of the station. Pêra also participated in the cast of Beto Rockfeller (1968), written by , on TV Tupi, the soap opera is considered a landmark of Brazilian television, for his modern language and urban ambiance. Pêra was invited by director Daniel Filho to return to the Globo in 1971, to interpret Shirley Sexy in O Cafona, character that gave him great popularity. Soon after, she played the taxi driver Noeli in , written by Dias Gomes. The following year, she it was Serafina Rosa Petrone in 's , opposite . Then she played the main character of the novel Supermanoela (1974), written by .
In 1982, Pear played the character Alice in , written by . The miniseries caused strong impact because of the realistic direction of Daniel Filho, and interpretations of the actress and , and the approach of a controversial issue, the crime of passion. After 13 years, Pear returned to work in telenovelas on TV Globo, as Rafaela Alvaray in , soap opera displayed in 1987, written by . In the miniseries O Primo Basílio (1988), an adaptation of Gilberto Braga and Leonor Brassères of Eça de Queiroz's novel, Pêra played the villain Juliana, another remarkable character.
Pêra worked on two telenovelas by : (1991), co-written by Ana Maria Moretzsohn and , and Meu Bem Querer (1998). In Band, starred in (1982), another novel Linhares, and the headline in Mandacaru (1997), written by . In 2001, Pêra participated of the cast in the miniseries Os Maias, an adaptation Eça de Queiroz's novel.
The actress was part of casts of the telenovelas Começar de Novo in 2004; Cobras & Lagartos, in 2006; Duas Caras in 2007.[5] Her last work at the broadcaster was the TV show Pé na Cova [One foot in the grave, in an unofficial translation], aired since 2013.
Film career[]
Internationally, Marília Pêra is best known for her performance in Pixote: A Lei do Mais Fraco (1980), where she portrayed the character Sueli. In 1982 she became the first South American ever honored in North America with a Best Actress Prize awarded by the National Society of Film Critics Awards. The film itself was nominated for the Best Foreign Film Golden Globe, but lost to that year's eventual Best Picture Oscar winner, Hugh Hudson's Chariots of Fire.[6] Vincent Canby wrote for The New York Times in relation to the film: “The performances are almost too good to be true, but Mr. Da Silva and Miss Pera are splendid.”[7] A former street kid, Fernando Ramos da Silva returned to the streets a few years after Pixote was released. He was killed by police – following an alleged shootout – at age 19 on Aug. 25, 1987.[8]
Highlights of her movie career include Hugo Carvana's (1983), in a comic performance as a temperamental soap opera star. Other films include: Central do Brasil (1998) and (2007). Her last film work was in in 2008.[9]
Death[]
Pêra died at her apartment in Rio de Janeiro from lung cancer at the age of 72.[10]
Awards[]
Year | Organisation | Category | Work | Country | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1982 | National Society of Film Critics Awards | Best Actress | United States | Won | |
Boston Society of Film Critics Awards | Best Actress | United States | Won | ||
1983 | Gramado Film Festival | Best Actress | Brazil | Won | |
Associação Paulista de Críticos de Artes | Best Actress | Brazil | Won | ||
1984 | Best Actress | Brazil | Won | ||
1987 | Gramado Film Festival | Best Actress | Brazil | Won | |
1988 | Troféu Imprensa | Best Actress | Brazil | Won | |
Associação Paulista de Críticos de Artes | Best Actress | Brazil | Won | ||
1991 | Cartagena Film Festival | Best Actress | Dias Melhores Virão | Colombia | Won |
Associação Paulista dos Críticos de Artes | Best Actress | Brazil | Won | ||
1997 | Associação Paulista dos Críticos de Artes | Best Supporting Actress | Brazil | Won | |
2000 | Cinema Brazil Grand Prize | Best Actress | Brazil | Won | |
2001 | Prêmio Qualidade Brasil | Best Actress in a Special Project | Brazil | Nominated | |
2005 | Prêmio Contigo! de TV | Best Supporting Actress | Brazil | Nominated | |
2006 | Prêmio Qualidade Brasil | Best Actress in Television | Brazil | Nominated | |
2007 | Best Actress | United States | Won | ||
Prêmio Contigo! de TV | Best Supporting Actress | Brazil | Nominated | ||
2008 | Prêmio Contigo! de Cinema | Best Actress | Brazil | Nominated | |
Prêmio Contigo! de TV | Best Supporting Actress | Brazil | Won |
Filmography[]
Movies[]
- 1968: .... Rosinha
- 1970:
- 1970:
- 1975: .... Pupe
- 1975:
- 1978:
- 1981: Pixote: A Lei do Mais Fraco .... Sueli
- 1983: .... Ana
- 1984: Mixed Blood .... Rita La Punta
- 1984: (TV Movie) .... Fabiano's mother
- 1987: Anjos da Noite .... Marta Brum
- 1990: Dias Melhores Virão .... Maryalva 'Mary' Matos
- 1995: Jenipapo .... Renata
- 1996: Tieta do Agreste .... Perpétua
- 1998: Central do Brasil .... Irene
- 1998: O Viajante .... Ana Lara
- 2001: Amélia .... Amélia
- 2002: .... Dona Fernanda
- 2003: .... Vanderléia
- 2006: .... D. Graça
- 2006: Living the Dream .... Vanessa
- 2006: .... Madame Clessy
- 2008: .... Magda / Magali
- 2008: .... Mãe de Monk, Lupa, Slide e Magali
- 2008: (TV Movie) .... Irmã Gardênia
- 2009: .... Justina / Gilda
- 2016: Tô Ryca! .... Madame Claude (final film role)
Telenovelas[]
- 1965: Rosinha do Sobrado .... Rosinha
- 1965: A Moreninha .... Carolina
- 1965: Padre Tião
- 1966:
- 1968: Beto Rockfeller .... Manoela
- 1968: .... Rosinha
- 1969-1970: .... Joana Martini
- 1971: O Cafona .... Shirley Sexy
- 1971-1972: .... Noeli
- 1972-1973: .... Serafina Rosa Petrone
- 1974: Supermanoela .... Manoela
- 1975: .... Pupe
- 1976:
- 1987: .... Rafaela Alvaray
- 1989: Top Model .... Maryalva 'Mary' Matos
- 1990-1991: .... Genuína 'Genu' Miranda
- 1996: .... Elizabeth Caldeira
- 1997: Mandacaru .... Isadora
- 1998-1999: .... Custódia Alves Serrão
- 2000: .... Amélia
- 2004-2005: Começar de Novo .... Janis Doidona
- 2006: Cobras & Lagartos .... Milu Montini
- 2007-2008: Duas Caras .... Gioconda
- 2011-2012: Aquele Beijo .... Maruschka Lemos de Sá
Series and Mini-Series[]
- 1982: .... Alice
- 1988: O Primo Basílio .... Juliana Couceiro Tavira
- 1994: .... Erotildes
- 2001: Os Maias .... Maria Monforte
- 2006: JK ....
- 2007: Toma Lá, Dá Cá .... Ivone
- 2008: Casos e Acasos .... Sônia
- 2010: .... Catarina Faissol
- 2012: .... Madame Vivi
- 2013–2016: Pé na Cova .... Darlene
References[]
- ^ "Morre a atriz Marília Pêra, aos 72 anos". O Globo. 5 December 2015. Retrieved 5 December 2015.
- ^ Biografia Itaú Cultural
- ^ Profile, sonymoviechannel.com; accessed 11 December 2014.
- ^ Actress Marília Pêra dies in Rio
- ^ Teatro, TV e cinema brasileiros perdem Marília Pêra, aos 72 anos
- ^ Corujão: 'Pixote - A Lei do Mais Fraco' mostra a visão de menor abandonado
- ^ MOVIE REVIEW: Pixote (1981) BABENCO'S 'PIXOTE' SHOW THE BOYS OF BRAZIL
- ^ Fernando Ramos da Silva, 19, Star of Brazil's 'Pixote,' Dies
- ^ Morre a atriz Marília Pêra
- ^ Morre a atriz Marília Pêra, aos 72 anos (in Portuguese)
External links[]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Marília Pêra. |
- Marília Pêra at IMDb
- 1943 births
- 2015 deaths
- Brazilian film actresses
- Brazilian stage actresses
- Brazilian telenovela actresses
- Brazilian people of Italian descent
- Brazilian people of Portuguese descent
- Actresses from Rio de Janeiro (city)
- Deaths from lung cancer
- Deaths from cancer in Rio de Janeiro (state)
- 20th-century Brazilian actresses
- 21st-century Brazilian actresses