World is buttressed by good people, award-winning Spanish actor says 2 minutes read
By Irene Escudero
Bogota, Apr 28 (EFE).- Good people outnumber the bad and serve as pillars of society worldwide, according to multiple Goya Award-winning Spanish actor Javier Camara, who said these unsung heroes fulfill their roles even though their actions at times are drowned out by political noise and violence.
“Spain is filled with good people who underpin this political moment of arguing and screaming and shouting. Colombia is the same … It’s poetic justice to provide cultural spaces for people who’ve done good things and have tried to do good things,” he said in a video interview with Efe coinciding with the presentation in Colombia of the 2020 film “El olvido que seremos” (Memories of My Father).
Memories of My Father review – loving portrait of a parent theguardian.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from theguardian.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Unprecedented and valuable triumph for Colombia at the Goya Awards Published: - Mar 09, 2021
El olvido que seremos be by Fernando Trueba won the only Latin American award in the most recent Goya Awards .
Latin America was present, not only through the Best Ibero-American Film Award, but also through nominees in other categories. Photo: YT-El País
LatinAmerican Post | Luis Angel Hernández Liborio
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On March 6, the Goya Awards ceremony was held, the highest award in Spanish cinema. On this occasion, the ceremony was carried out in a mixed way: virtual and face-to-face. Antonio Banderas was the host of the gala in which
Pilar Quintana reconnects with childhood and wins Alfaguara - Medicine Hat NewsMedicine Hat News medicinehatnews.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from medicinehatnews.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Sigal Ratner-Arias
This image provided by Penguin Random House shows Colombian author Pilar Quintana, winner of the Alfaguara novel prize for Los Abismos/The Abysses. (Manuela Uribe/Penguin Random House via AP) February 08, 2021 - 10:02 AM
NEW YORK - It took Pilar Quintana four years and a few drafts to write âThe Abyssesâ (âLos Abismosâ,) winner of the 2021 Alfaguara Novel Prize. Quitanaâs worries regarding maternity, and her âirrationalâ childhood terror of becoming an orphan, inspired the Colombian author to write this story about a young girl who reflects on her parents troubled marriage with extraordinary perception and sensitivity.
âMaternity helps you reconnect with the child that you were and to understand him and relive that phase of your life that we tend to forget as adults,â says Quintana, who has a 5-year-old son.