Penelope Cruz named best actress at Venice Film Festival

Penelope Cruz took home the best actress award at the Venice Film Festival, the latest success for the all-conquering queen of Spanish cinema.

Cruz won for her starring role in Parallel Mothers, her latest collaboration with legendary Spanish director Pedro Almodovar.

It was a surprisingly political turn for the flamboyant filmmaker, exploring the trauma of the 1930s Spanish civil war alongside the tale of two mothers sharing a maternity ward.

It marks a departure into dark historical territory for the director, while still focusing on the themes of motherhood and female relationships that have been central to many of his films.

Cruz described Almodovar as “my safety net” in a press conference ahead of their red carpet appearance in Venice.

“He can ask me to do something that can really scare me but I know he will be there waiting to sustain me,” she said, adding that she was grateful to the director for giving her “so many different, challenging characters”.

Cruz has appeared in seven of Almodovar’s movies, including All About My Mother and Volver.

She had a busy fortnight in Venice, also starring in the well-received Official Competition, a comedy about ego-maniacs in the film business that saw her in a rare appearance alongside her Spanish megastar Antonio Banderas.

Young talent 

Born in Madrid in 1974, she appeared destined for a career in the entertainment, initially studying ballet at Spain’s National Conservatory before winning an acting competition that led to roles on TV and in music videos.

Her break into film came in Spanish director Bigas Luna’s Jamon, Jamon in 1992, which received critical acclaim and was notable for its erotic scenes featuring a 16-year-old Cruz and Javier Bardem, who would much later become her husband.

That was followed soon afterwards by Belle Epoque, which won the Oscar for best foreign film, and featured Cruz as one of four sisters vying for the love of an army deserter.

The next milestone came in 1997, when she was cast in her first film by Pedro Almodovar.

Live Flesh marked the beginning of a decade-long collaboration between Almodovar and the actress which has included roles in another foreign language Oscar-winner, 1999’s All About My Mother.



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