|
Debora Bloch
Birth at
29 May 1963
|
When Deborah was 17, she made her professional debut in the theater: she replaced the then-famous “slave Isaura” Lucelia Santos in Oduvaldo Viana Filho’s “Broken Heart”. Then it went as usual: a year later, the first series "The Irony of Fate" and two more - the arrival in the cinema and films "My beloved Brazil" and "Night in the wilderness." For the last Debora received the award in the nomination "Best actress" at two film festivals: in Granada and in Carthage. The new awards followed after ten
more
When Deborah was 17, she made her professional debut in the theater: she replaced the then-famous “slave Isaura” Lucelia Santos in Oduvaldo Viana Filho’s “Broken Heart”. Then it went as usual: a year later, the first series "The Irony of Fate" and two more - the arrival in the cinema and films "My beloved Brazil" and "Night in the wilderness." For the last Debora received the award in the nomination "Best actress" at two film festivals: in Granada and in Carthage. The new awards followed after ten years of work on film sets and theatrical stages. In 1994, Deborah received four awards for the film "Look at this song": at the Latin American Festival in Rhode Island at the Havana Festival and two awards from the Brazilian Academy of Culture. Ironically, her father Jonas spent his whole life trying to play in movies, considering theatrical roles only a tribute to art and television as a means of earning money, and yet most of the time he starred in TV series. But Deborah with the same enthusiasm relating to all artistic genres gained worldwide fame as a film actress. Her last film, Bossa Nova (1999) by Columbia Pictures, where she co-starred with Amy Irving and Antonio Fagundez, was marked by high ratings and very impressive box office. Her theatrical career is distinguished by an enviable constancy: for three years the actress has been touring Brazil with unfailing success with the only play by Patricia Melo "Two Women and the Dead Man". The next season opened on March 8 at the Actor Cultural Center in São Paulo.