Ana Bustorff

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ana Maria Brito Bustorff Guerra (born November 15, 1959 in Miragaia , Porto ) is a Portuguese actress .

Life

In 1977 she started at the theater company Seiva Trupe in Porto and at the same time dropped out of her biology studies at the University of Porto . She first appeared on stage in the play Contos Cruéis by Jorge de Sena . This was followed by pieces by Almeida Garrett ( O Conde de Novion ) and Camilo Castelo Branco ( A Queda d´Um Anjo ), before she co-founded the theater company CENA in Porto, for which she played a variety of roles over the next few years, including in Günter Grass ´ A Cheia ("flood"), Karl Valentins Ei Lá! Você Exagera (“Well, now you 're exaggerating”) and in Georg Büchner's Leônica e Lena (“Leonce and Lena”).

After minor film and television roles, and theater plays for television (including the experimental play Yerma by Federico García Lorca ), she made a career change in 1993 and moved to Lisbon. There she was on stage in the Teatro Bairro Alto , in the Bairro Alto , for the play Desastres ("Unhappiness"), a production by Miguel Guilherme based on plays by Samuel Beckett , Eugène Ionesco and Philip K. Dick .

The great success of her role as Maria de Fátima in the comic television series Desculpem Qualquer Coisinha , in 1994 on the first channel of the RTP , made her known to a wide audience, and a variety of television roles followed, especially in comic sitcoms and telenovelas . She continued to play theater, albeit less often, around 1995 in Griselda Gambaro's Despir a que Está Nua in the Centro Cultural de Belém , or in 1996 in David Mamets Edmond in the Teatro Nacional D. Maria II . She has also appeared in front of the camera more often for movies, for example in the most successful Portuguese film since 2004 ( O Crime de Padre Amaro , 2005).

She is now counted among the most renowned actresses in Portuguese film and received the Globo de Ouro for Best Actress in 1999 and 2000 .

Filmography

  • 1980: O Viajante (TV); R: António Damião
  • 1980: Yerma (TV); R: Ferrão Katzenstein
  • 1981: Xarope de Orgiata (TV); R: Correia Alves
  • 1981: Um Táxi na Cidade (TV series, 1 episode)
  • 1983: 1 + 1 = 1 (TV series)
  • 1983: Nocturno (TV series)
  • 1984: Mudas Mudanças; R: Saguenail
  • 1985: A Idiota (TV); R: Rui Ramos
  • 1987: Histórias Quase Clínicas (TV series)
  • 1988: lunge; R: Cristina Hauser
  • 1988: Agosto; R: Jorge Silva Melo
  • 1992: Saudades (Soares Reis) (TV); R: Francisco Manso
  • 1992: Terra Fria; R: António Campos
  • 1993: Sozinhos em Casa (TV series, 1 episode)
  • 1994: Manual de Evasão; R: Edgar Pêra
  • 1994: Uma Cidade Qualquer (video), D: Joaquim Leitão
  • 1994: Le cascadeur (TV series)
  • 1994: Desculpem Qualquer Coisinha (TV series)
  • 1995: A Mulher do Senhor Ministro (TV series, 1 episode)
  • 1995: Tudo ao Molho e Fé em Deus (TV series)
  • 1995: O Mundo Desbotado (short film); R: Edgar Pêra
  • 1995: Adão e Eva; R: Joaquim Leitão
  • 1995: Cluedo (TV series)
  • 1996: Dois Dragões (short film); R: Margarida Cardoso
  • 1996–1997: Pensão Estrela (TV series)
  • 1997: Alta Saciedade (short film); R: Carlos Assis
  • 1997: Polícias (TV series, 1 episode)
  • 1997: The Weaknesses of Women ("Elles"); R: Luís Galvão Teles
  • 1997: Tentação; R: Joaquim Leitão
  • 1995: Os Malucos do Riso (TV series)
  • 1998: No Caminho Para a Escola (short film); R: Marco Martins
  • 1998: O Céu de Sacadura (TV)
  • 1998: Solteiros (TV series)
  • 1998: Sapatos Pretos; R: João Canijo
  • 1998: Diário de Maria (TV series)
  • 1998: Zona J; R: Leonel Vieira
  • 1998–1999: Médico de Família (TV series, 2 episodes)
  • 1998–1999: Polícias à Solta (TV series)
  • 1999: A Vida Como Ela É (TV series)
  • 1999: Inferno; R: Joaquim Leitão
  • 1999–2000: A Lenda da Garça (TV series)
  • 1999–2001: O Fura-Vidas (TV series)
  • 2000: As Terças da Bailarina Gorda (short film); R: Jeanne Waltz
  • 2000: O Segredo; R: Leandro Ferreira
  • 2000: Faca e Anjos (TV); R: Eduardo Guedes
  • 2000: Noites; R: Cláudia Tomaz
  • 2000: Super-Pai (TV series)
  • 2001–2002: A Minha Familia É Uma Animação (TV series)
  • 2001: Querido Professor (TV series, 1 episode)
  • 2002: A Bomba; R: Leonel Vieira
  • 2002: Crónica Feminina (short film); R: Gonçalo C. Luz
  • 2002–2003: A Minha Sogra É uma Bruxa (TV series)
  • 2003: Part-Time (short film): D: Jorge Queiroga
  • 2003: O Jogo (TV series)
  • 2003: A Passagen da Noite; R: Luís Filipe Rocha
  • 2003: The glass look; R: Markus Heltschl
  • 2004: Inspector Max (TV series, 1 episode)
  • 2004: Portugal SA; R: Ruy Guerra
  • 2004: Na Cidade Vazia; R: Maria João Ganga
  • 2004–2005: Maré Alta (TV series)
  • 2005: Segredo (TV series)
  • 2005: João Semana (TV series)
  • 2005: Alice; R: Marco Martins
  • 2005: O Mergulho; R: Jorge Paixão da Costa
  • 2005: O Fatalista; R: João Botelho
  • 2005: O Crime do Padre Amaro; D: Carlos Coelho da Silva
  • 2005: Pedro e Inês (TV series)
  • 2006–2007: Paixões Proibidas (TV series)
  • 2007: Nome de Código: Sintra (TV series)
  • 2007–2008: Resistirei (TV series)
  • 2008: Liberdade (TV series, 1 episode)
  • 2009: Conta-me Como Foi (TV series)
  • 2009: Equador (TV series)
  • 2009: Um Lugar Para Viver (TV series)
  • 2011: Tejo (short film); R: Henrique Pina
  • 2011: A Cura (short film); R: Henrique Pina
  • 2011: Par ou Ímpar (short film); D: Sílvia Cunha , Luís Gonçalves
  • 2011: A Família Mata (TV series, 1 episode)
  • 2011: Velhos Amigo (TV series, 1 episode)
  • 2011: Voo Directo (TV series)
  • 2011–2012: Morangos Com Açúcar (TV series)

literature

Web links

See also

Individual evidence

  1. Jorge Leitão Ramos: Dicionário do cinema português 1989 - 2003 , 1st edition, Editorial Caminho, Lisbon 2005, page 102ff
  2. cinema.pt: Ana Bustorff Biografia ( Memento from November 7, 2013 in the web archive archive.today )
  3. Jorge Leitão Ramos: Dicionário do cinema português 1989 - 2003 , 1st edition, Editorial Caminho, Lisbon 2005, page 104