María José Goyanes

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Born
María José Goyanes Muñoz

(1948-12-08) 8 December 1948 (age 76)
Madrid, Spain
OccupationActress
SpouseManuel Collado Sillero [es] (divorced c. 1985)
ChildrenJavier Collado [es]
María José Goyanes
María José Goyanes in 2019
Born
María José Goyanes Muñoz

(1948-12-08) 8 December 1948 (age 76)
Madrid, Spain
OccupationActress
SpouseManuel Collado Sillero [es] (divorced c. 1985)
ChildrenJavier Collado [es]
MotherMimí Muñoz [es]
Relatives

María José Goyanes Muñoz (born 8 December 1948) is a Spanish actress.

María José Goyanes belongs to a family with a long artistic tradition: her grandfather was the actor Alfonso Muñoz [es], her mother the actress Mimí Muñoz [es], and her sisters Vicky Lagos, Mara [es], and Concha [es] Goyanes.[1] She was married to the producer and theater director Manuel Collado Sillero [es]. Their son, Javier Collado [es], is also an actor.[2]

She began working in the theater while still a child, performing with José María Rodero in El caballero de las espuelas de oro [es].[3] She also made her debut in cinema and television when she was not yet 15. A dedicated theatrical actress, she formed her own company, staging works such as Chekhov's The Seagull.[4]

Goyanes was the subject of a scandal during the 1975 production of the play Equus. In her role, alongside José Luis López Vázquez and Juan Ribó [es], she appeared topless, the first time this had occurred in Spanish theater since the end of Francoist censorship.[5]

Her first big-screen appearance was in 1960's A Ray of Light by Luis Lucia, which also marked the debut of the prodigy Marisol.[6] However her film career has not been extensive, comprising fewer than ten roles, almost all in the 1960s, including Megatón Ye-Ye (1965) by Jesús Yagüe, ¿Qué hacemos con los hijos? [es] (1967), Los chicos del Preu [es] (1967), and Novios 68 [es] (1967), the last three by Pedro Lazaga.

She has had a more prominent presence on television, appearing on dozens of Televisión Española (TVE) shows, such as Novela [es] and Estudio 1, notably her two interpretations of Doña Inés in Don Juan Tenorio (1968 and 1973) and of Paula in Tres sombreros de copa [es] (1978).[7]

She is also known for acting in the series El olivar de Atocha [es] (1988), Yo, una mujer [es] with Concha Velasco (1996), Yo soy Bea as Alicia Echegaray (2008–2009), and Hospital Central. In 2016 and 2017 she played Ana María, marquise of Madrigales, in Amar es para siempre.[8]

Awards

  • Nominated for the Mayte Theater Award [es] (1982), for Educating Rita
  • Nominated for the Mayte Theater Award (1984)
  • Nominated for the Mayte Theater Award (1985)
  • Nominated for the Mayte Theater Award (1987)

Selected plays

Television appearances

References

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