Eduardo Noriega(II)
- Actor
- Writer
- Producer
Eduardo Noriega Gómez was born in Santander, Cantabria, Spain. The
youngest of 7 siblings, he had shown a very big talent for artistic
activities since he was a child. He began taking piano lessons and got
into the Santander Music Conservatory, where he studied for five years.
His music professors discovered that he had many conditions for playing
piano, so they would keep him practicing for hours until he got tired
of it and quit. After finishing high school, he decided to become a
lawyer and majored at University of Santander, one of the most
prestigious universities in Europe.That wouldn't last long either,
because he got the acting bug by chance when attended an acting class
alongside a friend that wanted to be an actress, he was invited to
participate and enjoyed it enough to do that for living. At 19, he
relocated to Madrid to start his drama classes at the R.E.S.A.D.
(Madrid Acting Conservatory) and tried to continue with Law School
attending the U.N.E.D. (a college where people can study even if they
live far away), but due to the time the acting classes demanded him,
couldn't focus on his other career and quit after passing the first
signature. Once at the Conservatory he met
Mateo Gil and
Alejandro Amenábar, who was searching
for good average students to make his first short films. Noriega shot a
few shorts with both of them until he landed one of the starring roles
in Amenábar's opera prima Thesis (1996).
This movie became the most successful movie of the year in Spain and
Eduardo Noriega and Fele Martínez became
huge stars. In 1996, Eduardo had a tiny part in
Pedro Olea's
Más allá del jardín (1996)
and the main role in
Question of Luck (1997),
shot in San Sebastián. During the making of this movie, his mother
passed away and he channeled his grief into work by making
Open Your Eyes (1997), another
Amenábar's movie that became one of the suspense classics worldwide.
This part gave Noriega his first Goya Award nomination, but he lost to
Fernando Fernán Gómez, although he
was consecrated as a very promising actor. Soon after, he tried himself
in comedy by taking part in the movie
Cha Cha Cha (1998) where he showed
his skills as a comedian and met who would be his girlfriend for two
years: Ana Alvarez. The relationship
ended in good terms and afterward, he arrived to Argentina to make
another movie that would become a cult one:
Burnt Money (2000). This flick
won the Goya Award in 2001 and Eduardo met his now friend
Leonardo Sbaraglia. Between 2001 and
2004, he made movies in France, Madagascar and Spain. 2004 was the year
that gave him the chance to play a real life character for first time
in the movie El Lobo (2004). He played
Txema, an insider infiltrated in ETA who gave information to the
government to dismantle the terrorist group. Critics and people loved
his interpretation and earned him a second Goya nomination. Next year,
he had the chance to play another controversial character: Che Guevara,
becoming the first Spanish actor to play it. In 2006
Master Kowalski (2006) was released at the
same time that the theater play and became a blockbuster in Spain and
Argentina, Marcelo Piñeyro was the
director and also had directed
Burnt Money (2000). His most
challenging role was yet to come, nevertheless:
Vicente Aranda was preparing to direct
Canciones de amor en Lolita's Club (2007)and
also looking for an actor who dared play twins who where identical in
the outside but totally different inside, because one was a violent
smart cop and the other one a mentally retarded sweet man. On December
3, 2007 he won the GQ award as the "Actor of the Year". In 2008 he
participated in two American movies:
Vantage Point (2008) and
Transsiberian (2008). In 2009 he
re-teamed with Amenábar (this time as a producer, not director) in
El mal ajeno (2010), where he had to
look older to play an apparently cold-blooded doctor that used to deal
with terminal patients, but his life is stricken when his teenage
daughter becomes his patient. With this movie, Eduardo showed his
maturity as an actor and next year he could fulfill a dream: making a
western. Blackthorn (2011) told the
story of Butch Cassidy in exile while staying in Bolivia.
Sam Shepard and
Stephen Rea were part of this superb
cast as well. During the half of 2011 a new suspense TV series called
Homicidios (2011) began to be
promoted on channel Tele5. This thriller meant the return of
Eduardo Noriega to television
(he had only had a small part in the 1994-1996 show "Colegio Mayor").
"Homicidios" premiered on 20 September 2011 in prime-time with a very
high rating. Although it was switched to different times until even
midnight, it had the highest audience of his all time branches. In 2013
he will release the movie The Last Stand, alongside
Arnold Schwarzenegger.