The artist, who participates in the television series "Ana and the Seven", visits Palma
The Balearic Islands Film Festival is coming to an end, leaving behind a trail of famous faces that we rarely have the opportunity to see together in these parts.
Yesterday it was the turn of the Catalan actress Silvia Marsó, who was the last artist to arrive in Palma to take part in the aforementioned festival, contributing her experience, her beautiful face, and, above all, that contagious smile that has made her popular, even though in her last job she plays evil. The Balearic Islands Film Festival will conclude tonight with the awards ceremony, which will be held at 9 pm at the Municipal Theater of Palma.
Silvia Marsó is one of those versatile actresses who tread the stage of a theater with ease in front of a movie camera or evolve at the pace of production demanded by television. She has recently participated in the feature film "the black bible", David Pujol's debut, and she also takes part in the popular television series "Ana y les seven", starring Ana García Obregón. In it, Silvia plays the role of Alexia, a character that she loves because she, she assures her, "she had never played such a bad bad role."
She is about "a woman who has reached the top by herself" she explains, for those who do not follow the series, "by dint of working, and although she is very ambitious, she has dignity. Unfortunately, however, today many people are like that, she adds. About her professional ambitions for the future, the artist hopes to be able to dedicate herself more to the seventh art and hopes that more opportunities will be presented to her in this field, because "according to her reproachful tone" "until now I have had very few.
Her first work in a feature film was "the dead mother", by the Basque Juanma Bajo Ulloa, and the actress keeps very good memories of that experience. And not only because it is her first film "and with a director of the stature of Juanma Bajo Ulloa," she clarifies, but because she "confessed to me that she wrote the role of Blanca precisely for me. She saw me in the theater doing 'the lady of dawn', by Alejandro Casona, and that's where the idea came from, "she reveals. Marsó thinks that in her profession there are always things to do and for this reason, she assures that "although I have been an actress for twenty years, I have the feeling that I am beginning."