Mario_Casas

Mario Casas

Mario Casas

Spanish film and television actor


Mario Casas Sierra (born 12 June 1986) is a Spanish film and television actor. Known for his roles in Spanish cinema and television, he has received various accolades including a Goya Award, a Gaudí Award, and three Feroz Awards.

Quick Facts Born, Occupation ...

In 2006, after featuring in minor credits in Motivos personales and Obsesión, Casas landed his first television main role in the teen drama SMS: Sin Miedo a Soñar and also debuted in the big screen in Summer Rain.[1] Casas acquired a larger clout owing to his appearance in the television series Los hombres de Paco, as part of a popular love triangle together with Hugo Silva and Michelle Jenner.[1] His early film career, featuring in box-office darlings such as Sex, Party and Lies (2009), Brain Drain (2009), and Three Steps Above Heaven (2010), consolidated after his performance as bad boy Hache in the latter title, which earned him wide popularity in Spain.[1][2][3] He also starred in television series El barco (2011−13).[1]

He went on to feature in starring roles in films such as Unit 7 (2012), I Want You (2012; the sequel to Three Steps Above Heaven), The Mule (2013), Witching & Bitching (2013), Ismael (2013), My Big Night (2015), Palm Trees in the Snow (2015), Toro (2016), The Invisible Guest (2016), The Bar (2017), The Skin of the Wolf (2017), The Photographer of Mauthausen (2018), Bye (2019), The Occupant (2020), and The Paramedic (2020).

He also appeared in English-language international projects Eden and The 33.[4][5]

Casas' leading performance in Cross the Line (2020) earned him his first Goya Award for Best Actor. He made his debut as a director with My Loneliness Has Wings (2023).

Early life and education

Casas was born in A Coruña to a 19-year-old father (an ébéniste) and a 17-year-old mother.[6] He moved to Barcelona at the age of 4.[6][7] After featuring as a child actor in some commercials (Cola Cao, Scalextric, Telepizza), he moved to Madrid at age 17−18 with his family, going on to combine odd jobs with acting training at the Cristina Rota acting school.[8][6]

Acting career

2005–2010: Early work and breakthrough

Casas began appearing in soap operas from 2005 at age 19, before earning minor roles in several Spanish films.[9] Mario Casas began his acting career with episode appearances in television series Obsesión (English: Obsession), Motivos personales (Personal Motives) and Mujeres (Women). He came to domestic media attention with his film debut in the 2006 film El camino de los ingleses (Summer Rain), directed by Antonio Banderas.

That same year he joined the cast of LaSexta series SMS. Casas then reached international audience as Aitor Carrasco in the Antena 3 series Los hombres de Paco (Paco's Men), which he starred from 2007 to 2010.

In 2009, Casas appeared in two hit films, Fuga de cerebros (Brain Drain) opposite Amaia Salamanca, and Mentiras y Gordas (Sex, Party and Lies) with his best friend Yon González,[10] Ana Maria Polvorosa, Ana de Armas and Hugo Silva. Both managed to lead the box office over the weekend of its release. In 2010, Casas starred in Carne de neón (Neon Flesh) directed by Paco Cabezas. Later that year in December 2010, he starred in Tres metros sobre el cielo (Three Steps Above Heaven) opposite María Valverde. It was eventually the highest-grossing Spanish film of the year. A sequel Tengo ganas de ti (I Want You), which stars Casas, Valverde and Clara Lago, premiered in 2012.[11] He also appeared in Miedo (2010), directed by Jaume Balagueró.[12]

2011–present: Career expansion and further acclaim

Casas in January 2011, during the presentation of Carne de neón

Since 2011, Casas has starred the Antena 3 series El barco (The Boat), he also starred in Tengo ganas de ti (I Want You), premiered in 2012.

During the late 2013 and early 2014, he went to Colombia and Chile for his second film project in English called Los 33 (The 33) with Antonio Banderas and Juliette Binoche, a story based on the Chilean mining accident that occurred in 2010.[13] In 2015, Mario also starred in two other films: the new Álex de la Iglesia comedy film My Great Night, and also in the romantic drama film Palmeras en la Nieve (Palm Trees in the Snow), where he reunited with the director of the films Tres metros sobre el cielo (Three Steps Above Heaven) and Tengo ganas de ti (I Want You), Fernando Gonzalez Molina.[14] In 2016, he performed in a thriller movie called "The Invisible Guest" which was a commercial success, although the film had opened to mixed critical responses. The film grossed US$3.9 million in Spain and CN¥172.4 million in China. In 2018, Casas starred in El fotógrafo de Mauthausen which tells the story of Francisco Boix, a Spanish Republican photographer who was sent to the Mauthausen-Gusen concentration camp complex during World War II.[15] Casas lost around 12 kilograms (26 pounds) to play Boix during his imprisonment.[16]

In October 2022, Casas began to shoot his debut as a feature film director, My Loneliness Has Wings, written alongside Deborah François and starring his brother Óscar.[17]

Personal life

Mario Casas is the older sibling of actor Óscar Casas, who has sometimes played younger versions of Mario's characters in some works.[18] Mario Casas is reported to have been in relationships with several fellow castmates including Erika Sanz [es], Amaia Salamanca, María Valverde, Berta Vázquez, Blanca Suárez, and Déborah François.[19]

Filmography

Film

Key
Denotes films that have not yet been released
More information Year, Title ...

Television

More information Year, Title ...

Accolades

More information Year, Award ...

References

  1. Pereira, Azucena (12 June 2016). "La carrera televisiva de Mario Casas: De 'SMS' a 'El Barco'". FormulaTV.
  2. "Las diez fotos de la infancia de Mario Casas". rtve.es. 11 February 2016. Retrieved 9 July 2023.
  3. Arraut, Lucas (29 March 2012). "Mario Casas: Heart-throb 2.0". El País.
  4. Woodman, Stephen (12 March 2018). "Meet Mario Casas, the Superstar Spanish Actor You Still Haven't Heard Of". Culture Trip. Retrieved 28 July 2018.
  5. Redondo, David; Blázquez, Clara (18 June 2009). Sánchez, Álvaro (ed.). "Entrevista a Mario Casas, en exclusiva". Punto de Encuentro (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 8 August 2012. Retrieved 2 November 2012.
  6. "Mario Casas, María Valverde y Clara Lago presentan 'Tengo ganas de ti'". Hola (in Spanish). 19 June 2012. Retrieved 2 November 2012.
  7. Maldivia, Beatriz (18 December 2010). "'Miedo', la wikipeli dirigida por Jaume Balagueró y miles de internautas". Blog de Cine (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 9 February 2017. Retrieved 14 September 2018.
  8. "Antonio Banderas, Mario Casas y Juliette Binoche presentan 'Los 33' con los mineros de Atacama". Hola!. 3 February 2014. Archived from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 14 September 2018.
  9. "Mario Casas protagoniza la adaptación del best seller "Palmeras en la nieve"". ABC (in Spanish). 23 September 2013. Retrieved 14 September 2018.
  10. Antón, Jacinto (23 November 2017). "La vida del fotógrafo que sufrió el horror nazi se convierte en película". El País. Prisa. Retrieved 5 January 2018.
  11. "Mario Casas protagoniza 'El fotógrafo de Mauthausen', participada por RTVE". RTVE (in Spanish). 10 November 2017. Retrieved 5 January 2018.
  12. Ayanz, Miguel (22 June 2012). "Tenemos ganas de Mario Casas". La Razón.
  13. Cano Expósito, Javier (29 November 2018). ""La mula", una historia de amor en plena Guerra Civil". Diario Jaén.
  14. "14º Festival Internacional de Cine Lésbico Gai y Transexual de Madrid" (PDF). Fundación Triángulo. p. 24. Retrieved 7 January 2023.
  15. Agudo, Jesús (28 January 2014). "Lista de ganadores de los Premios Feroz 2014". ecartelera.
  16. Palenzuela, Fernando S. (17 January 2021). "'Antidisturbios' y 'Patria', entre los ganadores de los Premios Forqué 2021". FormulaTV.

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