Goya Awards
The “Goya Awards”, “Annual Academy Awards” or simply “Los Goya”, as they are popularly known, are the awards granted annually by the Academy of Cinematographic Arts and Sciences of Spain, with the purpose of rewarding the best professionals in each of the different specialties of Spanish cinema. The prize consists of a bust of Francisco de Goya made in bronze by the sculptor José Luis Fernández. The first statuette to be delivered was the work of the sculptor Miguel Ortiz Berrocal; It was a removable sculpture, weighing 15 kg and from which a camera emerged from the bust of Goya. From the 4th edition, the statuette was commissioned to José Luis Fernández, developing the same bust with a smaller shape and weight.
The awards ceremony takes place between the last days of January and the beginning of February and follows the format of the Oscars.
History
A simulation of the film awards awarded in other countries (Oscar in the United States, Bafta in the United Kingdom, Ariel Awards in Mexico, César in France, David de Donatello in Italy, Lola in Germany...), and to reward the most outstanding works of Spanish cinema made in different categories during the year prior to the delivery date, the Academy of Cinematographic Arts and Sciences of Spain decides to create the so-called Annual “Goya” Academy Awards. The first edition took place on March 17, 1987 at the Lope de Vega Theater in Madrid. The name chosen for the award was due to the fact that, in the opinion of the academics, "Goya had had a pictorial concept close to cinema and several of his most representative works had an almost sequential treatment", and it was appropriate for It was a short name, which was similar to that of other film awards such as the Oscars, or the Césars.
In the year 2000 the awards ceremony was held in Barcelona, the first time outside the capital. On that occasion the ceremony took place in the Barcelona Auditorium.
In 2003, a large number of film professionals took advantage of the awards ceremony to express their rejection of the support of the José María Aznar government for the US invasion of Iraq ("No to war" 3. 4;).
In 2004, the AVT called a demonstration in front of the gala because among the nominees was the documentary by Julio Médem La pelota vasca, because according to them it equated the victims with the murderers. For this reason, they asked for the support of the attendees, who were asked to wear a sticker with the slogan "No to ETA". Banners with messages such as "No to Medem" or "No to Basque Pelota: the neck against the bullet". For their part, some of the attendees closed ranks around their partner, and wore their own stickers that read messages such as "Medem Yes, ETA No", & #34;Yes to freedom of expression" or "No to terrorism".
In 2005, José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero became the first Prime Minister to attend this awards ceremony. In this edition some voices were raised to accuse the PSOE of politicizing the delivery.
Since the XXVI edition (2011) to be a candidate in any interpretive category (including that of revelation actor or actress) the only condition is "being older than 16 years", regardless of nationality or language in which the interpreter and his character speak. Before that edition, a dozen children under 16 years of age were candidates for the acting awards, seven of them winning: Andoni Erburu (10 years old), Ivana Baquero (12 years old), Nerea Camacho (12 years old), Juan José Ballesta (13 years old), years old), Francesc Colomer (14 years old), Marina Comas (15 years old) and María Valverde (16 years old).
The 2014 gala was marked by an absence that until now had not occurred in the history of these awards: that of the Minister of Education, Culture and Sports, José Ignacio Wert, who justified his absence for reasons of agenda. This absence was one of the most commented topics during the gala, even the presenter of this edition, Manel Fuentes, alluded to the institutional absence, pointing out that the most important thing was to make the ceremony flow, regardless of the absences or presences. The truth is that the cultural sector has not found this absence a wise decision because they assure that in the moments in which it is going through, the most important thing is unity. Even the actor Eduardo Noriega went so far as to describe this absence as "making fools", with the aggravating circumstance that the minister has a public position and as such, he should have attended.
In 2019 the gala was held in Seville, specifically in the Fibes auditorium of the Palacio de Exposiciones y Congresos. The President of the Academy, Mariano Barroso, decided on this location because Seville is the third city in number of academics and an important headquarters of the Andalusian audiovisual industry.
On Monday, July 29, 2019, the Board of Directors of the Film Academy decided that the city of Malaga would host the gala of the 34th edition of the Goya Awards, which will be held in January 2020.[1]
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- * In the first two editions of 1986 and 1987, the Film Academy only awarded a single award for best script, falling in both editions to adapted scripts.
Editions and galas
The Awards are currently awarded in 28 categories, not counting the Goya Award of honor, with a maximum of four candidates for each of them since the XIII edition of 1998 (having been three candidates in the first edition, five in the II and III edition, and three from the IV to the XII edition), although since the XXVIII edition of 2013, only in the Best Film category, five candidates have been chosen.
The award-winning films that have been filmed in languages other than Spanish are: The Dream of the Crazy Monkey, The Others, The Secret Life of Words and The bookstore (in English), and Black bread (Pa negre in Catalan).
For the 2021 edition, the Board of Directors of the Film Academy decided that films with "online" could compete and obtain the Goya award, due to the coronavirus crisis (COVID-19). All this in an "exceptional" and only for the 2021 edition of the Goya Awards. [2]
Editing and date of the gala | Place and city Leaders | Best movie (Director of the film) | Best director and Best director novel | Number awards | Categories |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
I - 1986 17 March 1987 | Lope de Vega Theatre (Gran Via de Madrid) (1) Fernando Rey | The journey to nowhere (from Fernando Fernán Gómez) | Fernando Fernán Gómez (not granted) | 3 | 15 |
II - 1987 22 March 1988 | Palacio de Congresos de Madrid (Paseo de la Castellana, 99) (1) Fernando Rey | The animated forest (from José Luis Cuerda) | José Luis Garci (not granted) | 5 | 16 |
III. 1988 22 March 1989 | Palacio de Congresos de Madrid (2) Veronica Forqué and Antonio Resines | Women on the verge of a nerve attack (from Pedro Almodóvar) | Gonzalo Suárez (not granted) | 5 | 17 |
IV. 1989 10 March 1990 | Palacio de Congresos de Madrid (3) Carmen Maura and Andrés Pajares | The dream of a mad monkey (from Fernando Trueba) | Fernando Trueba (1) Ana Díez | 6 | 21 |
V-90 16 February 1991 | Palacio de Congresos de Madrid (4) Lydia Bosch and Jorge Sanz | Oh, Carmela! (from Carlos Saura) | Carlos Saura Rosa Vergés | 13 | 20 |
VI. 1991 7 March 1992 | Palacio de Congresos de Madrid (5) Aitana Sánchez-Gijón and José Coronado | Love (from Vicente Aranda) | Vicente Aranda Juanma Bajo Ulloa | 2 | 20 |
VII. 1992 14 March 1993 | Palacio de Congresos de Madrid (6) Imanol Arias | Belle Époque (from Fernando Trueba) | Fernando Trueba (2) July Medem | 9 | 22 |
VIII. 1993 21 January 1994 | Palacio de Congresos de Madrid (7) Rosa Maria Sardá | Everyone to jail (from Luis García Berlanga) | Luis García Berlanga Mariano Barroso | 3 | 22 |
IX - 1994 20 January 1995 | Palacio de Congresos de Madrid (8) Imanol Arias | Days counted (from Imanol Uribe) | Imanol Uribe La Cuadrilla (S. Aguilar and L. Guridi) | 8 | 25 |
X - 1995 27 January 1996 | Palacio Municipal de Congresos de Madrid (Campus of the United Nations) (1) Veronica Forqué and Javier Gurruchaga | No one will talk about us when we're dead. (from Agustín Díaz Yanes) | Alex of the Church Agustín Díaz Yanes | 8 | 24 |
XI - 1996 25 January 1997 | Palacio Municipal de Congresos de Madrid (2) Carmen Maura and Juanjo Puigcorbé | Thesis (from Alexander Amenábar) | Pilar Miró Alejandro Amenábar (1) | 7 | 25 |
XII. 1997 31 January 1998 | Palacio Municipal de Congresos de Madrid (3) The Great Wyoming | The good star (from Ricardo Franco) | Ricardo Fernando León de Aranoa (1) | 5 | 24 |
XIII - 1998 24 January 1999 | Palacio Municipal de Congresos de Madrid (4) Rosa Maria Sardá | The girl in your eyes (from Fernando Trueba) | Fernando León de Aranoa (2) Santiago Segura | 7 | 25 |
XIV - 1999 29 January 2000 | Auditorium of Barcelona (1) Antonia San Juan | All about my mother (from Pedro Almodóvar) | Pedro Almodóvar (1) Benito Zambrano | 7 | 26 |
XV - 2000 3 February 2001 | Palacio Municipal de Congresos de Madrid (5) María Barranco and José Coronado; Loles León and Imanol Arias; Concha Velasco and Pablo Carbonell | The Ball (from Achero Mañas) | José Luis Borau Achero Mañas | 4 | 25 |
XVI - 2001 2 February 2002 | Palacio Municipal de Congresos de Madrid (6) Rosa Maria Sardá | The others (from Alexander Amenábar) | Alejandro Amenábar (2) Juan Carlos Fresnadillo | 8 | 27 |
XVII - 2002 1 February 2003 | Palacio Municipal de Congresos de Madrid (7) Alberto San Juan, Guillermo Toledo, Nathalie Poza, Ernesto Alterio and Animalario (a theatre group). | Mondays in the sun (from Fernando León de Aranoa) | Fernando León de Aranoa (3) Roger Gual and Julio Wallovits | 5 | 28 |
XVIII - 2003 31 January 2004 | Palacio Municipal de Congresos de Madrid (8) Cayetana Guillén Cuervo and Diego Luna | I give you my eyes (from Icíar Bollaín) | Icíar Bollaín Angeles González-Sinde | 7 | 28 |
XIX - 2004 30 January 2005 | Palacio Municipal de Congresos de Madrid (9) Antonio Resines, Maribel Verdú and Montserrat Caballé (soprano) | Sea in (from Alexander Amenábar) | Alejandro Amenábar (3) Pablo Malo | 14 | 28 |
XX - 2005 29 January 2006 | Palacio Municipal de Congresos de Madrid (10) Concha Velasco and Antonio Resines | The Secret Life of Words (from Isabel Coixet) | Isabel Coixet (1) José Corbacho and Juan Cruz | 4 | 28 |
XXI - 2006 28 January 2007 | Palacio Municipal de Congresos de Madrid (11) José Corbacho (humorist) | Back (from Pedro Almodóvar) | Pedro Almodóvar (2) Daniel Sánchez Arévalo | 5 | 27 |
XXII - 2007 3 February 2008 | Palacio Municipal de Congresos de Madrid (12) José Corbacho (humorist) | Loneliness (from Jaime Rosales) | Jaime Rosales Juan Antonio Bayona (1) | 3 | 27 |
XXIII - 2008 1 February 2009 | Palacio Municipal de Congresos de Madrid (13) Carmen Machi (actress) and Muchachada Nui (Joaquín Reyes, Ernesto Sevilla, Pablo Chiapella, Aníbal Gómez, Julián López, Carlos Areces, Raúl Cimas)(humorous group) | Camino (from Javier Fesser) | Javier Fesser Santiago Zannou | 6 | 28 |
XXIV - 2009 14 February 2010 | Palacio Municipal de Congresos de Madrid (14) Andreu Buenafuente (humorist) | Cell 211 (from Daniel Monzón) | Daniel Monzón Mar Coll | 8 | 28 |
XXV - 2010 13 February 2011 | Teatro Real (Madrid) (1) Andreu Buenafuente (humorist) | Pa negre (black bread) (from Agustí Villaronga) | Agustí Villaronga David Pinillos | 9 | 28 |
XXVI - 2011 19 February 2012 | Palacio Municipal de Congresos de Madrid (15) Eva Hache (humorist) | There will be no peace for the wicked (from Enrique Urbizu) | Enrique Urbizu Kike Maillo | 6 | 28 |
XXVII - 2012 17 February 2013 | Hotel Auditorium (Centro de Congresos Príncipe Felipe, Madrid) (1) Eva Hache (humorist) | Snow White (from Pablo Berger) | Juan Antonio Bayona (2) Enrique Gato | 10 | 28 |
XXVIII - 2013 9 February 2014 | Hotel Auditorium (Centro de Congresos Príncipe Felipe, Madrid) (2) Manel Fuentes (humorist) | Living is easy with closed eyes (from David Trueba) | David Trueba Fernando | 6 | 28 |
XXIX - 2014 7 February 2015 | Hotel Auditorium (Centro de Congresos Príncipe Felipe, Madrid) (3) Dani Rovira (actor and humorist) | The minimum island (from Alberto Rodríguez) | Alberto Rodríguez Carlos Marquis-Marcet | 10 | 28 |
XXX - 2015 6 February 2016 | Hotel Auditorium (Centro de Congresos Príncipe Felipe, Madrid) (4) Dani Rovira (actor and humorist) | Truman (from Cesc Gay) | Cesc Gay Daniel Guzmán | 5 | 28 |
XXXI - 2016 4 February 2017 | Hotel Auditorium (Centro de Congresos Príncipe Felipe, Madrid) (5) Dani Rovira (actor and humorist) | Late for anger (from Raul Arévalo) | Juan Antonio Bayona (3) Raúl Arévalo | 4 | 28 |
XXXII - 2017 3 February 2018 | Hotel Auditorium (Centro de Congresos Príncipe Felipe, Madrid) (6) Ernesto Sevilla (humorist)Joaquín Reyes (humorist) and Muchachada Nui (Joaquín Reyes, Ernesto Sevilla, Pablo Chiapella, Aníbal Gómez, Julián López, Carlos Areces, Raúl Cimas) | The bookstore (from Isabel Coixet) | Isabel Coixet (2) Carla Simon | 3 | 28 |
XXXIII - 2018 February 2, 2019 | Palace of Congresses and Exhibitions of Seville (Fibes) (1) Andreu Buenafuente (humorist and presenter) and Silvia Abril (humorist) | Champions
(from Javier Fesser) | Rodrigo Sorogoyen
Arantxa Echevarría | 3 | 28 |
XXXIV - 2019 25 January 2020 | Sports Palace José María Martín Carpena (Malaga) (1)
Andreu Buenafuente (humorist and presenter) and Silvia Abril (humorist) | Pain and glory (from Pedro Almodóvar) | Pedro Almodóvar (3)
Bethlehem Funes | 7 | 28 |
XXXV - 2020 6 March 2021 | Soho CaixaBank Theatre (Malaga)
Antonio Banderas (actor and director) and Maria Casado (period) | Girls (from Pilar Palomero) | Salvador Calvo
Pilar Palomero | 4 | 28 |
XXXVI - 2021 12 February 2022 | Palau de les Arts Reina Sofía (Valencia) | The good pattern (from Fernando León de Aranoa) | Fernando León de Aranoa (4)
Clara Roquet | 6 | 28 |
XXXVII - 2022 11 February 2023 | Palace of Congresses and Exhibitions of Seville (Fibes) (2)
Antonio de la Torre (actor) and Clara Lago (actress) |
Television audiences
Interpreters awarded with the Goya award
In parentheses the total number of acting awards won combined (lead performance, supporting role and breakthrough performance).
The prize for the best actor and actress revelation was not granted until the IX edition of 1994.
Edición | Actor | Actriz | Actor de reparto | Actriz de reparto | Actor revelación | Actriz revelación | Goya de honor Goya Internacional |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
I - 1986 | Fernando Fernán Gómez (1) (Mambrú se fue a la guerra) |
Amparo Rivelles (Hay que deshacer la casa) |
Miguel Rellán (Tata mía) |
Verónica Forqué (1) (El año de las luces) |
— | — | José Fernández Aguayo |
II - 1987 | Alfredo Landa (1) (El bosque animado) |
Verónica Forqué (2) (La vida alegre) |
Juan Echanove (1) (Divinas palabras) |
Verónica Forqué (3) (Moros y cristianos) |
— | — | Rafaela Aparicio |
III - 1988 | Fernando Rey (Diario de invierno) |
Carmen Maura (1) (Mujeres al borde de un ataque de nervios) |
José Sazatornil "Saza" (Espérame en el cielo) |
María Barranco (1) (Mujeres al borde de un ataque de nervios) |
— | — | Imperio Argentina |
IV - 1989 | Jorge Sanz (Si te dicen que caí) |
Rafaela Aparicio (El mar y el tiempo) |
Adolfo Marsillach (Esquilache) |
María Asquerino (El mar y el tiempo) |
— | — | Victoriano López García |
V - 1990 | Andrés Pajares (¡Ay, Carmela!) |
Carmen Maura (2) (¡Ay, Carmela!) |
Gabino Diego (¡Ay, Carmela!) |
María Barranco (2) (Las edades de Lulú) |
— | — | Enrique Alarcón |
VI - 1991 | Fernando Guillén (Don Juan en los infiernos) |
Sílvia Munt (Alas de mariposa) |
Juan Diego (1) (El rey pasmado) |
Kiti Manver (Todo por la pasta) |
— | — | Emiliano Piedra |
VII - 1992 | Alfredo Landa (2) (La marrana) |
Ariadna Gil (Belle Époque) |
Fernando Fernán Gómez (2) (Belle Époque) |
Chus Lampreave (Belle Époque) |
— | — | Manuel Mur Oti |
VIII - 1993 | Juan Echanove (2) (Madregilda) |
Verónica Forqué (4) (Kika) |
Fernando «Tito» Valverde (Sombras en una batalla) |
Rosa María Sardá (1) (¿Por qué lo llaman amor cuando quieren decir sexo?) |
— | — | Tony Leblanc (1) |
IX - 1994 | Carmelo Gómez (1) (Días contados) |
Cristina Marcos (Todos los hombres sois iguales) |
Javier Bardem (1) (Días contados) |
María Luisa Ponte (Canción de cuna) |
Saturnino García (Justino, un asesino de la tercera edad) |
Ruth Gabriel (Días contados) |
José María Forqué |
X - 1995 | Javier Bardem (2) (Boca a boca) |
Victoria Abril (Nadie hablará de nosotras cuando hayamos muerto) |
Luis Ciges (Así en el cielo como en la tierra) |
Pilar Bardem (Nadie hablará de nosotras cuando hayamos muerto) |
Santiago Segura (El día de la bestia) |
Rosana Pastor (Tierra y libertad) |
Federico Gutiérrez-Larraya |
XI - 1996 | Santiago Ramos (Como un relámpago) |
Emma Suárez (1) (El perro del hortelano) |
Luis Cuenca (La buena vida) |
Mary Carrillo (Más allá del jardín) |
Fele Martínez (Tesis) |
Íngrid Rubio (Más allá del jardín) |
Miguel Picazo |
XII - 1997 | Antonio Resines (La buena estrella) |
Cecilia Roth (1) (Martín (Hache)) |
Pepe Sancho (Carne trémula) |
Charo López (Secretos del corazón) |
Andoni Erburu (Secretos del corazón) |
Isabel Ordaz (Chevrolet) |
Rafael Azcona |
XIII - 1998 | Fernando Fernán Gómez (3) (El abuelo) |
Penélope Cruz (1) (La niña de tus ojos) |
Tony Leblanc (2) (Torrente: el brazo tonto de la ley) |
Adriana Ozores (La hora de los valientes) |
Miroslav Táborský (La niña de tus ojos) |
Marieta Orozco (Barrio) |
Rafael Alonso |
XIV - 1999 | Francisco Rabal (Goya en Burdeos) |
Cecilia Roth (2) (Todo sobre mi madre) |
Juan Diego (2) (París-Tombuctú) |
María Galiana (Solas) |
Carlos Álvarez-Nóvoa (Solas) |
Ana Fernández (Solas) |
Antonio Isasi-Isasmendi |
XV - 2000 | Juan Luis Galiardo (Adiós con el corazón) |
Carmen Maura (3) (La comunidad) |
Emilio Gutiérrez Caba (1) (La comunidad) |
Julia Gutiérrez Caba (You're the One (una historia de entonces)) |
Juan José Ballesta (El Bola) |
Laia Marull (1) (Fugitivas) |
José Luis Dibildos |
XVI - 2001 | Eduard Fernández (1) (Fausto 5.0) |
Pilar López de Ayala (Juana la Loca) |
Emilio Gutiérrez Caba (2) (El cielo abierto) |
Rosa María Sardá (2) (Sin vergüenza) |
Leonardo Sbaraglia (Intacto) |
Paz Vega (Lucía y el sexo) |
Juan Antonio Bardem |
XVII - 2002 | Javier Bardem (3) (Los lunes al sol) |
Mercedes Sampietro (Lugares comunes) |
Luis Tosar (1) (Los lunes al sol) |
Geraldine Chaplin (En la ciudad sin límites) |
José Ángel Egido (Los lunes al sol) |
Lolita Flores (Rencor) |
Manuel Alexandre |
XVIII - 2003 | Luis Tosar (2) (Te doy mis ojos) |
Laia Marull (2) (Te doy mis ojos) |
Eduard Fernández (2) (En la ciudad) |
Candela Peña (1) (Te doy mis ojos) |
Fernando Tejero (Días de fútbol) |
María Valverde (La flaqueza del bolchevique) |
Héctor Alterio |
XIX - 2004 | Javier Bardem (4) (Mar adentro) |
Lola Dueñas (1) (Mar adentro) |
Celso Bugallo (Mar adentro) |
Mabel Rivera (Mar adentro) |
Tamar Novas (Mar adentro) |
Belén Rueda (Mar adentro) |
José Luis López Vázquez |
XX - 2005 | Óscar Jaenada (Camarón) |
Candela Peña (2) (Princesas) |
Carmelo Gómez (2) (El método) |
Elvira Mínguez (Tapas) |
Jesús Carroza (7 vírgenes) |
Micaela Nevárez (Princesas) |
Pedro Masó |
XXI - 2006 | Juan Diego (3) (Vete de mí) |
Penélope Cruz (2) (Volver) |
Antonio de la Torre (1) (AzulOscuroCasiNegro) |
Carmen Maura (4) (Volver) |
Quim Gutiérrez (AzulOscuroCasiNegro) |
Ivana Baquero (El laberinto del fauno) |
Tedy Villalba |
XXII - 2007 | Alberto San Juan (1) (Bajo las estrellas) |
Maribel Verdú (1) (Siete mesas de billar francés) |
José Manuel Cervino (Las 13 rosas) |
Amparo Baró (Siete mesas de billar francés) |
José Luis Torrijo (La soledad) |
Manuela Velasco (REC) |
Alfredo Landa |
XXIII - 2008 | Benicio del Toro (Che, el argentino) |
Carme Elías (Camino) |
Jordi Dauder (Camino) |
Penélope Cruz (3) (Vicky Cristina Barcelona) |
Juan Manuel Montilla "Langui" (El truco del manco) |
Nerea Camacho (Camino) |
Jesús Franco |
XXIV - 2009 | Luis Tosar (3) (Celda 211) |
Lola Dueñas (2) (Yo, también) |
Raúl Arévalo (Gordos) |
Marta Etura (Celda 211) |
Alberto Ammann (Celda 211) |
Soledad Villamil (El secreto de sus ojos) |
Antonio Mercero |
XXV - 2010 | Javier Bardem (5) (Biutiful) |
Nora Navas (1) (Pa negre (Pan negro)) |
Karra Elejalde (1) (También la lluvia) |
Laia Marull (3) (Pa negre (Pan negro)) |
Francesc Colomer (Pa negre (Pan negro)) |
Marina Comas (Pa negre (Pan negro)) |
Mario Camus |
XXVI - 2011 | José Coronado (No habrá paz para los malvados) |
Elena Anaya (La piel que habito) |
Lluís Homar (Eva) |
Ana Wagener (La voz dormida) |
Jan Cornet (La piel que habito) |
María León (La voz dormida) |
Josefina Molina |
XXVII - 2012 | José Sacristán (1) (El muerto y ser feliz) |
Maribel Verdú (2) (Blancanieves) |
Julián Villagrán (Grupo 7) |
Candela Peña (3) (Una pistola en cada mano) |
Joaquín Núñez (Grupo 7) |
Macarena García (Blancanieves) |
Concha Velasco |
XXVIII - 2013 | Javier Cámara (1) (Vivir es fácil con los ojos cerrados) |
Marian Álvarez (La herida) |
Roberto Álamo (1) (La gran familia española) |
Terele Pávez (Las brujas de Zugarramurdi) |
Javier Pereira (Stockholm) |
Natalia de Molina (1) (Vivir es fácil con los ojos cerrados) |
Jaime de Armiñán |
XXIX - 2014 | Javier Gutiérrez (1) (La isla mínima) |
Bárbara Lennie (Magical Girl) |
Karra Elejalde (2) (Ocho apellidos vascos) |
Carmen Machi (Ocho apellidos vascos) |
Dani Rovira (Ocho apellidos vascos) |
Nerea Barros (La isla mínima) |
Antonio Banderas (1) |
XXX - 2015 | Ricardo Darín (Truman) |
Natalia de Molina (2) (Techo y comida) |
Javier Cámara (2) (Truman) |
Luisa Gavasa (La novia) |
Miguel Herrán (A cambio de nada) |
Irene Escolar (Un otoño sin Berlín) |
Mariano Ozores |
XXXI - 2016 | Roberto Álamo (2) (Que Dios nos perdone) |
Emma Suárez (2) (Julieta) |
Manolo Solo (Tarde para la ira) |
Emma Suárez (3) (La próxima piel) |
Carlos Santos (El hombre de las mil caras) |
Anna Castillo (El olivo) |
Ana Belén |
XXXII - 2017 | Javier Gutiérrez (2) (El autor) |
Nathalie Poza (1) (No sé decir adiós) |
David Verdaguer (Verano 1993) |
Adelfa Calvo (El autor) |
Eneko Sagardoy (Handia) |
Bruna Cusí (Verano 1993) |
Marisa Paredes |
XXXIII - 2018 | Antonio de la Torre (2) (El reino) |
Susi Sánchez (La enfermedad del domingo) |
Luis Zahera (El reino) |
Carolina Yuste (Carmen y Lola) |
Jesús Vidal (Campeones) |
Eva Llorach (Quién te cantará) |
Narciso "Chicho" Ibáñez Serrador |
XXXIV - 2019 | Antonio Banderas (2) (Dolor y gloria) |
Belén Cuesta (La trinchera infinita) |
Eduard Fernández (3) (Mientras dure la guerra) |
Julieta Serrano (Dolor y gloria) |
Enric Auquer (Quien a hierro mata) |
Benedicta Sánchez (Lo que arde) |
Marisol |
XXXV - 2020 | Mario Casas (No matarás) |
Patricia López Arnaiz (Ane) |
Alberto San Juan (2) (Sentimental) |
Nathalie Poza (2) (La boda de Rosa) |
Adam Nourou (Adú) |
Jone Laspiur (Ane) |
Ángela Molina |
XXXVI - 2021 | Javier Bardem (6) (El buen patrón) |
Blanca Portillo (Maixabel) |
Urko Olazabal (Maixabel) |
Nora Navas (2) (Libertad) |
Chechu Salgado (Las leyes de la frontera) |
María Cerezuela (Maixabel) |
José Sacristán (2) Cate Blanchett |
XXXVII - 2022 | Carlos Saura Juliette Binoche |
Records
- Movies
- Movie with more Goya awards: Sea in (2004); 14 awards.
- Film with more applications: The good pattern (2021); 20 nominations.
- Movie with more nominations and no Goya award: Attack me! (1990); 15 nominations.
- Producer with more Goya awards to the Best Film: El Desire (Agustín Almodóvar); 4 awards (and 1 award for the Best Ibero-American Film).
- Film director with more Goya awards to the Best Film: Pedro Almodóvar; 4 awards.
- Film director with more candidates for the Best Film: Pedro Almodóvar; 10 candidates.
- Individual awards
- Increased number of awards: Alberto Iglesias (all to the best original music); 11 awards.
- Awarded in more different categories: Fernando Trueba: 2 awards as director, 2 as screenwriter, 1 as director of the best documentary film, 1 as director of the best animation film and 3 to the best producer/best movie.
- Awards for interpreters
- He is an expert in Goya awards to the “best interpretation”, the “best interpretation of distribution” and the “best revelation”: Laia Marull.
- Intérprete con más Premios Goya en la misma edición: Verónica Forqué; 2 Premios en la II edición de 1987, a la «mejor interpretación protagonist» y a la «mejor interpretación de cast» (por por Joyful life and Moors and Christians), and Emma Suárez; 2 awards in the XXXI edition of 2016, to the "best interpretation protagonist" and to the "best interpretation of casting" (by Julieta and Next skin).
- Actor with more prizes Goya: Javier Bardem; 6 awards (5 as protagonist and 1 as cast actor).
- Actress with more Goya awards: Carmen Maura; 4 awards (3 as protagonist and 1 as cast actress) and Veronica Forqué (2 as protagonist and 2 as cast actress).
- Actor with more nominations: Antonio de la Torre; 14 candidates.
- Actress with more nominations: Penelope Cruz; 12 nominations.
- Youngest award winner: Andoni Erburu; 10 years old (for Secrets of the heart).
- Most award-winning old man: Julieta Serrano; 86 years old (per Pain and glory).
- Youngest interpreter candidate: James Bentley; 7 years old (by The others).
- Most old candidate: Antonia Guzmán; 93 years old (by In return for nothing).
- Longest time between two candidatures of interpretation: Julieta Serrano, (Women on the verge of a nerve attack1988; and Pain and glory, 2019); 31 years.
- Intérpretes con mayor número de candidas y ninguna Premio Goya: Ángela Molina (con 5 candidatures); Jordi Mollà Juan Diego Botto y Tristán Ulloa (con 5 candidatures).
- Category Awards
- Producer with more awards to the Best Film: Agustín Almodóvar (El Desire) and Andrés Vicente Gómez (Iberoamericana Films and Lolafilms); 4 awards.
- Film director: Alejandro Amenábar, Fernando León de Aranoa, Juan Antonio Bayona and Pedro Almodóvar; 3 awards.
- Guionista: Rafael Azcona; 6 awards.
- Composer: Alberto Iglesias; 11 awards.
- Director of Photography: Javier Aguirresarobe; 6 awards.
- Mounting Director: José Salcedo, Pablo González del Amo and Pablo Blanco; 3 awards.
- Sound director: Gilles Ortion; 8 awards.
- Artistic director: Félix Murcia; 5 awards.
- Costume Design Director: Javier Artiñano; 5 awards.
- Director of makeup and hairdressing: José Quetglas; 7 awards.
- Director of special effects: Reyes Abades; 9 awards.
- Production Director: José Luis Escolar; 4 awards.
Statistics
Movies
Films with the most Goya awards
- 14 awards
- Sea in (2004) of 15 candidates [taken the Best Film Award]
- 13 awards
- Oh, Carmela! (1990) of 15 candidates [taken the Best Film Award]
- 10 awards
- Snow White (2012) of 18 candidatures [taken the Best Film Award]
- The minimum island (2014) of 17 nominations [taken the Best Film Award]
- Handia (2018), 13 candidates.
- 9 awards
- Belle Époque (1992) of 17 nominations [taken the Best Film Award]
- Black bread (2010) of 14 candidates [taken the Best Film Award]
- A monster comes to see me (2017), 12 candidatures
- 8 awards
- The stunned king (1991) of 14 nominations
- Days counted (1994) of 19 nominations [taken the Best Film Award]
- No one will talk about us when we're dead. (1995) of 10 candidates [taken the Best Film Award]
- The others (2001) of 15 candidatures [taken the Best Film Award]
- Cell 211 (2009) of 16 candidates [taken the Best Film Award]
- The witches of Zugarramurdi (2013), of 10 applications
- 7 awards
- Thesis (1996) of 8 candidates [taken the Best Film Award]
- The Hortelane Dog (1996) of 12 candidates
- The girl in your eyes (1998) of 18 candidatures [taken the Best Film Award]
- All about my mother (1999) of 14 nominations [taken the Best Film Award]
- I give you my eyes (2003) of 9 nominations [taken the Best Film Award]
- The Labyrinth of Fauna (2006) of 13 candidates
- The orphanage (2007), 14 nominations
- Agora (2009) of 13 candidates
- The kingdom (2018), 13 nominations
- Pain and glory (2019) of 16 candidates
Films that have won the 5 main Goya awards (best film, director, screenplay, actor and leading actress)
- Oh, Carmela! (1990): film, director (Carlos Saura), adapted script (Rafael Azcona and Carlos Saura) and protagonists (Andrés Pajares and Carmen Maura).
- I give you my eyes (2003): film, director (Icíar Bollaín), original script (Icíar Bollaín) and protagonists (Luis Tosar and Laia Marull).
- Sea in (2004): film, director (Alejandro Amenábar), original script (Alejandro Amenábar and Mateo Gil) and protagonists (Javier Bardem and Lola Dueñas).
Films with the most Goya Award nominations
- 20 nominations
- The good pattern (2022), 6 awards
- 19 nominations
- Days counted (1994), 8 awards
- 18 nominations
- The girl in your eyes (1998), 7 awards
- Snow White (2012), 10 awards
- 17 nominations
- Belle Époque (1992), 9 awards
- The minimum island (2014), 10 awards
- As long as the war lasts (2019), 5 awards
- As bestas (2022), pending
- 16 nominations
- Women on the verge of a nerve attack (1988), 5 awards
- Cell 211 (2009), 8 awards
- The skin that I dwell in (2011), 4 awards
- Group 7 (2012), 2 awards
- The Child (2014), 4 awards
- Pain and glory (2019), 7 awards
- Model 77 (2022), pending
- 15 nominations
- Oh, Carmela! (1990), 13 awards
- Attack me! (1990), 0 awards [film with more nominations and no awards]
- The community (2000), 3 awards
- The others (2001), 8 awards
- Sea in (2004), 14 awards [film with the highest number of awards]
- Alatriste (2006), 3 awards
- The blind sunflowers (2008), 1 award
- Sad tile of trumpet (2010), 2 awards
- The infinite trench (2019), 2 awards
- Maixabel (2022), 3 awards
Greater number of individual Goya awards
- 11 awards
- Alberto Iglesias (all to the best original music)
- 10 awards
- Pedro Almodóvar (4 to the producer/best movie, 3 as best director, 2 as best screenwriter and 1 to the producer/best movie Iberoamericana). In addition, your producer has won 1 award for the best film.
- 9 awards
- Reyes Abades (all for the best special effects)
- Alejandro Amenábar (3 as best director, 4 as best screenwriter, 1 to the best original music and 1 to the best movie)
- 8 awards
- Javier Bardem (5 as the best protagonist, 1 as best cast actor and 2 as producer of the best documentary film)
- Felix Bergés (all for the best special effects)
- Isabel Coixet (3 as best writer, 2 as best director, 2 as director of the best documentary film and 1 as producer of the best film)
- Gilles Ortion (all at best sound)
- José Quetglas (7 to the best makeup and hairdressing and 1 to the best special effects)
- 7 awards
- Rafael Azcona (6 as the best writer and 1 Goya de Honor)
- Alfonso Pino (all the best sound)
- Pau Costa (all for the best special effects)
- 6 awards
- Javier Aguirresarobe (all the best photography)
- Javier Artiñano (5 to the best costume design and 1 to the best artistic director)
- Fernando Fernán Gómez (2 as the best protagonist, 1 as a cast actor, 1 as best director and 2 as best screenwriter)
- Javier Fesser (1 to the best director, 1 to the producer/best movie, 1 to the best animation movie, 2 as best screenwriter, 1 to the best fiction short film)
- Fernando León de Aranoa (3 as best director, 2 as best screenwriter and 1 as director of the best documentary film)
- José Nieto (all to the best original music)
- Raúl Romanillos (all for the best special effects)
- Fernando Trueba (2 as best director, 2 as best screenwriter, 1 as director of the best documentary film and 1 as director of the best animation film). In addition, your producer has won 3 awards for the best film.
- 5 awards
- José Luis Alcaine (all to the best photograph)
- Agustín Almodóvar (4 as producer/best film and 1 as producer/best movie Ibero-American)
- Enrique Gato (1 as a novel director, 2 to the best animation film and 2 to the best animation short film)
- Félix Murcia (all at the best artistic direction)
- José Antonio Sánchez (all at best makeup and hairdressing)
- 4 awards
- José Antonio Bermúdez (all at best sound)
- Yvonne Blake (all the best costume design)
- José Luis Escolar (all at the best direction of production)
- Veronica Forqué (2 as the leading actress and 2 as the best cast actress)
- Esther García (3 to the best direction of production and 1 as producer/best movie Iberoamericana)
- Mateo Gil (3 as best screenwriter and 1 at best short film)
- Andrés Vicente Gómez (all as producer of the best film)
- David Martí (3 for the best special effects and 1 for the best makeup and hairdresser)
- Carmen Maura (3 as the best protagonist and 1 as best cast actress)
- Enrique Molinero (all the best sound)
- Romana González (all at best makeup and hairdressing)
- Josefa Morales (all the best makeup and hairdresser)
- Paquita Nuñez (all at best makeup and hairdressing)
- Marc Orts (all the best sound)
- Gil Parrondo (all at the best artistic direction)
Directors
Directors with the most Goya awards adding the best director and the best new director
- 4 awards
- Fernando León de Aranoa (3 awards as best director and 1 as best novel director). He also has 1 award as the best documentary film director (it was shared direction), and 1 award for the best film.
- 3 awards
- Pedro Almodóvar (3 awards as best director)
- Alejandro Amenábar (2 awards as best director and 1 as best director novel).
- Juan Antonio Bayona (2 award as best director and 1 as best director novel).
- 2 awards
- Isabel Coixet (2 awards as Best Director)
- Fernando Trueba (2 awards as best director). He also has awards as director of best documentary film and best animation film.
Directors with the most nominations adding the best director and the best new director
- 10 nominations
- Pedro Almodóvar (3 awards as best director)
- 6 nominations
- Alejandro Amenábar (2 awards as best director and 1 award as best director novel)
- Vicente Aranda (1 award as best director)
- Isabel Coixet (2 awards as Best Director)
- 5 nominations
- Fernando Trueba (2 awards as Best Director)
- Church Alex (1 award as best director)
- Icíar Bollaín (1 award as best director)
- 4 nominations
- Fernando León de Aranoa (2 awards as best director and 1 award as best novel director)
- José Luis Garci (1 award as best director)
- Agustín Díaz Yanes (0 awards as best director and 1 award as best director novel)
- Benito Zambrano (0 awards as best director and 1 award as best novel director)
Interpreters with the most awards and nominations adding up the three categories (best leading performance, supporting role and best revelation)
Actors with the most Goya awards
- 6 awards
- Javier Bardem (5 awards as protagonist and 1 as cast actor) plus 2 other Goya awards (both as a documentary producer)
- 3 awards
- Fernando Fernán Gómez (2 awards as protagonist and 1 as cast actor) plus 3 other Goya (1 as director and 2 as screenwriter) awards
- Luis Tosar (2 awards as protagonist and 1 as cast actor)
- Juan Diego (1 prize as protagonist and 2 as cast actor)
- Eduard Fernández (1 prize as protagonist and 2 as cast actor)
- 2 awards
- Alfredo Landa (2 awards as protagonist). He was also granted the Goya de Honor.
- Javier Gutiérrez (2 awards as protagonist)
- Javier Cámara (1 prize as protagonist and 1 as cast actor)
- Juan Echanove (1 prize as protagonist and 1 as cast actor)
- Carmelo Gómez (1 prize as protagonist and 1 as cast actor)
- Karra Elejalde (2 awards as a cast actor)
- Emilio Gutiérrez Caba (2 awards as a cast actor)
- Antonio de la Torre (1 prize as protagonist and 1 as cast actor)
Actresses with the most Goya awards
- 4 awards
- Carmen Maura (3 awards as protagonist and 1 as cast actress)
- Veronica Forqué (2 awards as protagonist and 2 as cast actress)
- 3 awards
- Penelope Cruz (2 awards as protagonist and 1 as cast actress)
- Emma Suárez (2 awards as protagonist and 1 as cast actress)
- Laia Marull (1 star award, 1 as cast actress and 1 as a revealing actress) [only interpreter in obtaining the award as protagonist, of distribution and revelation]
- Candela Peña (1 prize as protagonist and 2 as cast actress)
- 2 awards
- Lola Dueñas (2 awards as protagonist)
- Cecilia Roth (2 awards as protagonist)
- Maribel Verdú (2 awards as protagonist)
- Nora Navas (1 prize as protagonist and 1 as cast actress)
- Nathalie Poza (1 prize as protagonist and 1 as cast actress)
- Natalia de Molina (1 as protagonist and 1 as actress revelation)
- María Barranco (2 as a cast actress)
- Rosa María Sardá (2 as a cast actress)
Actors with the most nominations
- 14 nominations
- Antonio de la Torre (2 awards)
- 13 nominations
- Eduard Fernández (3 awards)
- 11 nominations
- Javier Bardem (6 awards)
- 10 nominations
- Luis Tosar (3 awards)
- 9 nominations
- Juan Diego (3 awards)
- 8 nominations
- Javier Cámara (2 awards)
- 7 nominations
- Alfredo Landa (2 awards)
- 6 nominations
- Fernando Fernán Gómez (3 awards)
- Juan Echanove (2 awards)
- Javier Gutiérrez (2 awards)
- Jorge Sanz (1 award)
- 5 nominations
- Antonio Banderas (1 award)
- Raúl Arévalo (1 award)
- Gabino Diego (1 award)
- Juan Diego Botto (0 awards)
Actresses with the most nominations
- 14 nominations
- Penelope Cruz (3 awards)
- 11 nominations
- Maribel Verdú (2 awards)
- 9 nominations
- Victoria April (1 award)
- 8 nominations
- Candela Peña (3 awards)
- 6 nominations
- Emma Suárez (3 awards)
- 6 nominations
- Carmen Maura (4 awards)
- Nathalie Poza (2 awards)
- Ariadna Gil (1 award)
- Chus Lampreave (1 award)
- Adriana Ozores (1 award)
- Terele Pávez (1 award)
- 5 nominations
- Veronica Forqué (4 awards)
- María Barranco (2 awards)
- Lola Dueñas (2 awards)
- Natalia de Molina (2 award)
- Pilar López de Ayala (1 award)
- Barbara Lennie (1 award)
- Angela Molina (0 awards) [interpreter with more nominations and no awards]
Interpreters with the most awards and nominations in different categories
Award-winning interpreters and younger and older candidates
- Awarded in any interpretative category
- Underage premied: Andoni Erburu, with 10 years, as best actor revelation by Secrets of the heart (XII edition, 1997).
- Underage premied: Ivana Baquero, with 12 years and 231 days, as best actress revelation by The Labyrinth of Fauna (XXI edition, 2006).
- Premiado de mayor: Fernando Fernán Gómez, with 77 years, as best male interpretation protagonist by Grandpa (XIII edition, 1998).
- Older woman: Julieta Serrano, 87, as the best female interpretation of cast by Pain and glory (XXXIV edition, 2019).
- Candidates in any interpretive category
- A minor candidate: James Bentley, 7 years old, as best actor revelation by The others (XVI edition, 2001).
- Youngest singer: Alakina Mann, 11 years old, as best actress revelation by The others (XVI edition, 2001).
- Older candidate: Manuel Alexandre, with 88 years, as best male performance protagonist by Elsa and Fred (XX edition, 2005).
- Older singer: Antonia Guzmán, 93, as best actress revelation by In return for nothing (XXX edition, 2015).
- Best protagonist interpretation
- Premiado de menor: Jorge Sanz, con 20 años, por If they tell you I fell (IV edition, 1989).
- Premiada de menor: Pilar López de Ayala, con 23 años, por Juana la Loca (XVI edition, 2001).
- Older woman: Fernando Fernán Gómez, 77, by Grandpa (XIII edition, 1998).
- Older woman: Rafaela Aparicio, 83, by The sea and time (IV edition, 1989).
- A minor candidate: Jorge Sanz, 17 years old, by The year of the lights (I edition, 1986).
- A minor candidate: Penelope Cruz, 17 years old, by Ham, ham (VII edition, 1992).
- Older candidate: Manuel Alexandre, 88, for Elsa and Fred (XX edition, 2005).
- Older singer: Rafaela Aparicio, 83, by The sea and time (IV edition, 1989).
- Better distribution interpretation
- Premiado de menor: Gabino Diego, con 24 años, por Oh, Carmela! (V edition, 1990).
- Premiada de menor: María Barranco, con 27 años, por Women on the verge of a nerve attack (III edition, 1988).
- Older woman: Tony Leblanc, 76, for Torrente, the dumb arm of the law (XIII edition, 1998).
- Older woman: Julieta Serrano, 87, for Pain and glory (XXXIV edition, 2019).
- A minor candidate: Jorge Sanz, 19, by The Lute II: tomorrow I will be free (III edition, 1988).
- Candidate de menor: Candela Peña, 21 years old, by Days counted (IX edition, 1994).
- Older candidate: Luis Cuenca, 79, by Masterpiece (XV edition, 2000).
- Older singer: Chus Lampreave, 82, by The artist and the model (XXVII edition, 2012).
- Better performance
- Premiado de menor: Andoni Erburu, con 10 años, por Secrets of the heart (XII edition, 1997).
- Underage premied: Ivana Baquero, with 12 years and 231 days, as best actress revelation by The Labyrinth of Fauna (XXI edition, 2006).
- Older: Saturnino García and Carlos Álvarez-Nóvoa, 59, by Justin, a senior killer (IX edition, 1994) and Solas (XIV edition, 1999).
- Older woman: Benedicta Sánchez, 84, by What burns (XXXIV edition, 2019).
- A minor candidate: James Bentley, 7 years old, for The others (XVI edition, 2001).
- A minor candidate: Alakina Mann, 11 years old, by The others (XVI edition, 2001).
- Older candidate: Walter Vidarte, 75, for The night of sunflowers (XXI edition, 2006).
- Older singer: Antonia Guzmán, 93, as best actress revelation by In return for nothing (XXX edition, 2015).
Other film awards
- In Spain
- Medals of the Film Writers Circle of the Film Writers Circle
- Feroz Awards of the Association of Film Reporters of Spain
- Forqué Awards of the Audiovisual Producers’ Rights Management Entity (EGEDA)
- Silver Photography Awards of the magazine Fotogramas
- Sant Jordi Awards for Cinematography of Spanish National Radio (Barcelona site)
- Autonomic academies and associations
- Gaudí Awards of the Catalan Film Academy
- Mestre Mateo Award at Galega do Audiovisual Academy
- Berlanga Awards of the Valencian Academy of Audiovisual
- Carmen Awards of the Andalusian Film Academy
- Simon Awards of the Aragonese Film Academy
- ASECAN Awards of the Andalusian Film Writers and Writers Association
- Out of Spain
- Oscar Awards of the Hollywood Academy of Arts and Film Sciences
- Oscar the best foreign film
- Oscar winners and nominees to the best foreign film
- Golden Globe Awards of the Hollywood Foreign Press Association (initiated in 1944)
- Golden Globe to the best non-English-language film
- Emmy, Grammy, Oscar and Tony Award winners
- BAFTA Awards of the British Academy of Film and Television Arts (initiated in 1948)
- César Awards of the French Academy of Arts and Techniques (initiated in 1976)
- Deutscher Filmpreis Award of the German Academy of Arts and Film Sciences (initiated in 1951)
- European Film Awards of the European Film Academy (initiated in 1988)
- Ariel Awards of the Mexican Academy of Arts and Film Sciences (initiated in 1947)
- Silver Condor Awards of the Association of Film Chronicles of Argentina (initiated in 1943)
- South Awards of the Academy of Film Arts and Sciences of Argentina (initiated in 2006)
- David de Donatello Award from the Italian Film Academy (started in 1956)
- Czech Lion Awards of the Czech Academy of Film and Television (initiated in 1994)
- Pedro Sienna Award of the National Council for Culture and Arts (Chile)
- SAG Awards of the Union of Actors (initiated in 1995)
- Golden Raspberry Awards, considered as the “Anti-Oscars”.
- Awards The Chair of the Dominican Association of Film Industry Professionals
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