Fernando Fernán Gómez

Fernán Gómez was regarded as one of Spain's most beloved and respected entertainers, winning two Silver Bears for Best Actor at the Berlin International Film Festival for ''The Anchorite'' and ''Stico''. He was also the recipient of the Prince of Asturias Award for the Arts, the National Theater Award, the Gold Medal of Merit in the Fine Arts, the Gold Medal of the Spanish Film Academy, and six Goya Awards. He starred in 200 films between 1943 and 2006, working with directors including Carlos Saura (''Ana and the Wolves'', ''Mama Turns 100''), Víctor Erice (''The Spirit of the Beehive''), Fernando Trueba (''Belle Époque''), José Luis Garci (''The Grandfather''), José Luis Cuerda (''Butterfly's Tongue'') and Pedro Almodóvar (''All About My Mother'').
He directed over 25 films, among them ''El extraño viaje'' (1964), and ''Life Goes On'' (1965), both great classics of the Spanish cinema that were very limited distribution due to Franco's censorship and made him a "cursed" filmmaker in his country. His film ''Voyage to Nowhere'' (1986) earned critical acclaim, becoming the most awarded Spanish film at the 1st Goya Awards ceremony. Provided by Wikipedia