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Natalia Oreiro

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Natalia Oreiro
Oreiro in 2018
Born
Natalia Marisa Oreiro Iglesias

(1977-05-19) 19 May 1977 (age 47)
Montevideo, Uruguay
CitizenshipUruguay, Argentina,[1] Russia[2]
Occupations
  • Singer
  • songwriter
  • actress
  • model
Years active1990s–present
Spouse
(m. 2002)
Children1
Musical career
Genres
Instruments
  • Vocals
  • guitar
Labels
Websitenataliaoreiro.com

Natalia Marisa Oreiro Iglesias (Spanish pronunciation: [naˈtalja oˈɾejɾo]; born 19 May 1977) is a Uruguayan actress, singer, songwriter, model, television presenter and fashion designer. She began her career in telenovelas but since 2008 she has switched to work primarily in films. Oreiro has worked on social awareness shows and events for organizations like Greenpeace and UNICEF, the latter of which designated her as ambassador for Argentina and Uruguay in September 2011.[3]

Her starring role as Milagros Espósito on Muñeca Brava (1998–99) gave her wide international fame, especially in Central and Eastern European, Central Asia and former Soviet countries, where her popularity remained even after the end of the telenovela, which has been broadcast on several occasions.[4] She has also made several tours and special performances in these regions.[5][6] The term "Oreiromania" was adopted to describe the frenzy of her fans.[7] She has been included in Esquire magazine's "The Sexiest Woman Alive" list.[8]

Her most recognized works in cinema are the films I'm Gilda (Gilda, no me arrepiento de este amor), Super Crazy (Re Loca), and the shortlisted for the Oscar Clandestine Childhood (Infancia Clandestina) and The German Doctor (Wakolda). As an actress she has participated in some of the most important film festivals, such as Cannes, San Sebastian, and Venice, winning many awards for her performances including 3 Silver Condor Awards and a Platino Award.

As a singer, she has sold over 10 million records worldwide and has been nominated for the MTV Video Music Awards and the Latin Grammy Awards among others. Likewise, she has also dabbled in television hosting, presenting reality series such as Got Talent Uruguay, La Voz Uruguay and ¿Quién es la Máscara? Argentina.

Early life

[edit]

Natalia Oreiro was born on May 19, 1977 in Montevideo, to Carlos Florencio Oreiro Poggio and Mabel Cristina Iglesias Bourié.[9] She is of Galician and Italian descent and has an older sister Adriana.[10][11] In 1986 her family moved to Málaga, Spain, where they lived for two years, before returning to Uruguay.[12] She attended elementary schools No. 30 and No. 40 in the Villa del Cerro neighborhood of Montevideo.[13] She began studying drama at the age of eight, and auditioning for advertising campaigns at twelve.[14] During her teens she appeared in more than 30 television commercials for such trademarks as Coca-Cola, Pepsi, and Johnson & Johnson.[15]

Career

[edit]

1995–2000: Career beginnings

[edit]

At the age of 16 she moved to Buenos Aires, Argentina where she began auditioning to unleash his ambition to be a star.[16] In 1993 she won the children's contest El Show de Xuxa and became the "super paquita" (entertainer and assistant) of the program and representative of its presenter Xuxa in different Latin American countries.[17] She worked as an MTV VJ and in 1995, she landed a minor role in El Nueve's soap opera Dulce Ana.[18] In 1996 she was cast in El Nueve's telenovela 90-60-90 modelos as Lucía, and made her stage debut in the Leonard Gershe's Butterflies Are Free.[19] In 1997 she obtained her first leading role, playing Valeria García Méndez de Salerno in the soap opera Ricos y Famosos.[20]

She starred in the Argentinian film Un Argentino en New York (1998). After the movie, Natalia launched her first album, Natalia Oreiro and the single "Cambio Dolor" became the opening theme for her next acting project, the prime time show Muñeca Brava (1998–1999). For her performance in Muñeca Brava, Natalia was nominated twice (1998 and 1999) for a Martín Fierro Award as Best Actress in a leading role. In 1998, Natalia Oreiro recorded the theme "Paths of the Soul" next to Kennedy Choir and with more than 120 Argentine artists under the direction of Instrumental pianist and conductor Nazareno Andorno.

In January 2000, Natalia was named "Celebrity of the Century" by E! Entertainment Television. She became popular in Russia and Israel due to the success of Muñeca Brava in that country and was even invited to star in a Russian telenovela. In Israel, she performed many times on big stages and many television shows and won the Best Telenovela Actress Award and Best Theme Song "Cambio Dolor" at the "VIVA 2000" awards, 2002 Israeli Cable TV had a live competition for finding the Israeli Natalia Oreiro, and she was the guest of honor for the evening.[21]

2000–2005: Tu Veneno and Turmalina

[edit]

She pursued her musical career with the next album Tu Veneno and presentations at Gala de la Hispanidad, Gala de Murcia (both in Spain) and Festival de la Calle 8 in Miami. Her most important appearance was in the prestigious Latin television show Sábado Gigante Internacional, hosted by Don Francisco. Natalia's major achievement at this time was her music performance in Chile at Viña del Mar Festival 2000 for which she was crowned Queen of that event.[22] The album scored a Latin Grammy nomination for Best Female Pop Vocal Album, but lost to Christina Aguilera's Mi Reflejo.

Oreiro in 2005

On 1 June 2002, her third studio album Turmalina was released by BMG Ariola Argentina. Turmalina was produced by Latin record producer Kike Santander and is a combination of styles such as rock, pop and 50's and 60's sounds. On this album, Oreiro wrote and composed the songs: "Alas De Libertad" which is inspired by kids she met some time ago in the city of Jujuy, Argentina; "Mar" tells the love story between a sailor and his girlfriend. Natalia also contributed to the lyrics of "Cayendo". "Que Digan Lo Que Quieran" is Turmalina's first single. The official Uruguayan 2002 World Cup song "Pasión Celeste" is recorded with Fredy Bessio.[23] "Cuesta arriba, cuesta abajo" was the opening song of the soap opera Kachorra (Runaway Lady). Kachorra ended with a rating lower than 20 points in Argentina.[24]

In March 2003 she started filming her second film Cleopatra together with Norma Aleandro, Leonardo Sbaraglia and Héctor Alterio, under the direction of Eduardo Mignogna, a co-production with Spain. In the middle of 2003, she started a tour for Eastern Europe and Latin America. On 1 March 2004 she started filming El Deseo.

2006–2014: Sos mi vida, switch to cinema and other works

[edit]

In 2006 she joined as the female boxer, Esperanza Munoz, the cast of the telenovela Sos mi vida along with her Muñeca Brava co-star Facundo Arana. It was directed by Rodolfo Antúnez and Jorge Bechara and broadcast by Canal 13. It began broadcasting on 16 January 2006 and ended 9 January 2007. During its broadcast averaged 26.9 points overall rating,[25] and ended as the most watched fictional Argentine television program ever,[26] until it was displaced by the 2009, telenovela Valientes.[27] It was written by Ernesto Korovsky and Sebastian Parrotta, and won four Martín Fierro Awards and three Clarín Awards.

On 30 April 2008, Oreiro starred in Amanda O which was an internet television series in Argentina and produced by Dori Media Group. It was the first soap opera ever made for the internet,[28] and was seen by 550,000 users over Novebox.com, from Argentina, Uruguay and Paraguay during its first season and beginning of the second.[29] Later in 2008 she co-starred in the film Las vidas posibles, along with Germán Palacios and Ana Celentano and got nominated for a Silver Condor for Best Supporting Actress.[30]

In 2009 she starred with Diego Peretti in Música en espera. The film premiered in Buenos Aires in March 2009 and sold 235,000 tickets. During the same year, she visited several international film festivals to present the film Francia directed by Adrián Caetano, including the San Sebastian Film Festival among others.[31]

In 2010 she starred in the film Miss Tacuarembó,[32] a musical comedy, which was co-produced by Uruguay, Argentina and Spain. For her performance, she received the Iris award for Best Actress.[33] Oreiro also participated in the soundtrack of the film, performing all the songs.[34] During the same year, she presented Se dice de mí, a program that sought to raise awareness about women's rights.

During the first half of 2011, she starred with Daniel Hendler in My First Wedding, a film comedy directed by Ariel Winograd.[35]

In 2012 she started in Lynch, a series created in Colombia and broadcast throughout Latin America.[36] The same year the film Clandestine Childhood, which takes place during Argentina's last military dictatorship, premiered in Argentina. The film was selected to compete for a nomination in the Best Foreign Film category at the 2013 Oscar Awards.[37] For her work in this film Oreiro won the Silver Condor Award and the Argentine Academy of Cinematography Arts and Sciences Award for Best Actress.[38] At the end of 2012 she returned on stage and performed in the Superdiscoteca of the 90s Festival, which took place in St. Petersburg, Russia.[39]

During 2013, she starred in the telenovela Solamente vos, which marked her return to television after a 7 year hiatus. For her performance in the series she won awards for Best Comedy Actress in the Tato Awards and Martín Fierro awards. Her next leading role was in the film The German Doctor, which was shot during 2012 in the city of Bariloche, and premiered in September 2013.[40] This film, became the second in Oreiro's career to be shortlisted by the Academy of Arts and Sciences of Argentina to compete for a nomination in the Oscar Awards at the category for Best Foreign Film.[41] She also won awards and nominations for Best Actress in the Condor de Plata awards, Sur awards, and the Unasur Festival. The film was nominated for a Goya Award and presented at several international film festivals.

Oreiro at the 2017 Miami International Film Festival showing of I'm Gilda

2014–2017: Nasha Natasha tour, Entre caníbales and I'm Gilda

[edit]

At the end of 2013 she resumed her musical career performing a tour in Eastern Europe called Nasha Natasha Tour Hits (lit. Our Natasha in Russian, from the Russian diminutive form of Natalia). She also released a new song and video clip, a cover of Gloria Trevi's song "Todos me miraran". With the "Nasha Natasha Tour 2014 ", she toured a total of 19 Russian cities making it a total of 34 shows.[42] One of the most important was the one she held at the Olympic Sports Hall in Moscow, which broke a record, as it gathered more than 60 thousand people.[43] She later recorded a new Russian version of "Me muero de amor" («Я умираю от любви»), with a video clip that starred Facundo Arana.[44]

In 2015 she returned to television starring in the dramatic series Entre caníbales, along with Benjamín Vicuña and Joaquín Furriel, and under the direction of Juan José Campanella. The series was broadcast by the Telefe network for Argentina, and by Fox Life for the rest of the Latin American market.[45]

In 2016 she starred in I'm Gilda reaching 953,120 in Argentina's box office, a film based on the life of the Argentinian singer, Gilda, who died in a car accident in September 1996.[46] The soundtrack of the film became the fourth album in her musical career. In December 2016 she presented the first single of the album, the song Corazón Valiente in collaboration with Ruben Rada.[47] The film was presented at several festivals such as the Miami International Film Festival in 2017 and the Malaga Film Festival the same year, and for her performance she won several awards: Sur Award (2016),[48] Audience Platinum for Best Actress (2017) and Condor Award (2017). She has been at the 2016 Platinum Awards as a host and singing "Garota de Ipanema" during the presentation.[49]

2017-2019: Return to the stage, Super Crazy and FIFA World Cup

[edit]
Oreiro in Moscow, May 2018

Her return to music, with the soundtrack of the I'm Gilda film, gave her the opportunity to return to the stage and at the beginning of 2017 she sang at several festivals in Argentina (such as Lincoln, Villa María and Mar del Plata, among others).[50][51] In Madrid she repeated her role as host of the 2017 Platino Awards (winner of the ''Best Actress'' award from the audience) and the same year she received a Platinum Iris for her career at the 22nd Iris Uruguay Awards.[52]

Natalia Oreiro advertising campaign in a Zarina store in Russia, 2019

During 2018, the movie Super Crazy was premiered, which reached 759,546 spectators in Argentina's box office,[53] and she released two songs for the FIFA World Cup held in Russia ("United By Love" was included in the official album of the 2018 FIFA World Cup and the song "Mi Pobedim").[54][55] She attended the Kids Choice Awards 2018 (winner of a Lifetime Achievement Award)[56] and the Gramado Festival in Brazil (winner of ''Crystal Kikito'').[57] In 2019, her tour called the "Unforgettable Tour" was launched with 14 concerts in various cities of Russia,[58] Belarus, Moldova[59] and Armenia.[60] A few months later she returned to Russia to attend the ''New Wave Festival'' in Sochi to sing with Roberto Kel Torres the theme ''Acapulco''.[61] In November 2019, the Fort Lauderdale International Film Festival in the United States awarded her with the ''Career Achievement Award'' for her career.[62] In Argentina she appeared in the films "La Noche Mágica" (Bad Christmas) (Gaston Portal's first film) with Diego Peretti and "Las Rojas" (The Broken Land) with Mercedes Moran. The turn of the year found her in Poland singing some of her greatest hits in front of 120,000 spectators.

2020–present: Got Talent, La Voz, Evita and Yosi, the Regretful Spy

[edit]
Oreiro during a concert in Chișinău, Moldova in 2019

At the beginning of 2020, she filmed some scenes for the film Hoy Se Arregla El Mundo by Ariel Winogrand with Leonardo Sbaraglia.[63] During the year she hosted Got Talent Uruguay, which was renewed for a second season broadcast in 2021, and a third broadcast in 2022.[64][65] On 6 August 2020, Netflix premiered Nasha Natasha worldwide. The documentary directed by Martín Sastre, refers to her special bond with Russia, while revealing aspects of her private life that were unknown until then.[66][67][68] The documentary reached the top positions in Uruguay, Argentina and several European countries and also reached the 30th position globally.

In 2021, she filmed the first season of the Amazon Prime Video series Yosi, the Regretful Spy, which premiered on 29 April 2022, and follows a spy who infiltrates a Jewish community to gather information that was used to carry out the AMIA bombing.[69] On 17 February 2022, it was officially announced that she would be the host of La Voz, the Uruguayan version of The Voice of Holland.[70] That year the western film Las Rojas was also released, in which she stars alongside Mercedes Morán, and the Star+ series Santa Evita also premiered, in which Oreiro plays Eva Perón.[71][72]

In July 2023, she continued to host the second season of La Voz,[73] in addition to starring in the premiere of the romantic comedy film Casi muerta, in which she plays a woman who finds out she has a terminal illness.[74]

Personal life

[edit]

In 2001, Oreiro began a relationship with Argentine singer and musician Ricardo Mollo, best known for his career as member of the rock bands Sumo and Divididos. They secretly married later that year, on 31 December. On 26 January 2012, in a clinic in Buenos Aires, Oreiro gave birth to a boy named Merlín Atahualpa Mollo Oreiro. She and her son received Russian citizenship on 25 October 2021.[2]

She has declared herself as a socialist.[75]

Discography

[edit]

Acting career

[edit]

Television

[edit]
Año Title Role Notes[76]
1994 Inconquistable corazón Victoria Main role
1995 Dulce Ana Verónica Iturbe Montalbán Main role
1996 90-60-90 modelos Lucía Peralta Main role
1997 Ricos y Famosos Valeria García Méndez de Salerno 1 series
1998–1999 Muñeca Brava Milagros Espósito "La Cholito" Main role
2002 Kachorra Antonia Guerrero "Kachorra"/Rosario Achával Main role
2004 El Deseo Carmen Main role
2005 Botines Renée 1 episode
2006 Sos mi vida Esperanza "La Monita" Muñoz Main role
2007 Patito feo Patricia González Guest appearance
2008 Amanda O Amanda O Main role
2008 Recurso Natural Herself Host
2010 Se dice de mi Host
2011 Cuando me sonreís Leonora Bellami Guest appearance
2012–2013 Lynch Isabel Reyes alias Mariana Main role
2013 Solamente Vos Aurora Andrés Main role
2015 Entre caníbales Ángeles Pellegrini/Ariana Mendoza Main role
2020–2022 Got Talent Uruguay Herself Host
2022–2023 La Voz Uruguay
2022 Yosi, the Regretful Spy Claudia Main role
Santa Evita Eva Perón Main role

Filmography

[edit]
Natalia Oreiro at Cannes in 2007.
Year Film Role Notes[76]
1998 Un Argentino en New York Verónica 'Vero' De Ricci
2003 Cleopatra Sandra / Milagros
2004 La guerra de los gimnasios (short) telenovela actress
2006 La peli Lola Montero
  • Won – Festival Cine Argentino de Tandil – Best actress
2008 Las vidas posibles Marcía Miconi
  • Nominated – Silver condor – Best Supporting Actress
2008 Música en espera Paula Otero
  • Won – Tatu tumpa (Bolivia) – Award for her role in Música en Espera
  • Nominated – South Awards – Best Actress
  • Nominated – Silver condor – Best Actress
2010 Francia Cristina
2010 Miss Tacuarembó Natalia "Cristal" / Cándida López
  • Nominated – Asociación de Críticos de Cine del Uruguay – Best Actress
  • Won – IRIS (Uruguay) – Best Actress[77]
2011 My First Wedding Leonora Bellami
2011 Clandestine Childhood Cristina
2013 The German Doctor Eva
  • Won – 2nd Unasur Cine International Film Festival[78] Best Actress
2016 I'm Gilda Gilda
2017 The Unseen Dr. Ortega
2018 Re Loca Pilar
2020 Nasha Natasha Herself Documentary biographic film
2021 La Noche Magica Kira Damato
2022 Hoy Se Arregla El Mundo Silvina Lasarte
2022 Las Rojas Constanza
2023 Casi muerta María

Tours

[edit]
Year Name Number of concerts
2000–2002 Tu Veneno Tour 35 concerts
2003 Tourmalina 10 concerts
2005 Tahití, Haití Tour 3 concerts
2013 Tour Hits 4 concerts
2014 Nasha Natasha Tour 16 concerts
2015 Fiesta Tour (Cancelled) 8 concerts
2016–2017 Cumbia & Hits Tour 13 concerts
2019 Unforgettable Tour 17 concerts
2020 20 Years Together (Cancelled via COVID-19) 13 concerts

Awards

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Natalia Oreiro quiere nacionalizarse argentina: "Este país es todo"" [Natalia Oreiro wants to nationalize Argentina: "This country is everything"]. La Capital (in Spanish). 30 September 2010. Retrieved 28 October 2021. Y también tengo ciudadanía española por mis padres y mis abuelos. Pero soy argentina por elección, que es lo más importante.
  2. ^ a b "Vladimir Putin le dio a Natalia Oreiro la ciudadanía rusa" [Vladimir Putin gave Natalia Oreiro Russian citizenship]. La Nación (in Spanish). 25 October 2021. Retrieved 28 October 2021.
  3. ^ "Natalia Oreiro fue designada como Embajadora de Unicef". La Capital. Retrieved 13 April 2024.
  4. ^ "Muñeca brava: Natalia Oreiro y Facundo Arana recuerdan al éxito que revitalizó a la telenovela argentina". LA NACION (in Spanish). 20 April 2020. Retrieved 13 April 2024.
  5. ^ "La Capital On Line - Sección - - Natalia Oreiro hace furor en Hungría". archivo.lacapital.com.ar. Retrieved 13 April 2024.
  6. ^ "Natalia Oreiro cantó para 100 mil personas en Polonia" [Natalia Oreiro sang for 100 thousand people in Poland]. A24 (in Spanish). Retrieved 13 April 2024.
  7. ^ ""Zbuntowany anioł": Czterdziestoletnia anielica". swiatseriali.interia.pl (in Polish). Retrieved 13 April 2024.
  8. ^ Uruguay - Natalia Oreiro - Sexiest Women in the World 2010. Esquire (30 July 2010). Retrieved 11 November 2021.
  9. ^ "La odisea de Natalia Oreiro: el día que un hombre se presentó como su padre y le reclamó la identidad". Todo Noticias (in Spanish). 20 May 2023. Retrieved 13 April 2024.
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  12. ^ "Natalia Oreiro: su infancia en el Cerro, el trabajo del que se arrepiente y su misofonía". EL PAIS. 9 September 2022. Retrieved 13 April 2024.
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  14. ^ "Nasha Natasha: la familia de Natalia Oreiro habló de la polémica publicidad de tampones que la lanzó a la fama". LA NACION (in Spanish). 7 August 2020. Retrieved 13 April 2024.
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  59. ^ "natalia-oreiro-a-sala-llena-en-moldavia/". 19 March 2019.
  60. ^ "natalia-oreiro-en-armenia/".
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  62. ^ "Fort Luderdale International Film Festival Award". YouTube. 3 November 2019.
  63. ^ "pelicula-con-leonardo-sbaraglia-y-natalia-oreiro". 10 February 2020.
  64. ^ Observador, El. "Got Talent Uruguay tendrá una segunda temporada". El Observador. Retrieved 11 July 2022.
  65. ^ ElPais (30 May 2022). "¿Cómo se puede asistir a las grabaciones de la tercera temporada de "Got Talent Uruguay"?". Diario EL PAIS Uruguay (in Spanish). Retrieved 11 July 2022.
  66. ^ "nasha-natasha-documental-natalia-oreiro-resumen-resena/". 8 August 2020.
  67. ^ "natalia-oreiro-la-madonna-rusa-llega-a-netflix". 29 July 2020.
  68. ^ "natalia-oreiro-superstar-nasha-natasha-se-estreno-en-netflix". 8 August 2020.
  69. ^ "iosi-el-espia-arrepentido-en-prime-lo-que-la-serie-cuenta". 7 May 2022.
  70. ^ "oreiro-conducira-voz-urugua". 18 February 2022.
  71. ^ "natalia-oreiro-se-mostro-caracterizada-como-eva-pero". 24 June 2021.
  72. ^ Sigal, Lucila (25 July 2022). "TV series focuses on eerie afterlife of Argentina's 'Santa Evita'". Reunters.
  73. ^ Redacción. "Vuelve La Voz Uruguay: todos los detalles de la nueva temporada". El Observador. Retrieved 13 July 2023.
  74. ^ Redacción. "Natalia Oreiro presentó su nueva película acompañada de Mollo y Suar". El Observador. Retrieved 13 July 2023.
  75. ^ https://www.infobae.com/teleshow/infoshow/2016/06/22/natalia-oreiro-hablo-de-la-realidad-del-pais-uno-no-termina-de-saber-si-esto-es-un-reality-show-o-es-todo-verdad/ Natalia Oreiro habló de la realidad del país: "Uno no termina de saber si esto es un reality show o es todo verdad"
  76. ^ a b For awards: "Bio, Awards". Archived from the original on 14 July 2011.
  77. ^ "Natalia awarded in Uruguay". Archived from the original on 4 October 2011. Retrieved 2 June 2011.
  78. ^ "Unasur Cine 2013 winners" (PDF) (in Spanish). Archived from the original (PDF) on 22 February 2014. Retrieved 29 September 2013.
  79. ^ "Tele: todos los ganadores de los Martín Fierro 2014" [TV: all the winners of the Martín Fierro 2014]. La Nación (in Spanish). 19 May 2014. Retrieved 28 May 2014.
  80. ^ "Todos los ganadores de los premios Tato 2013" [All the winners of the Tato awards 2013]. La Nación (in Spanish). 3 December 2013. Retrieved 2 December 2013.
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