Néstor Cantillana

Néstor Igor Cantillana (born July 19, 1975 in Santiago) is a Chilean actor[2] in theater, movies and TV.

Néstor Cantillana
Born
Néstor Igor Cantillana

(1975-07-19) July 19, 1975
OccupationActor
Political partyDemocratic Revolution[1]
PartnerMacarena Teke
Children2

Life and career

Cantillana's grandmother was a communist and later she practiced the evangelic religion and he grew up under that doctrine until 12 years old in Curicó. He used to play the piano in the local church. He studied in the theater academy of Fernando González.

Since 1994 he has participated in theater work such as Historia de la Sangre (1995), Calígula (1998), Hamlet (2000) and La Herencia (2000).

In 1995, Cantillana traveled to the Canadian city of Montreal with the play "Historia de la Sangre". The following year, 1996, he participated in the same play in Berlin, a city where he would return that same year with the play La misión. In 1998, the actor would return to Germany to present the same play in Munich, Bonn and Stuttgart.

In 1996, Cantillana received the award for best actor for his role in the play Despertar de Primavera, presented in the third Nuevas Tendencias Teatrales festival.

He made his debut in the telenovela world in the role of Patricio Tepano in Iorana (1998) from TVN, he then performed some other characters, among them, an AIDS victim, a common employee, a frustrated detective and a young homosexual doctor.

Cantillana was nominated for an Altazor Award for his role in the soap opera Romané and he won the APES award as the best actor in the year 2000.

He had the protagonist role in the TVN soap opera, Corazón de María (2007), where he plays Miguel.

He has one of the mains roles in the HBO series Prófugos. He also has supporting role in the TVN series Los Archivos del Cardenal. This series tells the ordeals of a group of lawyers than works for Vicaria de la Solidaridad an office within the Catholic Church that investigates crimes by Augusto Pinochet's secret police against left-wing people.

He acted in the movie Radio Corazón (the sequel to El Chacotero Sentimental), with Claudia Di Girólamo, Tamara Acosta and Manuela Martelli, under director Roberto Artiagoitía (El Rumpy) and with screenwriter Pablo Illanes. The argument represents the personal relations among family members and combines various elements, principally comedy, with some romance and drama aspects. He also played supporting roles in the Oscar-nominated No (2012) and the Oscar-winning drama A Fantastic Woman (2017).

Filmography

Year Title Role Notes Ref(s)
1995 E s 3 Short film
1997 Historias de fútbol Francisco
2001 Un ladrón y su mujer
2002 Cofralandes, Chilean Rhapsody
2002 Fragmentos urbanos Short film
2002 Ciudad de maravillas Raul Short film
2003 Los Debutantes Silvio
2004 La sagrada familia Marco (hijo)
2005 Paréntesis
2006 Las Golondrinas de Altazor Altazor
2007 Radio Corazón Federico
2012 No Fernando
2015 The Memory of Water
2016 Neruda
2017 A Fantastic Woman
2021 Apps [3]
2022 The Punishment Mateo

Television

Soap operas

  • Iorana (TVN, 1998) - Patricio Tepano
  • La Fiera (TVN, 1999) - Carlos Lizana
  • Romané (TVN, 2000) - Escudero
  • Pampa Ilusión (TVN, 2001) - Tobías Pincheira
  • El Circo de las Montini (TVN, 2002) - Rodrigo Marín
  • Puertas Adentro (TVN, 2003) - Raúl Brito
  • Los Pincheira (TVN, 2004) - Santos Molina
  • Cómplices (TVN, 2006) - Sebastián Opazo
  • Corazón de María (TVN, 2007) - Miguel Villa
  • Viuda Alegre (2008) - Andrés Tapia
  • Sin Anestesia (2009) - Dr. Quiñores
  • Peleles (2011) - Fabian

Series and other TV shows

  • Cuentos Chilenos (Gracia y el forastero) (2000) - Gabriel
  • Cuentos Chilenos (2001)
  • Mira Tú (2002) - Maxi
  • Profugos (2011) - Vicente Ferragut

Stage

  • Cada vez que ladra los perros
  • Le senttiment de la langue
  • Historia de la Sangre (1995)
  • Despertar de Primavera (1996)
  • La Misión (1998)
  • Calígula (1998)
  • La Herencia (2000)
  • Hamlet (2000)
  • De noche, justo antes de los bosques (2004)
  • Roberto Zucco (2006)
  • Sueño con revólver (2007)
  • Pelo Negro, Boca Arriba (2007)

References

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