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Úrsula Corberó: “I have always seen myself as a very young mother…”

After the global success of La Casa de Papel, Úrsula Corberó decided to stop for more than a year, take a breath and rethink a career between Hollywood and Argentina, to return to Spain with another promising project: El Cuerpo en Llamas.

With enviable energy, Úrsula Corberó (Barcelona, 1989) arrives on the hot morning that officially marks the beginning of summer. A large international team will accompany her during the photo shoot that illustrates these pages. “I don’t know if I speak English, Spanish, Argentine or Catalan”, the actress admits with a laugh before getting under the brushes of the makeup artist who will be with her during the almost twelve hours of work in which she will do everything possible to raise the spirits of a group as diverse as the one that surrounds her. “I need to create a pleasant environment around me. When I am doing something where I am the essential piece of the whole team structure, I have to make sure that people are happy so that they can work in good conditions”, she will admit days later, sitting over an iced tea in the bar of a central Madrid hotel. “It is something I do for myself, not for others. It makes me feel good”, she admits sincerely.

Corberó kicks off with this session the promotion prior to the premiere of El Cuerpo en Llamas after its filming, her first project in Spain after the end of the series that gave her worldwide fame and changed the rules of her game, La Casa de Papel. Tokio, the leading role in the fiction created by Álex Pina, caused the actress’s face to become known throughout the world and also, after the broadcast of its last season at the end of 2020, she decided to take a break to think and decide where to continue with her career. A year and a half of hiatus that for anyone else could have been an insurmountable setback. “It was good, but then reality came. And the reality is that people don’t know you as much, that your followers drop”, she says confidently. “It was a fairly premeditated decision. I felt that my body and my head wanted to rest a little. Not only because I had just worked a lot, but also because of everything that happened after La Casa de Papel. Life has turned us all upside down and I felt like I wasn’t capable of making good decisions”, she continues. “I thought: ‘Well, you better stop, relax a little, honey, lower your frequencies and when you know what you want, go for it’. Suddenly I was in a bad way. Everything was falling apart. I lost my way a bit too. What now? What is the next step I have to take?” she admits honestly. How does someone find their compass again after such a difficult professional and personal moment? “I have been in therapy for many years. Since I was 17”, she confesses.

Leaving behind a character that caused requests for the mixie cut – a mix of mullet and pixie – to multiply in hair salons around the world meant making the leap to Hollywood with poor English after a stop in the British series Snatch, the adaptation to the small screen of the Guy Ritchie film released in 2000. During the final moments of La Casa de Papel, Corberó set her sights abroad. “I learn English by going to film a series in English and without speaking English”, she recalls with laughter. “I hire a coach – I suddenly realised that he was the best in the world – who tells me: ‘Hey, it’s incredible, but you have spectacular phonetics. Do you understand what you’re saying?’ I replied: ‘No, I don’t have a fucking clue'”, she continues, amused. From that experience came the definitive leap to the mecca of cinema – with a few stops in Argentine auteur cinema such as Matar al Jockey, her next film directed by Luis Ortega – first as the Baroness in Snake Eyes, an action film inspired by the G.I. Joe universe; then with a short film from the Star Wars universe, Visions – “I haven’t shared anything on social media, I’m the worst at promoting” –; an action feature film that will be released in 2024, Lift; a couple of projects that she can’t give away and, in between, a visit to The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon that is now history. “I think they called me because someone dropped out”, she explains with the emotion of someone who still can’t believe what happened despite the fact that more than a year has passed. “My boyfriend is with me, bless him. I told him: ‘Either you come or I die'”, she remembers. “I was nervous, but something happens to me that has to do with the camera. Before anything happens I shit myself, but when I see her in front of me I grow up”, he continues. “I was behind the curtain while they were introducing me, they brought me a bag and I thought they were giving it to me in case I wanted to vomit until they explained to me that it was to leave the mask. The only thing I had in my head was: ‘You can’t vomit and you can’t shit yourself’. The only thing,” he admits between loud laughs. There he spoke about his then newly-found friendship with Madonna, whom he met on a plane and whom he saw again at the party that Saint Laurent organized at Miami Art Basel on the occasion of the reissue of the controversial book Sex on the thirtieth anniversary of its publication. Yes, the Queen of Pop is also a declared fan of Tokyo.

His full-scale approach to the reality of the major international studios comes at a critical time for his sector. In May, a strike was declared for screenwriters; in July, a strike for actors. The stars showed solidarity with all members of the Actors Guild, supporting demands such as increasing the lowest salaries, ensuring residual income [what an actor earns each time the series or film in which he appears is re-run, something that has been reduced since the emergence of streaming platforms] and protecting artists from the indiscriminate use of artificial intelligence and possible abuses. “It scares me. I feel that it is completely getting out of hand”, says Corberó. “It is about ensuring basic rights. I have always been in favour of people having freedom of expression, going out to demonstrate and going out to fight for what they believe is theirs. What is happening seems horrible to me”. The situation, at a national level, is not excessively encouraging either. “There is a false image because of what Hollywood projects. Only because there are a few actors who are doing very well, but being an actor is not that. There are those who are really suffering. And people who are having a hard time, who come here to Madrid and work for years as waiters. There are a thousand things going on”.

Soaked in the reality of working on the other side of the Atlantic, Úrsula Corberó accepted her next leading role in Spain, but not before mulling it over for a long time. The actress overcame her prejudices and finally decided to play Rosa Peral in El Cuerpo en Llamas, the Netflix series that premieres on the platform on September 8 and delves into the Crime of the Guardia Urbana, the name by which the murder of Pedro Rodríguez in 2017 was known and a media case that monopolized hours of television and even had its own true crime format in four installments hosted by Carles Porta. Peral and her lover, Albert López, were sentenced to 25 and 20 years in prison respectively for homicide after burning her then-boyfriend in his car. “It is a very delicate subject and it made me think a lot about being part of this project. I did not want to fall into sensationalism or morbidity or patriarchy”, explains the actress. “When they offered it to me I had heard hints about the matter and the truth is that I didn’t know the case very well. And it really caught my attention. There are so many men who kill their wives and this kind of follow-up is not done…” Corberó insists that this project is more fiction than reality, something that is pointed out at the beginning of each episode with a superimposed notice on the screen. “People are not used to seeing a woman in the police force, a mother, a murderer and sexually active. That’s why I was very afraid of getting involved in this project. I thought there was a character there, although I didn’t want to add more morbidity or more objectification to this real story”, she admits.

Under the direction of Jorge Torregrossa and Laura Mañá, and alongside Úrsula Corberó, the series stars Eva Llorach, José Manuel Poga, Isak Ferriz and Quim Gutiérrez, who plays Albert Lopez, the character with whom Rosa Peral creates the deepest, most morbid and passionate bond –the relationship, in the series, is practically based on the insatiable sexual appetite of both–. The acting couple already worked together in a light film with a very different tone to this project, Who Killed Bambi? (Santi Amodeo, 2013), exactly a decade ago. “Working with Úrsula again has been an exercise in complicity, trust and comfort. We had many shirtless sequences and that is always somewhat unpleasant. You can disguise it however you want, but there is a degree of discomfort. “It’s been fantastic to feel comfortable in physical nudity, but also in creating an emotional space between these two characters that is very peculiar, very dark and for me very enjoyable”, explains Gutiérrez in a message to this publication. “As in all reunions, you inevitably take stock of what has happened. And this one is very positive. It’s nice and almost a relief to realize that it has been like this for both of us. I am older than her and I can say from the license that age confers on me that it is very cool to see her maturity as an actress. She has known how to take advantage of everything that has happened to grow”, he adds.

Seasoned in great television series of the last two decades, it all began for her with the jump after several Catalan series for TV3 that meant the role of Ruth in Física o Química, a production by Carlos Montero that served as a precedent in 2008 to what would later be seen in Élite. Úrsula was then 19 years old and “had a very different energy”, she admits. The cast became regulars at the most varied parties in Madrid and Corberó acknowledged in a viral interview in 2016 that she reappears frequently on social media having perhaps had too much fun in those years, something that did not sit well with all her colleagues. “It is something I am working on, it is okay to make mistakes. Feminism is also about that. My mistake was talking about other people’s private life. Say yours if you want, but don’t bring others in. Lesson learned. I was wrong”, she admits humbly. “Although now I think about it and it is a bit funny”, she adds mischievously. A firm believer in expressing how she feels at any given moment with the words she considers appropriate – “I don’t like to keep a low profile. Not at all” – the actress has also had no problem speaking openly about her relationship with actor Chino Darín, with whom she has been in a relationship for seven years and with whom she forms one of the most stable couples within the Spanish star system. “I have already experienced in other relationships the thing of keeping things clandestine and being very reserved, and I realized that no, in the end it doesn’t work. There will be people for whom it does, but for me, because of the way I am, it didn’t work out”, she explains. Their relationship became even stronger after being forced to spend the confinements caused by the pandemic in Buenos Aires, in the Darín family home. “I was like shit. Then I realized that I shouldn’t have been so hard on myself, because I was aware of the situation that a lot of people were experiencing who didn’t have the same resources or the same privilege as me, and I didn’t give myself permission at that time to feel bad. I realised that I had the right to be in a bad way, just like anyone else, I was 13,000 kilometres away from my family”, she explains. “All of this added to the fact that you are at your in-laws’ house and you don’t want them to see you in certain situations. I was completely unhinged. I would wake up happy one day, and five minutes later I would be crying. What a person”, she explains again, laughing despite the dramatic nature of the situation.

At 34, Úrsula Corberó can allow herself to make a brief assessment of her personal life. “I feel that I am fine, in a good moment of my life and my parents have always instilled in me that getting older is good”, she says. “There are some things that I didn’t expect to be like this. I have always visualised myself as a very young mother, but then you realise that reality is different and the years go by”, she admits. It is at this significant moment that she has been encouraged to take the step of collaborating with Save the Children. The actress is the first Spanish global ambassador of the NGO and travelled last July with a team from the group to the Kolda region, in Senegal, to learn about an initiative that seeks to end child marriage. “It is the first time I have told it and it makes me excited”, she says. “I am still processing a lot of things from the trip, I knew that I had to prepare myself for this type of experience. It was something that until then I had not felt strong enough to do and suddenly I had it”, she says. “I went there thinking I was going to teach the girls a lesson, but it was the opposite. I came back completely confused”. The projects under development aim to show the girls the reality of independent women, mentors, who have managed to avoid child marriages due to economic necessity.

Before saying goodbye, the actress shows off the mastery with which she has been treating fans of the seemingly never-ending global phenomenon called La Casa de Papel for over three years when a group of excited tourists ask her if it really is Tokyo, unable to believe what they are seeing. Laughing, she deceives them, plays with them, lets herself be loved and almost jumps like her character to finally admit that yes, they are in front of the person who embodies the fictitious thief in a red jumpsuit. “I love these moments”, she admits, amused, before leaving the place where the interview is taking place and surrendering to the very high temperatures of a Madrid at half speed, rocked by the start of the holidays.

Source : vogue.es

Photoshoot by Fausto Elizalde

Úrsula Corberó appointed new Save the Children ambassador

Actress Úrsula Corberó has joined Save the Children as a new ambassador and will support the organisation in promoting gender equality as well as supporting children in humanitarian emergencies.

The Spanish actress, best known internationally for her role as Tokyo in the Netflix series Money Heist, will work with the charity to help ensure girls’ access to education and also to combat the violation of girls’ rights, such as forced child marriage, female genital mutilation, and trafficking for sexual exploitation.

“Thanks to Save the Children, I’ve been able to meet girls with wonderful potential. Girls and young women who are strong, who have clear ideas and plans for the future, who only need a bit of support to make their way and make their dreams come true. I wanted to join an organisation that makes this happen, and that’s why I went to Save the Children”, said Úrsula Corberó.

“Úrsula is the perfect person to help us show the public that the world is full of girls of all ages who want to study, work and make their own choices. As a woman who built her career from a very young age as a girl, she couldn’t be a better ambassador to build support for girls who need it the most”, added Andrés Conde, Save the Children Spain’s General Director.

Corberó, 33, will work with Save the Children in English and Spanish to reach global audiences. Born in Barcelona, she also speaks Catalan. In addition to her long-term commitment to working with girls, Corberó will also support Save the Children in humanitarian emergencies.

After gaining international recognition for Money Heist, Corberó will release a new series on Netflix on 8 September called Burning Bodies. She also has several films in the pipeline, including Matar al Jockey by Argentinian director Luis Ortega, and Lift, directed by F. Gary Gray.

Source : lac.savethechildren.net

Portraits by Miranda Makaroff

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