Albert Espinosa

Screenwriter

Albert Espinosa was born in Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain on November 5th, 1973 and is the Screenwriter. At the age of 50, Albert Espinosa biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, and networth are available.

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Date of Birth
November 5, 1973
Nationality
Spain
Place of Birth
Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain
Age
50 years old
Zodiac Sign
Scorpio
Profession
Actor, Engineer, Film Director, Journalist, Novelist, Screenwriter, Writer
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Albert Espinosa Height, Weight, Eye Color and Hair Color

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Albert Espinosa Religion, Education, and Hobbies
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Albert Espinosa Career

Espinosa began writing in his college years, at first by writing the plays the group performed, many of them Shakespearean-inspired (including texts and transcriptions of the actors' improvisations), others focusing on autobiographical themes (such as his play 'Los Pelones', premiered at the Riereta Teatre in Barcelona in July 1995, which was the seed of what years later would become his first movie script 'Planta 4ª') as well as other works set in a university context, such as 'Un novato en la ETSEIB' After completing his studies, he formed with classmates and theater group ETSEIB the theater company "The Pelones" (referring endearing to the eponymous piece cited above, this group of pediatric cancer patients, all bald by the effects of chemotherapy, which was part Espinosa himself in his years of hospital stay), which even today is still active.

Unlike the other members of "The Pelones," Espinosa never worked as an engineer. After finishing his studies, his first paid screenplay (1998) was for a video that won the European Prize for Information Technology.

He recovered fully from his illness (at twenty-four), thanks to the previous experience of writing short plays and scripts that he had acquired during his college years. He began working as a writer for television programs and contests, mostly for the Catalan producers, Gestmusic, an activity which he combined with his role as a playwright and as an actor in the theater company "The Pelones". Espinosa himself confessed that what he most liked was acting, but that he was only offered jobs as a television scriptwriter. That's why when he started working in television (his first program was the children's program Club Super3 for Catalan television), he set himself the challenge of changing jobs every six months to avoid burnout in a fast moving world. Then came a time that the author himself admits, he had doubts about whether to return to his other vocation (Engineering), his doubts were dispelled after working in Xat TV (1999–2000), one of the youth magazine 2 emitted in Catalonia definitely anchored him to the world of the screenwriter. It is also noteworthy that period their collaboration as a writer on the sitcom Psycho Express (2001–2002), created for TV3 by the Catalan company Dagoll Dagom musical theater, in the long-running series of Television of Catalonia El cor de la ciutat, whose team worked for a year and a half (2002–2003), its first screenwriting job for a number of daily broadcast, in the 3rd season of the comedy series Majoria absoluta (2003–2004), which marked his first collaboration with writer-director Joaquin Oristrell, and in the telefilm Tempus fugit (2003), winner of the Amsterdam Festival, SAG Awards 2004, at the Manchester Festival and the Monte Carlo Television Festival 2004.

However, the true consecration of Espinosa's talent as a writer came with the film 4th Floor (2003), directed by Antonio Mercero and starring Juan José Ballesta. In this work, marked autobiographical, the author recounts with tenderness and humor, in a tone away from the drama and tragedy, the everyday experience in a hospital of a group of children suffering from cancer. The film premiered at festivals, was nominated for the prize for best film at the XVIII edition of the Goya Awards from the Academy of Arts and Cinematographic Sciences of Spain.

Later, still trying to break into the world of film, television continued, with works like the script for the TV series Abuela de verano (Summer Spanish Grandmother) (2005), based on the novel Diario de una abuela de verano (Diary of a summer grandmother) writer Rosa Regas and starring Rosa Maria Sarda, in which he intervened in a supporting role (it was his first job as an actor and screenwriter simultaneous).

In 2006 lives his most prolific year as a screenwriter and as a playwright. The 23 February debuts in the alternative theater comedy Barcelona Tantarantana Idaho and Utah (lullabies for babies unwell), written, directed and starring Espinosa himself, and set in a near future where he invents a pill to stop sleep indefinitely. The play was revived in April 2007 in Madrid (National Drama Centre). In addition, also premiered that year (April and October) two films with his script. The first is your life in 65', directed by Maria Ripoll and adapted from a play by Espinosa, which tells a story in which death and chance intertwine constantly. For the script of this film, Espinosa was awarded at the Sixth Edition of the Barcelona Cinema. The other film released that year was going to be that Nobody is Perfect, directed by and starring Joaquin Oristrell Santi Millán, Fernando Tejero and José Luis García Pérez, who at the time was surrounded by some controversy for alleged plagiarism of a previous script Strawberry Caesar. His latter film, which won a Special Mention at the Ciutat de Barcelona Prize, portrays the physical disability issues as a daily, which should be considered normal vision banishing exclusive. Finally, in December was released in the Teatre Nacional de Catalunya, the work The great secret, co-written with Joan Font. A children's adaptation of this work, entitled The petit secret, would be released on 9 January 2007, and the original work arrived in Madrid (Teatro Gran Via) in March 2007.

In May 2007, started shooting the film, released in October the following year, Espinosa would debut as a film director: Do not ask me to kiss you, because I'll kiss, a comedy starring Eloy Azorin and based on the work homonymous theater (released in January 2004) and in another piece titled the club will palles (straws club) (premiered at the National Theatre of Catalonia in March 2004), both composed by Espinosa for the company itself "The Pelones". Also in 2007 the company begins a theater turn with the work Idaho and Utah (lullabies for bad children).

In 2009, Albert Espinosa presented the Teatre Lliure comedy "El fascinant noi que treia la llengua quan feia treballs manuals" (Catalan: The fascinating boy who stuck his tongue out when he did manual labor), again written, directed and starring himself, but this time, for the first time, without the group "Los Pelones". Made up the cast, along with the very Espinosa, Roger Berruez, Juanma Falcón and Oscar Blanco. The author's intention is to adapt this work to the movies also.

In the summer of 2009 is shot in various locations of the coast and the interior of Catalonia, the film Herois a very personal film project the producer Luis de Val, Media Films, and director Pau Freixas had prepared for three years. Espinosa co-authored the script with Freixas himself. In April 2010, the film won the Silver Biznaga-Audience Award and the award for best costume at the XIII Edition of the Spanish Film Festival in Malaga.

Espinosa is a best-selling author, and has published four books: The Yellow World (2008), Everything You and I Could Have Been If We Were Not You and I (2010), the successful novel If You Tell Me To Come I'll Drop Everything...But Tell Me To Come (2011), which was the best selling book on the traditional holiday of Sant Jordi in Barcelona. And finally his new book, Compasses That Seek Lost Smiles (2013).

The Yellow World is a memoir about Espinosa's years with cancer. Of it, he said: 'I do not talk about cancer, I talk about what I learned from cancer, everything it taught me for everyday life.'

In 2010 he embarked on a new project with Pau Freixas, director of Héroes (2009), the television series Polseres vermelles (known in English as The Red Band Society), created by Espinosa himself. The story and the script are the responsibility of the author and Pau Freixas is responsible for the direction, the series is also co-produced by both.

Polseres vermelles tells the everyday story of a group of teenagers who meet at a hospital because of their illnesses, and talks, always with humor and tenderness, the value of friendship, the will to live and the desire to excel. As it did in the movie 4th Floor (2003), Albert Espinosa used his own life experience to recreate the Polseres vermelles hospital environment.

The original script, based on the aforementioned novel The Yellow World (2008), by Espinosa himself is designed for four seasons, and time series (co-produced by Castelao Productions and Television of Catalonia) after the remarkable success of audience and critical of the 1st season (issued between January and May 2011, the regional channel TV3), already renewed for a second, which would consist of 15 new episodes. In addition, the 1st season was dubbed into Castilian and issuance began 9 July 2012 in Antena 3 with a large audience, surpassing even the harvested data in Catalonia with the original pass.

Besides Season 2 of Polseres vermelles, currently Espinosa is preparing a movie: 5th Floor, a kind of sequel to the hit 4th floor.

In National Radio Spain, he worked in the morning Affections evening program, led by Jordi Tuñón, with a weekly section about interesting scientific studies until 2012 when the program ended.

Source

Albert Espinosa Awards
  • 2003 – Butaca prize for best theatrical text for the act Your life in '65.
  • 2004 – Basque Film Award for Best Screenplay for 4th floor.
  • 2004 – SAG Award for Best Screenplay for TV movie for Tempus fugit.
  • 2004 – Golden Nymph for Best Screenplay at the Monte Carlo Television Festival by Tempus Fugit.
  • 2006 – Award for the work BCN Theater Idaho and Utah (Lullabies for Sick Babies).
  • 2007 – Award Barcelona Cinema for Best Screenplay for Your Life in 65.
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