Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
Miguel Rellán
Spanish actor (born 1942) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
Miguel Ángel Rellán García (born 7 November 1942) is a Spanish actor. He was the first actor to win a Goya Award for Best Supporting Actor for Tata mía at the 1987 edition.[1][2] He made his feature film debut in El perro (1977).[3] He became very popular to a television audience in Spain for his portrayal of history teacher Félix in Compañeros.[4]
Remove ads
Filmography
Film
Television series
- Tiempos de guerra (2017) as Dámaso
- Vergüenza (2017–¿?) as Carlos
- Cuéntame cómo pasó (2016) as General (Papel episódico)
- La que se avecina (2016) as Cristóbal López García (Papel recurrente)
- Águila Roja (2015) as El emisario real
- El ministerio del tiempo (2015–2016) as Gil Pérez
- Los misterios de Laura (2011, 2014) as Isidoro de la Villa/Sebastián de la Villa
- Frágiles (2013) as Ricardo
- Fenómenos (2012) as Eugenio Nebot
- Rescatando a Sara (2011) as Ministro de exteriores
- Historias robadas (2011) as Doctor Gil
- Plaza de España (2011) as Don Benito
- Raphael: una historia de superación personal (2010) as Doctor Llano
- El comisario (2008–2009)
- Soy el solitario (2008)
- La dársena de poniente(2007) as Leopoldo
- Regreso a Moira (2006), by Mateo Gil as Vicente
- Los Serrano (2005) (Personaje episódico)
- Paco y Veva (2004) as Clemente
- Compañeros (1998–2002) as Félix Torán
- Menudo es mi padre (1996–1998) as Antonio
- La regenta (1995), by Fernando Méndez Leite as Frígilis
- El Buscavidas (1993) as Fermín
- Tango (1992) as Aledre
- Una hija más (1991) as Demetrio Sánchez
- Las gallinas de Cervantes (1988) as Cervantes
- Turno de oficio: cap 5°: "Cosecha del 73" (1986) as El Pato
- Goya (1985)
- Los desastres de la guerra (1983)
- Juanita la larga (1982) as El cura
Remove ads
Theatre credits
- 7 años (2018), by José Cabeza
- Ninette y un señor de Murcia (2015), by Miguel Mihura
- El viaje a ninguna parte (2014), by Fernando Fernán Gómez
- Los hijos se han dormido (2012), by Daniel Veronese.
- Luces de bohemia (2012), by Valle-Inclán.
- Al final del arco iris (2011), by Peter Quilter.
- La abeja reina (2009), by Charlotte Jones.
- Marat Sade (2007), by Peter Weiss.
- Cuentos del Burdel (2005), by Miguel Hermoso.
- Los cabellos de Absalon (1983), by Pedro Calderón de la Barca.
- El gran teatro del mundo (1981), by Calderón de la Barca.
- La coartada, by Fernando Fernán Gómez.
- Amadeus, by Peter Shaffer.
- Las reclamaciones, by Valle-Inclán.
- El caballero de Olmedo, by Lope de Vega.
- La lozana andaluza, by Francisco Delicado.
- La infanta palancona, by Francisco de Quevedo.
- El alcalde de Zalamea, by Calderón de la Barca.
- Comedia veneciana de la cucaracha, by himself
- Fuenteovejuna, by Lope de Vega.
- Volpone, by Ben Jonson.
- La murga, by Alfonso Jiménez Romero.
- Soldiers, by Rolf Hochhuth.
- Novecento, by Alessandro Baricco
Remove ads
References
External links
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads