Rafael Azcona
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Rafael Azcona Fernández (24 October 1926 – 24 March 2008) was an awarded Spanish screenwriter and novelist who has worked with some of the best Spanish and international filmmakers. Azcona won five Goya Awards during his career, including a lifetime achievement award in 1998.
He was born in the northern Spanish city Logroño on 24 October 1926. Azcona initially began his career writing for humor magazines. He became known as a screenwriter when he penned the screenplay for the film, El Pisito (The Little Apartment), which was based on his own novel. The 1959 film was directed by Italian film director, Marco Ferreri.
Azcona teamed up with director Fernando Trueba in “Belle Époque,” which won an Academy Award for best foreign film in 1994. He collaborated with other Spanish directors including Luis Garcia Berlanga, Jose Luis Cuerda, Jose Luis Garcia Sanchez, Pedro Olea, and Carlos Saura. Azcona was also awarded the Spanish Fine Arts Gold Medal in 1994.
Rafael Azcona died at his home in Madrid, Spain, on 24 March 2008, at the age of 81.
Acting
Movie
The Little Apartment
as (uncredited)
1959
Movie
José Luis López Vázquez. ¡Qué disparate!
2022
Movie
Marco Ferreri: The Director Who Came from the Future
as Self
2007
Movie
Eduardo Ducay: el cine que siempre estuvo ahí
as Self
2015
Movie
Rafael Azcona
as Self (archive footage)
2010
Rafael Azcona, oficio de guionista
as Himself
2007
The Invisible Half: Luis García Berlanga's The Executioner
as Interviewee
2012
Crew
Movie
La Grande Bouffe
Screenplay
1973
Movie
Butterfly
Screenplay
1999
Movie
Belle Époque
Screenplay
1992
Movie
The Executioner
Screenplay
1963
Movie
The Girl of Your Dreams
Writer
1998
Movie
The Queen of Spain
Characters
2016
Movie
Placido
Screenstory
1962
Movie
Ay, Carmela!
Screenplay
1990
Movie
It Can Be Done Amigo
Screenplay
1972
Movie
The National Shotgun
Screenplay
1978
Movie
A Reason to Live, a Reason to Die
Screenplay
1972
Movie
Madrid, 1987
Dialogue
2012