Yolanda García Serrano Biography, Weight & Height, Age, Nationality & Ethnicity

Yolanda García Serrano Biography, Weight & Height, Age, Nationality & Ethnicity
Yolanda García Serrano (born 1958) is a Spanish film director and
writer, the winner of the 1994 Goya Award for Best Original Screenplay
for the film All Men Are the Same.García studied Public Relations and
worked for a few years as a secretary while starting her studies in
Dramatic Arts. She immediately began to participate in a theater group
and to write small works, first for the children's audience and then
for adults. She studied dramatic writing with Fermín Cabal [es],
José Luis Alonso de Santos, and Jesús Campos [es], and later studied
audiovisual and cinematographic narrative, as well as film direction.
She then began writing for film, television, and theater.In 1986, and
within a dramaturgy workshop of the National Center of New Trends, her
play La llamada es del todo inadecuada was selected along with two
others to be performed at the Círculo de Bellas Artes in Madrid. It
was a completely new project in Spanish drama with a work framed in
the theater of the absurd. She began working in cinematic
screenwriting with Joaquín Oristrell, Lola Salvador [es], and Manolo
Matji [es], but despite having gone through specialized schools with
American and Hispanic writers, García confesses that she learned the
trade by writing, reading, going a lot to the movies, "and throwing
many scripts to the basket." Later she also went on to teach at the
Community of Madrid's Cinematography and Audiovisual School.In 1988,
she began her career as a professional screenwriter with works for
film, television programs, and series. From the beginning she formed a
team working in collaboration with Manuel Gómez Pereira, Juan Luis
Iborra [es], and Joaquín Oristrell. In 1994, and in collaboration
with them, she won the Goya Award for Best Original Screenplay for All
Men Are the Same. Among the series she has written for are Farmacia de
guardia (1991â€"1995), Abuela de verano [es] (2005), Clara Campoamor,
and Fugitiva (2018). In movies, she wrote Why Do They Call It Love
When They Mean Sex? (1993), Love Can Seriously Damage Your Health
(1997), Queens (2005), and Mediterranean Food (2008). Yolanda García Serrano Biography, Weight & Height, Age, Nationality & Ethnicity

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