Rodolfo Sancho
Rodolfo Sancho | |
---|---|
Born | Rodolfo Sancho Aguirre 14 January 1975 Madrid, Spain |
Nationality | Spanish |
Occupation | Actor |
Years active | 1983- present |
Partner | Xenia Tostado (2005- present) |
Children | 2 |
Parent | Sancho Gracia |
Rodolfo Sancho Aguirre (born 14 January 1975) is a Spanish actor. He is best known for his role as Julián Martínez in the television series El Ministerio del Tiempo.[1]
Personal life
Sancho was born on 14 January 1975 in Madrid, Spain the son of actor Félix Sancho Gracia and Noela Aguirre.
In 1994, his son Daniel was born when he was 19 years old. In 2015, he welcomed a daughter, Jimena, with partner Xenia Tostado.
Career
His first roles came in the 1990s in the television series Hermanos de leche, Carmen y familia, with small roles in other projects such as Muertos de risa and La comunidad. His first major role came portraying Nico in Al salir de clase for four years. In cinema, he worked alongside Javier Florrieta (Pacto de brujas), Sigfrid Monleón (La bicicleta) and with Jorge Sánchez-Cabezudo in his directorial debut, La noche de los girasoles.
In 2012, he returned to La 1 for Isabel, a series depicting the life of Isabel I of Castile, portraying Fernando II of Aragón for three seasons before departing for another La 1 series, El Ministerio del Tiempo playing the part of Julián Martínez, a nurse working for SAMUR[2] where he was a series regular for Season 1 and had a recurring role in the second season.
His work on El Ministerio del Tiempo was delayed as he starred as the lead role in Antena 3's Mar de Plástico as Héctor.
Filmography
Film
- Cachito (1995)
- Taxi (1996)
- Muertos de risa (1999)
- Casi veinte horas (1999)
- La comunidad (2000)
- Qué puta es mi hermana (2000) (Short-film)
- Mucha sangre (2002)
- Pacto de brujas (2003)
- Las llaves de la independencia (2005)
- Dentro del paraíso (2005) (TV)
- Cuba libre (2005), de Raimundo García.
- Los muertos van deprisa (2006)
- La bicicleta (2006)
- Películas para no dormir: La habitación del niño (2006)
- La noche de los girasoles (2006)
- La herencia Valdemar (2010)
- No Rest for the Wicked (2011)
- Artigas - La Redota (2011), de César Charlone
- Las nornas (2011)
- La corona partida (2016)
- Voces (2020)[3]
- Y todos arderán (2021)[4]
Television
- Los desastres de la guerra (1983)
- Colegio Mayor (1995)
- Hermanos de leche (1995)
- Curro Jiménez, el regreso de una leyenda (1995)
- Carmen y familia (1996)
- La vida en el aire (1997)
- Al salir de clase (1997–1999)
- Paraíso (2000)
- Hospital Central (2002)
- Policías, en el corazón de la calle (2002–2003).
- Tres son multitud (2003)
- Un paso adelante. (2003)
- Lobos (2005)
- Amar en tiempos revueltos (2005–2006)
- Hospital Central (2006)
- MIR (2007–2008)
- La Señora (2008–2010)
- Gavilanes (2010–2011)
- Historias robadas (2012)
- Isabel (2012–2014)
- El Ministerio del Tiempo (2015–2017)
- Mar de Plástico (2015–2016)
- Los nuestros 2 (2018)
- Sequía (TBD)[5]
Stage
- Caos
- Misterio en el circo de irás y no volverás
- El cerco de Numancia
- Cedra
- Fedra
References
- ^ "'El Ministerio del Tiempo' se estrena el martes 24 de febrero contra 'Bajo sospecha'". FormulaTV (in Spanish). Retrieved 2018-06-06.
- ^ "La serie El ministerio del Tiempo - Web Oficial - RTVE.es". RTVE.es (in European Spanish). Retrieved 2018-10-11.
- ^ Mullor, Mireia (27 November 2020). "'Voces': El final explicado de la película de terror española en Netflix". esquire.com.
- ^ Díaz, Rosa (16 October 2021). "Una ángel diabólico siembra terror en un pueblo de Ávila en "Y todos arderán"". Cadena COPE.
- ^ "'Sequía': Primeras imágenes del thriller de TVE con Elena Rivera, Rodolfo Sancho y Miguel Ángel Muñoz". Diez Minutos. 21 June 2021.