Fernanda Montenegro (born October 16, 1929, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil) is a Brazilian stage and screen actress, best known outside of South America for her role in Central do Brasil (1998; Central Station), for which she was nominated for the 1999 Academy Award for best actress. She was the first Brazilian actress to receive that honour.
Montenegro made her theatrical debut in 1950 alongside actor Fernando Torres, whom she married three years later. In 1959 she and Torres established their own theatre company, producing and acting in Portuguese-language productions of numerous works by such playwrights as Edward Albee, Samuel Beckett, and Arthur Miller.
Beginning in the early 1960s, Montenegro also performed in motion pictures and on television. Among her films were A falecida (1965; The Deceased); Eles não usam Black-Tie (1981; They Don’t Wear Black Tie), about family relations and labour unrest; and the three-part Traição (1998; Treason), which examined adultery. Her television credits included a number of soap operas, in which she was usually typecast as an “elegant, well-dressed magnate’s wife who lives in a big mansion.” In the television serial Rainha da sucata (1990; “The Queen of Scrap Iron”), a lampoon of soaps that was dubbed into Spanish and distributed throughout North and South America, she took on a self-effacing role as the matriarch of a quarreling family. An astonishingly versatile actress, she was respected for treating even the smallest of roles with consummate professionalism.
Though Montenegro had long been a grande dame of the Brazilian stage and screen, she was little known in Europe or Anglo-America prior to her appearance in the 1998 film Central do Brasil (1998; Central Station). Critics praised her portrayal of Dora, an embittered retired schoolteacher in Rio de Janeiro who ekes out a living writing letters for illiterate people and who finds redemption after she decides to help a homeless boy search for his father. Montenegro won the Berlin International Film Festival’s award for best actress for the performance, and in 1999 the role garnered her an Academy Award nomination for best actress.
Despite her success in Central do Brasil, Montenegro’s primary interest remained the theatre. In 1999 she kept up her busy acting schedule, appearing in stage productions of plays by Anton Chekhov and Luigi Pirandello. She also continued her work on the small screen, including a turn as a manipulative stepmother in the acclaimed miniseries Hoje é dia de Maria (2005; Today is Maria’s Day). The film O outro lado da rua (2004; The Other Side of the Street), a thriller inspired by the work of director Alfred Hitchcock, featured Montenegro as a lonely woman who believes she has witnessed a murder take place across the street from her apartment building. She received a number of best actress awards for the performance, including the Tribeca Film Festival award and the Cinema Brazil Grand Prize. Montenegro again reached audiences outside her native Brazil in Love in the Time of Cholera (2007), an adaptation of Gabriel García Márquez’s 1985 novel.
Montenegro continued to act throughout the 2010s, notably playing a widowed matriarch in the TV movie Doce de mãe (2012; Sweet Mother); for her performance, she won an International Emmy, and she later starred in the spin-off miniseries that aired in 2014. That same year she had roles in the films Infância (“Childhood”) and Rio, eu te amo (Rio, I Love You). She subsequently appeared in A vida invisível de Eurídice Gusmão (2019; The Invisible Life of Eurídice Gusmão) and Piedade (2019; Mercy). The TV movie Gilda, Lúcia e o bode (“Gilda, Lucia, and the Goat”) aired in 2020.