Dalila Carmo

Dalila Carmo (born August 24, 1974) is a Portuguese actress.

Dalila Carmo
Born (1974-08-24) August 24, 1974

She trained at The Actors Studio in New York in 1996-1997 with Marcia Haufrecht, who directed her in Vidas Publicadas by Donald Margulies, Teatro da Comuna (2005), A Lição de Ionesco (1996), and Ludlow Fair by Lansford Wilson (1997) at The Common Basis Theatre.

She was a cast member in numerous productions such as Artaud Estudio with Paulo Filipe (ACARTE, 1997); Auto da India by Gil Vicente; Let's Make Opera with Paulo Matos (Teatro São Luiz, 1994); Queima de Judas (Teatro O Bando, 1992).

In the movie industry, after appearing in Paulo Castro's short film, O Criado Ostrowski (1990), she played in Vale Abraão (1993) by Manoel de Oliveira.

In between TV movies and some international co-productions, she also performed in features such as A Comédia de Deus (1995) by João Cesar Monteiro, Tráfico (1998) by João Botelho, O Anjo da Guarda (1999) by Margarida Gil, and Os Meus Espelhos (2005) by Rui Simões, "Quero Ser Uma Estrela" (2009) by José Carlos de Oliveira, "Quinze Pontos na Alma" (2009) and Florbela (2011) by Vicente Alves do Ó.

She acted at the Theatre Company of Almada, under the direction of Joaquin Benite, in Moliére by Mikhail Bulgakov (1995) and Filopópulus by Virgílio Martinho (1995).

Dalila Carmo was a cast member of nearly 10 soap operas: 2006 - Tempo de Viver, 2005 - Ninguem Como Tu, 2003 - Morangos com Açúcar, 2002 - Jóia de África, 2001 - Filha do Mar, 2000 - Jardins Proibidos, 1999 - Todo o Tempo do Mundo, 1998 - Diário de Maria, among others.

Dalila is currently living between Lisbon and Madrid.

Filmography

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gollark: We already *work* on pretty informal rules and stuff. You seem to want weird legal-ish procedures in place.
gollark: It's a word used to describe stuff which is obvious to you, but not others.
gollark: Doesn't that just mean even MORE fuzziness and admin-discretion than the at least somewhat specific rules here?
gollark: So, "leave you live" is technically valid if you treat "live" as an adjective meaning "alive", but it's an odd form.


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