Elena Anaya Movies
For many of those who realize their calling in life at an early age, the world is wide open with success and opportunity at every turn. When Spanish actress
Elena Anaya felt that her talents gravitated toward a life on the stage and screen, the aspiring young actress spared precious little time in getting herself prepared for life in the limelight -- a fact that no doubt played a part in her being named one of European Films' Shooting Stars during the 2004 European Film Promotion campaign. A relatively new face to stateside audiences at the time of her international debut in 2004's
Van Helsing,
Anaya was soon climbing the latter to international success with subsequent roles opposite such screen heavies as
Gary Oldman (
Dead Fish) and
Viggo Mortensen (Alatriste).
A native of Palencia, Spain, whose early childhood was spent practicing karate at the Okinawa Gymnasium and climbing mountains,
Anaya opted out of Cadiz School in 1996 -- choosing instead to join the Real Escuela Superior de Arte Dramático de Madrid and study under actor
Manuel Morón. Following her feature debut in the 1996 drama
África,
Anaya continued to impress with supporting roles in such features as
Black Tears and
Wiped-Out Footprints. A turn opposite handsome Spanish leading man
Eduardo Noriega in the 2000 romantic drama
El Invierno de las Anajanas showed great promise for the burgeoning actress, with a role in the erotic arthouse drama
Sex and Lucia earning her a Goya nomination for Best Supporting Actress. As her profile continued to increase thanks to roles in such features as The Blue Room and
Pedro Almadóvar's
Talk to Her, it seemed only a matter of time before
Anaya's popularity went international. Though her role as Dracula's most possessive bride in 2004's
Van Helsing may have offered her little chance to shine amongst the massive CG-overload, audiences could rest assured that they would be seeing plenty more of the Spanish beauty when it was announced that she would be appearing in both the 2004 action comedy
Dead Fish and the 2005 period adventure Alatriste. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi