Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Ana Daniel

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Nationality
  
Portuguese

Producer
  
Daniel Birman Ripstein

Role
  
2009 film

Screenplay
  
Michel Franco

Name
  
Ana Daniel

Running time
  
1h 30m

Occupation
  
Poet and writer

Director
  
Michel Franco


Ana Daniel Picture of Daniel and Ana


Full Name
  
Maria de Lourdes d’Oliveira Canellas da Assuncao Sousa

Born
  
19 May 1928 (
1928-05-19
)
Lisbon, Portugal

Died
  
30 November 2011(2011-11-30) (aged 83) Sintra, Portugal

Spouse(s)
  
Fernando d’Assuncao Sousa

Parent(s)
  
Mario Canellas and Maria Eugenia d’Oliveira Canellas

Cast
  
Marimar Vega, Dario Yazbek Bernal, Jose Maria Torre, Monserrat Ontiveros, Veronica Langer

Similar
  
Movies about Mexico, Dramas

Initial release
  
March 31, 2010 (France)

Ana Daniel (19 May 1928 – 30 November 2011), pseudonym of Maria de Lourdes d’Oliveira Canellas da Assunção Sousa, was a Portuguese poet.

Contents

Ana Daniel Daniel and Ana 20092010 Covering Media

Biography

Ana Daniel Movie Review Daniel y Ana 2009

She was born in Lisbon, in Santa Isabel parish, in 1928. She was the daughter, along with four brothers, of Mário Canellas and Maria Eugénia d’Oliveira Canellas. She married Fernando d’Assunção Sousa in 1950 and moved from Campo de Ourique, where she had lived during her youth, to Sintra. There she raised five children and wrote most of her work. She started writing poetry at the age of 15, and soon had her work published in Portuguese newspapers and magazines, both in the continent and overseas. With her first pseudonym Ana Arlési, she was awarded several youth poetry prizes. But it was by the time she was 20 that Ana Daniel defined her literary path, gaining all the intensity that made her poetic work so remarkable.

Her work

Ana Daniel wwwgstaticcomtvthumbdvdboxart8004737p800473

Prize National Poetry Manuscript Contest 1969, “Momento Vivo” (Edições Panorama, 1970) was her first book, a work marked by the sense of strangeness and the knowing of the irredeemable.

“Nos Olhos das Madrugadas” (Arbusto Editores, 2010), her last book, comprehends the loneliness of body and soul, made of loss and absence, and also of nostalgia, perhaps the most persistent feeling within her lyrical poetry, which is a filigree of emotions, whether of acceptance or nonconformity.

References

Ana Daniel Wikipedia