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Actor Eusebio Poncela, who starred opposite Antonio Banderas in Pedro Almodóvar’s Law of Desire, has died at the age of 79. The Spanish Film Academy confirmed his death on Wednesday (August 27), hailing the Madrid-born performer as one of the most influential figures in Spanish cinema. Poncela enjoyed a career spanning theatre, television, and film, with some of his most celebrated work in the 1980s alongside Almodóvar and rising star Banderas. No cause of death was revealed.

Away from the screen, Poncela was candid about his battles with heroin addiction. He admitted to losing friends to the drug and once relocated to Ushuaia, Argentina, in order to get clean. Reflecting on the prejudices he faced, he said in an interview with ABC: “More than once I’ve been pigeonholed by prejudice: for being poor, for being gay, for being a drug addict, and now for being old. And, above all, it seems that I’m not forgiven for always doing whatever I want and going it alone.”

Tributes have poured in for the acclaimed star online, with one fan taking to X - formerly known as Twitter - to share: "Eusebio Poncela leaves us, one of the great names in cinema, theater, and television in Spain. An actor and director with a career marked by elegance and intensity."

Another penned: "It cannot be denied of Eusebio Poncela that he lived as he wanted, that he always did whatever he felt like, that he did not bow to the demands of anyone except those of his vocation, that he lived life fully, not only in its sweetest and easiest moments, but also in the most." 

The outspoken actor's refusal to conform to stereotypes made him a figure known for pushing boundaries. He brought disturbing, often unsettling nuances to his roles, a style that set him apart in Spanish cinema of the time.

His breakthrough came with Eloy de la Iglesia’s The Week of the Murderer (1972), but it was Iván Zulueta’s cult classic Arrebato (Rapture) in 1979 that cemented his reputation. Its mix of addiction, obsession, and avant-garde style is now seen as a cornerstone of modern Spanish film.

Poncela’s association with Almodóvar followed soon after. He appeared in Matador (1986) before playing filmmaker Pablo Quintero in Law of Desire (1987), opposite Banderas as the dangerously obsessed Antonio Benítez.

His popularity soared in the 1980s thanks to television, especially as Carlos Deza in The Joys and the Shadows (1982). In 2001, he starred in Juan Carlos Fresnadillo’s thriller Intacto alongside Max von Sydow, earning his only Goya nomination.

Later projects included horror films Black Prickly Pear (2001) and The Valdemar Legacy (2010). Though cinema made him a household name, Poncela remained deeply rooted in theatre.

He starred in Macbeth (2004), an acclaimed trilogy of Oedipus (2009), and The Servant (2019). His final performance was in Kiss of the Spider Woman, which toured Spain before closing in Barcelona in 2023.

Born in Vallecas in 1945 and trained in drama, Poncela was remembered as a daring, uncompromising actor who left an indelible mark on European film.

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