1960s After winning
Tawag ng Tanghalan in 1967, Aunor made her first appearance as a guest at
Timi Yuro's
Araneta Coliseum concert. She made her first TV appearance as a guest on
An Evening with Pilita, hosted by
Pilita Corrales, and
Carmen on Camera, hosted by
Carmen Soriano. On October 2, 1967, Aunor signed an eight-picture non-exclusive contract with
Sampaguita Pictures, with the assurance that she would be given a singing part. Aunor made several youth-oriented films, including
All Over The World and
Way Out of the Country. That year her contract with Sampaguita Pictures expired and she made films with other studios, including
Banda 24 and
Drakulita for Barangay,
Oh Delilah,
Karate Showdown,
Pabandying-Bandying, and
Adriana. Tower Records gave Aunor her first starring role opposite Cruz, the ''D' Musical Teenage Idols
by Tower Productions, directed by Artemio Marquez and released on September 23, 1969. On September 26, Sampaguita Pictures released its 34th-anniversary presentation, Fiesta Extravaganza''. During Aunor's coronation as the muse of Sampaguita Family Club, Tirso gave her a doll, "Maria Leonora Theresa", which reportedly became the most popular doll in Philippine showbiz history.
1970s Aunor continued to make teeny-bopper films alongside
Tirso Cruz III. Together they were known as
Guy and Pip from their most successful film,
Guy and Pip. The film stayed in cinemas for six months, and was the top grosser at the 1971 Manila Film Festival. She was first nominated for best actress by
FAMAS (Filipino Academy for Movies, Arts and Sciences) for
A Gift of Love. Aunor was nominated 17 times by FAMAS for best actress and won five times, and was nominated 21 times by
Gawad Urian, with seven wins. directed by national artist
Gerardo de León. She played a courageous
Ifugao chieftain's daughter defending her tribe from nefarious outside forces. For this performance, Aunor received her fourth Best Actress nomination at the
1976 FAMAS Awards. In 1976, Aunor produced the film
Alkitrang Dugo (Blood of Tar) through NV Productions. It is based on Sir
William Golding's novel
Lord of the Flies. She continued to produce and act in films such as the period drama
Tatlong Taong Walang Diyos (Three Years Without God), in which she played the schoolteacher Rosario, who experiences the atrocities of
World War II. Her performance won her the first best actress award given by the Manunuri ng Pelikulang Pilipino (
Gawad Urian Award) and her first Best Actress Award from FAMAS. Before the year ended, Aunor starred in the groundbreaking ''
Minsa'y Isang Gamu-gamo'' (Once There Was a Firefly) (1976), playing a would-be migrant to the United States whose brother is shot by a US soldier on the eve of her departure. Knowing that President
Ferdinand Marcos's administration would not allow the public showing of any films criticizing the US presence in the Philippines, the producers tapped Aunor to star in the film, believing she had the support of Marcos and First Lady
Imelda Marcos. The film, from Premiere Productions, won two awards at the
1976 Metro Manila Film Festival, and it also won Best Picture, Director (for Lupita Aquino-Kashiwahara), Screenplay, Story, and Editing at the
1977 FAMAS Awards. For Aunor's performance and the film's message, ''Minsa'y Isang Gamu-gamo'' is considered a classic Filipino film. In 1977, Aunor starred with
Fernando Poe Jr. in the romantic-comedy film
Little Christmas Tree. On December 25, 1977, her film
Bakya Mo, Neneng (Your Wooden Clogs, Neneng) was JE Productions' official entry in the
1977 Metro Manila Film Festival. She was paired with
Joseph Estrada, who later became
president of the Philippines. At the
1978 FAMAS Awards, Aunor received her sixth nomination, for
Bakya Mo Neneng, and won the
FAMAS Award for Best Picture. She also appeared in
Ikaw Ay Akin (You are Mine), directed by
Ishmael Bernal. This film gave Aunor her second nomination from
Gawad Urian for Best Actress. Later that year, her film
Atsay (Maid) was an official entry in the
1978 Metro Manila Film Festival. It was one of the two best entries at the festival, along with
Rubia Servios, directed by
Lino Brocka.
Atsay was the only film to have won Best Performer in Metro Manila Film Festival history. That year, the organizers decided to give just one citation for performers—no best actor or actress or supporting actor or actress award, just the Best Performer Award. Aunor won Best Performer for
Atsay.
Amy Austria, who played a supporting role in the film, was also nominated for Best Performer. The festival organizers wanted to adopt a sense of gender sensitivity by giving out a gender-neutral award. The award was scrapped the next year.
Atsay also won Best Picture, Romeo Vitug for Best Cinematography and
Eddie Garcia for Best Director at the
Film Festival Awards. Aunor was nominated for the seventh time at the
1979 FAMAS Awards. At the
1979 Metro Manila Film Festival, she had two films,
Kasal-kasalan, Bahay-bahayan and
Ina Ka ng Anak Mo. Both Aunor and
Lolita Rodriguez won Best Actress for
Ina Ka ng Anak Mo,
Lino Brocka won Best Director,
Raoul Aragon Best Actor, and the film won Best Picture. Aunor was also nominated for the
Gawad Urian for Best Actress and won at the
1980 FAMAS Awards for her role. This was Aunor's second FAMAS Best Actress Award.
1980s In the 1980s Aunor's first film was
Nakaw Na Pag-ibig (Stolen Love), another collaboration with Lino Brocka, together with
Hilda Koronel and
Phillip Salvador. That same year, Aunor made another film with
Mario O'Hara,
Kastilyong Buhangin (Sandcastle), with
Lito Lapid as her leading man. Before 1980 ended, two of Aunor's films were official entries at the
1980 Metro Manila Film Festival. In ''Kung Ako'y Iiwan Mo'', directed by
Laurice Guillen, she played Beatrice Alcala, a singing superstar. The film won Best Sound and Cinematography at the Festival. Aunor'a other entry was
Bona, a film she produced and Brocka directed. At the festival, three women were nominated for Best Actress: Aunor for
Bona and
Kung Akoý Iiwan Mo (If You Leave Me), Amy Austria for
Brutal, and
Gina Alajar for
Brutal. Aunor won her second Gawad Urian Best Actress for
Bona, tying with Alajar; Aunor won her ninth Best Actress nomination from the
1981 FAMAS Awards for the same film.
Bona screened at the
Directors' Fortnight at the
1981 Cannes Film Festival, and decades later a restored version screened as part of the Cannes Classics at the
2024 Cannes Film Festival. In 1981, Aunor made six films: Brocka's
Dalaga si Misis, Binata si Mister, O'Hara's
Gaano Kita Kamahal, and three films by
Maryo de los Reyes—
Totoo Ba ang Tsismis,
Ibalik ang Swerti, and
Rock N Roll.
Rock N Roll was an entry in the
1981 Metro Manila Film Festival. Aunor made another film with O'Hara that year,
Bakit Bughaw ang Langit? (Why Is the Sky Blue?), for which she received her 10th FAMAS Best Actress nomination and fifth nomination from Gawad Urian. She won the Best Actress award from the Catholic Mass Media Awards. No print of this film is known to exist. Aunor continued to make romantic comedy films in 1982, such as
Annie Sabungera (Annie the Woman Cockfighter) and
Palengke Queen. The same year, she also appeared in three other films.
Mga Uod at Rosas (Worms and Roses) tells the story of a painter whose work affected his relationship with his wife and his model mistress. This film earned Aunor her 11th nomination from FAMAS. In
T-Bird at Ako (T-Bird and Me), Aunor plays a lesbian lawyer who falls for a woman she is defending in court. Her third drama performance for 1982 was in
Himala (Miracle), in which she plays a young woman who claims to have seen the
Virgin Mary. Produced by the
Experimental Cinema of the Philippines, the film won Best Picture, Best Actress for Aunor, Best Director for
Ishmael Bernal, and six other awards in the
1982 Metro Manila Film Festival. It was the first Filipino film to screen in the "Competition Section" of the
Berlin International Film Festival and received the Bronze Hugo Award at the 19th Chicago Film Festival (1983), the Asia-Pacific Film Festival Special Achievement award for Best Depiction of Socially Involved Religion (1983), and the Best Asian-Pacific Movie of All Time, CNN APSA Viewers Choice Award (2008). 30 years after its release, a restored version of the film was shown in the "Venice Classics" section at the
69th Venice International Film Festival. In 2019
Himala was made into a stage musical. In 1983, Aunor made a single film,
Minsan, May Isang Ina, with
Charito Solis and
Maricel Soriano, and directed by
Maryo J. de los Reyes. For this she received her 12th consecutive
FAMAS Best Actress nomination. In 1984, Aunor released three films. In ''
'Merika'', she portrayed an
Overseas Filipino Worker who works as a nurse in America and struggles to fight loneliness and homesickness. The film is about Filipino illegal
aliens who will do anything just to get a
Green card. Directed by
Gil Portes, Aunor's performance in this film won her awards from (PMPC) Star Awards for Movies and her eighth Gawad Urian best actress nomination.
Condemned is a story of siblings Yolly (Aunor) and Efren (
Dan Alvaro), and how their lives changed when Efren worked as a driver and a hired killer for ruthless
money laundering lady Connie (played by
Gloria Romero). The film was given an "A" Rating by the Film Ratings Board.
Bulaklak sa City Jail (Flowers of the City Jail) was an official entry to the
1984 Metro Manila Film Festival, won best actress from Metro Manila Film Festival for her role as a pregnant
prisoner and a victim of injustice, Angela Aguilar. It also won Catholic Mass Media Awards and her third best actress award from FAMAS. At the Gawad Urian that year, Aunor was a double nominee for Best Actress for
Bulaklak sa City Jail and
Merika, while at the PMPC Star Awards for Movies, Aunor was a triple nominee for
Best Actress for
Merika,
Condemned, and
Bulaklak sa City Jail. She was also nominated for Best Actress at the Film Academy of the Philippines for
Bulaklak sa City Jail. In 1985, Aunor made five films. The first was
Beloved, a film about four people torn between the love of power and the power of love and infidelity. The film was also serialized in King Komiks. Next was
Tinik sa Dibdib as Lorna, a long-suffering daughter of irresponsible parents who drove her to marry a security guard, who himself is the breadwinner of a very dysfunctional family. Her next film was
Till We Meet Again. This was followed by an anthology film
Mga Kwento ni Lola Basyang, and finally, ''I Can't Stop Loving You'', an entry to the
1985 Metro Manila Film Festival. For the next three years, released only a handful including her final team-up with Dolphy,
My Bugoy Goes to Congress. Other films included 1986's
I Love You Mama, I Love You Papa, in which she received her 15th consecutive FAMAS Best Actress nomination;
Sana Mahalin Mo Ako;
Tatlong Ina, Isang Anak (Three Mothers, One Son); and
Balut...Penoy. In 1989 she filmed
Bilangin ang mga Bituin sa Langit (Count the Stars in the Sky), about the rise and fall of a poor, hard-working, and determined barrio lass and her lifetime stormy relationship with a childhood sweetheart. For this film, she won the Best Actress Awards in Gawad Urian, FAMAS, and FAP. On October 1, 1989, after 22 years, her musical-variety show
Superstar aired its final episode. The program briefly returned on television from November 1989 when it was produced on Channel 13.
1990s In the 1990s Aunor made 10 films. Most of these films were critically acclaimed and won domestic and international awards. Aunor also did three stage plays, two of them produced by the
Philippine Educational Theater Association (PETA). In the 1990 film
Andrea, Paano Ba ang Maging Isang Ina? (Andrea, What is it Like to Be a Mother?), Aunor played a
New People's Army rebel who leaves her newborn baby to search for her husband. The film won for Aunor all the Best Actress Awards given by the Philippines' five annual award-giving bodies at that time: Gawad Urian, Star Awards for Movies, Film Academy of the Philippines, and her fifth FAMAS Award for Best Actress, thus elevating her to the Hall of Fame. She won the first
Young Critics Circle Award for Best Performance. The film was also the official entry to the
1990 Metro Manila Film Festival, where she also won the Best Actress award. On May 18, 1991, a few days before her 38th birthday, she staged her first major concert at the
Araneta Coliseum, thus earning the name "concert queen" for filling the venue with about 30,000 fans. Her guests included
Gary Valenciano, Mon Faustino, The Hotlegs, The Operas, and many more. The audio recording of the concert was later released as her first live album
Handog ni Guy Live. Later in 1991, Aunor ventured into theater and did the stage adaptation of her critically acclaimed film, ''
Minsa'y Isang Gamu-gamo''. It was staged by PETA and directed by Socrates "Soxy" Topacio, then PETA's artistic head, and penned by Rody Vera. She did two more stage plays,
DH in 1992 and
The Trojan Women in 1994. Her performances in the three plays were acclaimed. On December 25, 1991,
Ang Totoong Buhay ni Pacita M. was included in the
1991 Metro Manila Film Festival. Aunor played a mother struggling to take care of her vegetative daughter. Aunor won numerous awards for her performance, including the Metro Manila Film Festival Best Actress and her third consecutive Best Actress trophy from the Film Academy of the Philippines. She also won at the Star Awards for Movies and from the
Young Critics Circle Award for Best Performance. In 1992, Aunor was cast in another PETA play,
DH. PETA toured the play in North America, Europe, and Hong Kong. On the same year, Aunor returned to television through the weekly drama anthology,
Star Drama Presents NORA. She won the Best Actress Award from Star Awards for Television (Philippine Movie Press Club). In 1994, she won the Best Actress in a Single Performance award from the Star Awards for Television (Philippine Movie Press Club) for her performance in "Spotlight" for the episode: "Good Morning, Ma'am". She went back into the recording studio to record bonus tracks for a compilation album to be released in co-operation with Alpha Records and Warner Brothers. The new songs were written by an American songwriter, a neighbor of her sister Tita in San Diego, California. In 1994, Aunor received the Lifetime Achievement Award from the Film Academy of the Philippines. She was the youngest recipient of this special award. In 1995, Aunor found renewed success in the box office when she starred in the biographical film
The Flor Contemplacion Story, about Filipino
domestic worker Flor Contemplacion who was hanged in Singapore for allegedly killing her fellow maid. Her performance in
The Flor Contemplacion Story got rave reviews earning her first international best actress awards from
Cairo International Film Festival, she swept all the Best-Actress awards given by the Philippines' different award-giving bodies, including the Best Performance by Male or Female, Adult or Child, and Individual or Ensemble in Leading or Supporting Role given by the Young Critics Circle Award for Best Performance. Aunor's other 1995 film was
Viva Films' official entry to the
1995 Metro Manila Film Festival,
Muling Umawit ang Puso, featuring her as a once-famous actress seeking to regain her popularity. It won several awards at the festival including Best Picture, Director, and Actress. In June 1996, Aunor was cast to play Sisa in
Premiere Productions' then-upcoming film adaptation of
José Rizal's novel
Noli Me Tángere, though the project did not come to fruition. In 1997, Aunor won her second international Best Actress trophy from the 1st East Asia Film and Television Awards and her sixth
Urian Best Actress Award for her role as a
psychotic woman who plots her revenge on the family of her parents' killer in
Bakit May Kahapon Pa?. In 1999, Aunor made only one film,
Sidhi, written by
Rolando Tinio, a
National Artist for Theater and Literature. Later that year, Aunor received the Centennial Honors for the Arts from the
Cultural Center of the Philippines, conferred to Filipinos who have made significant contributions to culture and the arts in the 20th century.
2000s In 2002, Aunor returned to Philippine television through her nightly drama show entitled,
Bituin, a
soap opera that was aired by
ABS-CBN from September 23, 2002, to May 23, 2003. It starred
Carol Banawa,
Desiree del Valle, Aunor and
Cherie Gil. In 2003, Aunor held her 50th birthday
Gold sell-out concert at the
Araneta Coliseum. In 2004, Aunor made
Naglalayag, her last film shot entirely in the Philippines before she went on hiatus for almost eight years. Aunor played a middle-aged judge having an affair with a young taxi driver, portrayed by
Yul Servo. Their performance won them international acting awards at the
31st Festival International du Film Indépendant de Bruxelles, where the film also won the jury prize. On December 1, 2005, Aunor received her own star on the
Philippines Walk of Fame as one of its first inductees. While in the United States, Aunor did two independently produced films namely
Ingrata and
Care Home. Even with only a limited run in a few Metro Manila theaters, the films, particularly
Care Home, was still able to score for Aunor critical praise and even nominations for Best Actress, specifically from
PMPC Star Awards for Movies in 2007.
2010s Aunor toured the United States and Canada performing to Filipino communities in a series of concerts at the start of the decade. In February 2010, she was shortlisted by the Green Globe Film Awards as one of the 10 Best Asian Actresses of the Decade. On March 23, 2010, Aunor was named one of the 10 Best Asian Actresses along with
Gong Li and
Maggie Cheung. She was the only Filipino actress to be shortlisted and win this award. Aunor also made two endorsement deals in Japan, including one for a skin clinic. However, due to a botched surgery in Japan, Aunor lost her singing voice, During her concert in May 2010 in
Toronto, Canada, Aunor tearfully announced that it would be her last concert as she could no longer sing. On August 2, 2011, Aunor returned to the Philippines. She signed a three-year contract with
TV5 and was cast in the mini series
Sa Ngalan ng Ina, where she played a widow who suddenly finds herself embracing the complexities of political life and government power. Aunor received a nomination from Golden Screen TV Awards and a best actress trophy from 2012 Star Awards for Television. This miniseries was her last collaboration with director Mario O'Hara before his death from leukemia. She also starred alongside
ER Ejercito in the historical film
El Presidente, a biopic of the first Philippine President
Emilio Aguinaldo intended for the
2012 Metro Manila Film Festival, in which she played the role of Aguinaldo's second wife Maria Agoncillo. Also in 2011, she received eight Lifetime Achievement Awards for film and music from different award giving bodies. In 2012, Aunor collaborated with the
Cannes best director awardee Brillante Mendoza for the film
Thy Womb which was part of the
69th Venice International Film Festival. Aunor played Shaleha, a barren Badjao midwife who helps her husband look for a wife who can bear a child. The film was nominated for
Golden Lion for Best Film and
Volpi Cup for best actress for Aunor. On the eve of the awards, Aunor was chosen by the "Premio Della Critica Indipendiente" as their best performer and gave her the Bisato d'Oro. In November 2012, Aunor won the
Asia Pacific Screen Award for Best Performance by an Actress and the film won the
Asia Pacific Screen Award for Achievement in Directing for Brillante Mendoza. By virtue of her nomination from the
Asia Pacific Screen Award, she became the first Filipino actor to be inducted as a member of Asia Pacific Screen Academy. She was also nominated at the 55th Asia Pacific Film Festival, Dubai International Film Festival, 43rd International Film Festival of India, and won Best Actress at the seventh Asian Film Awards. At the 2012 Metro Manila Film Festival, Aunor won her eighth best actress award from the Festival. Also in 2012, Aunor guested in the fantasy-drama TV series
Enchanted Garden, as a faith healer who happens to be a queen. She guested in
Third Eye. In 2013, she returned to TV in the soap opera,
Never Say Goodbye and was also cast in
Ang Kwento ni Mabuti an official entry to the first CineFilipino film Festival directed by acclaimed director Mes de Guzman. On May 21, 2013, Aunor celebrated her 60th birthday dubbed as "Nora at 60" at the Meralco Multi-Purpose Hall. On June 18, 2013, Aunor won the Gawad Urian Award for Best Actress for
Thy Womb. This was her 17th nomination and her seventh win. On August 30, 2013, Aunor won her fourth international Best Actress award from the third Sakhalin International Film Festival in Russia for the film
Thy Womb. In 2014, Aunor filmed her second tele-movie/miniseries with TV5 titled
When I Fall in Love, and directed by Joel Lamangan. She portrayed a wife who takes care of her terminally-ill husband. Aunor was honored as one of the "People of the Year" by People Asia magazine on January 21, 2014. In the promotional news of TV5, Aunor was announced to top-bill the musical-drama,
Trenderas, in which Aunor played the role of a famous singer who mysteriously disappeared at the height of her popularity. On February 2, 2014, Aunor received her second Ani ng Dangal Award from the
National Commission for Culture and the Arts (Philippines). On July 18, 2014, the
University of the Philippines College of Mass Communication awarded Aunor with the Gawad Plaridel Award for Television, Music and Film. Aunor made four films in 2014, including
Hustisya, which was part of the
10th Cinemalaya Independent Film Festival. This was the first time that Aunor had participated in the Film festival. The film was directed by Joel Lamangan and written by Ricky Lee. Aunor won her first Best Actress award from this festival. The film was also declared by Cinemalaya as the box-office winner during its weeklong run. The three other films were
Dementia, a psychological horror drama directed by Perci Intalan.
Padre de Pamilya and
Whistleblower, In 2012, Aunor received the Asian Achiever Award as Asia's Best Actress Awardee by the Asia Pacific Awards Council (APAC) led by consumer advocate Jonathan Navea. She again received the same accolade during the 26th Asia Pacific Excellence Awards on April 9, 2015. On May 16, 2015, Aunor won her eighth International Best actress for
Dementia which also won the Best Foreign Language Film at the St. Tropez International Film Festival in France. She also won the Lifetime Achievement Award at the 2015 ASEAN International Film Festival. In 2015, Aunor was recognized by several universities and colleges in the Philippines, naming her as a cultural Icon.
Bicol University presented her with the ONRA Award upon the initiative of
Ako Bicol Partylist Representative
Rodel Batocabe for bringing honor and pride to her fellow Bicolanos in particular, and to the country in general, through her achievements in the arts. The
Ateneo de Naga University gave her "Bulawan na Bikolnon" award for giving pride to the Bicol Region.
De La Salle University also recognized her with the "Gawada La Sallian para sa Sining" for her contributions to Philippine Arts. On September 17, 2015, Aunor was conferred the Gawad CPP para sa Sining for Film and Broadcast Arts by the
Cultural Center of the Philippines. At the
63rd FAMAS Awards on September 20, 2015, Aunor was recognized as the Iconic Movie Queen of Philippine Cinema. After consecutive nominations for
Thy Womb,
Ang Kwento ni Mabuti,
Dementia, and
Taklub, Aunor received her fifth consecutive and 21st
Gawad Urian for Best Actress nomination in 2017 for
Hinulid, her first film shot entirely in her native
Bicolano language.
2020s In 2020, Aunor appeared in the film
Isa Pang Bahaghari (Another Rainbow), with Phillip Salvador and
Michael de Mesa, directed by
Joel Lamangan. The film competed in the
2020 Metro Manila Film Festival. In May 2020 on her 67th birthday, during the
COVID-19 pandemic in the Philippines, Aunor appeared in the YouTube video
Lola Doc. In 2021, Aunor was chosen as one of the Best Actors and Actresses of the Decade (2010s) by the Manunuri ng Pelikulang Pilipino, the Filipino film critic group of the
Gawad Urian Award. In late 2021, Aunor was cast in her first antagonist role in the film
Kontrabida (
The Villain), directed by
Adolfo Alix Jr. The film competed at the sixth
Hanoi International Film Festival, winning the Network for the Promotion of Asia Pacific Cinema Prize for Best Asian Film. In June 2022, Aunor received the
National Artist of the Philippines award following Proclamation 1390 issued by President
Rodrigo Duterte. In 2023, Aunor starred in
Pieta, a drama-thriller directed by Alix, with
Alfred Vargas, Bembol Roco,
Gina Alajar, and Jaclyn Jose. She portrayed a mother who is going blind and suffering from early-onset Alzheimer's who meets her son just released from prison after 25 years. For her performance, Aunor won the Best Actress award at the 40th PMPC Star Awards for Movies. Aunor made a cameo appearance in the 2024 musical drama film and
Metro Manila Film Festival entry
Isang Himala, an adaptation of the 2018 theatrical play based on Aunor's 1982 film
Himala. In February 2025, Aunor starred in her final film titled
Mananambal, a horror film directed by Alix. Before her death, Aunor was supposed to star in a film with
Hilda Koronel. On May 4, 2025, Aunor was posthumously conferred with the
Presidential Medal of Merit from President
Bongbong Marcos for her services to the arts. ==In politics==