Stage in
The Belle of Amherst, 1980 Summoned by actor and director
Lautaro Murúa to appear as Donna Natividad in the third movie version of
Un Guapo del 900, China Zorrilla's film debut came late in 1971 at age 49. The following summer she made replaced actress
Ana María Campoy in
Butterflies are Free, which was performed in
Mar del Plata. She settled in Buenos Aires. Her stay coincided with the civilian-military dictatorship in Uruguay (1973–1985), which forced her to stay abroad. Zorrilla expressed her solidarity by protecting and helping Uruguayans flee the dictatorship. During that period, she was banned by the
military regime from performing in Uruguayan theatres. After the country's return to democracy in the 1980s, Zorrilla made a triumphal comeback at the Teatro Solís as Emily Dickinson. During the mid-1970s and 1980s, Zorrilla toured and performed nationally and internationally, including the
Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts. On stage she has portrayed historical figures such as
Emily Dickinson in
William Luce's
The Belle of Amherst, Monica Ottino's
Victoria Ocampo,
Mrs. Patrick Campbell in
Jerome Kilty's
Dear Liar: A Comedy of Letters. Zorrilla performed in plays by
Jean Cocteau,
Lucille Fletcher, Oscar Viale, and fellow countryman Jacobo Langsner who wrote several plays for her. She reprised one of her theater earlier successes, the part of Judith Bliss in
Hay Fever. In 1995, she appeared in Buenos Aires's main opera house, the
Teatro Colón as
Persephone in
Stravinsky and
Gide's
Perséphone. Zorrilla adapted, directed, and produced plays and musicals:
Goldoni's
Servant of Two Masters,
Reginald Rose's
Twelve Angry Men,
Georges Feydeau's
A Flea in Her Ear and
Neil Simon's
Lost in Yonkers. In the last decade, she won four awards as sculptor
Helen Martins in
Athol Fugard's
The Road to Mecca and as Eve in an adaption of
Mark Twain's ''
Eve's Diary''.
Film and TV After her debut in 1971 as Mother Natividad in Murua's
Un guapo del 900, Zorrilla appeared in more than 40 Argentinian movies. In 1973, she became a popular star in
Alberto Migré's soap operas. In 1984, she won Best Actress at the La Habana Film Festival for "Darse Cuenta". She performed in
Summer of the Colt (a Canadian coproduction),
Maria Luisa Bemberg's ''Nobody's Wife
, The Jewish Gauchos
, the coproduction The Plague'' (starring
William Hurt and
Raúl Juliá),
Edgardo Cozarinsky's
Guerriers et captives,
Manuel Puig's "Pubis Angelical",
Adolfo Aristarain's
Lasts Days of the Victim, and in the Argentine
black comedy Esperando la carroza (
Waiting for the Hearse). Later, Zorrilla earned international recognition for her performances in
Conversaciones con mamá in 2005 (2004 Best Actress Award at the
26th Moscow International Film Festival and the
Málaga Film Festival) and in
Elsa & Fred, which won her several awards, including the
Silver Condor for Best Actress. == Death ==