Leila Diniz
Born 1945 (age 27) · Niterói, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Appears in 37 titles

Leila Roque Diniz (25 March 1945 – 14 June 1972) was a Brazilian television, movie and theatre actress, whose liberal ideas and attitudes about sex had raised the discontent of both the feminists and the Brazilian military government of the 1960s. Born in a middle-class family and the daughter of a communist activist, Leila worked as a kindergarten teacher at age 15. At age 17, she met movie director Domingos de Oliveira, with whom she lived until age 21. Between 1962 and 1964 she had minor roles on stage. In 1965, Diniz started working in television, where she made several telenovelas and various commercials. In 1967, she also started to make movies. She died on 14 June 1972, aged 27, at the peak of fame, coming back from a movie festival in Australia, where she won a Best Actress award for the movie Mãos Vazias ("Empty Hands"), in the Japan Airlines Flight 471 crash in India.

Filmography

All the Women in the World
6.9
All the Women in the World
1966
as Maria Alice
Dangerous Game
5.8
Dangerous Game
1967
as Servant (segment "Divertimento")
The Alienist
6.3
The Alienist
1970
as Eudóxia
Hunger for Love
5.1
Hunger for Love
1968
as Ulla
Improvised and Purposeful: Cinema Novo
7.5
Improvised and Purposeful: Cinema Novo
1967
as Self (archive footage)
A Public Opinion
6.4
A Public Opinion
1967
The Naked Man
5.9
The Naked Man
1968
as Mariana
Os Paqueras
6.3
Os Paqueras
1969
as Ela mesma
Mãos Vazias
5.0
Mãos Vazias
1971
as Ida
Love, Carnival and Dreams
4.7
Love, Carnival and Dreams
1972
as Pirata
A Madona de Cedro
7.5
A Madona de Cedro
1968
as Marta
Mulheres de Cinema
10.0
Mulheres de Cinema
1978
as Self (archive footage)
Já que Ninguém me Tira Para Dançar
8.0
Já que Ninguém me Tira Para Dançar
2021
as Self (archive footage)
Edu, Coração de Ouro
7.0
Edu, Coração de Ouro
1968
as Tatiana
Corisco, o Diabo Loiro
8.0
Corisco, o Diabo Loiro
1969
as Dadá
Leila Para Sempre Diniz
4.0
Leila Para Sempre Diniz
1976
as Self (archive footage)
10.0
O Donzelo
1971
as Leila
Domingos
2.0
Domingos
2009
as (archive footage)
Celebração - 100 Anos do Cinema Nacional
Mineirinho, Vivo ou Morto