Television Luis Zahera tells in La Resistencia what they always ask him for being Galician

Luis Zahera was in La Resistencia on Monday, February 13, two days after winning the Goya for best supporting actor for his work in As bestas

Television Luis Zahera tells in La Resistencia what they always ask him for being Galician

Luis Zahera was in La Resistencia on Monday, February 13, two days after winning the Goya for best supporting actor for his work in As bestas. in the space of

Grison recalled that on his previous visit to the 'late show', which took place in February 2022, he had brought crabs and other products from his land. The interpreter took advantage of the occasion to tell an anecdote. "If you are Galician, you get to a series and not here, because they must be very healthy people, but on Telecinco, which must be all...", he commented without finishing the sentence.

"They come down and tell me: 'Hello, you're Luis Zahera, right? Do you go to Galicia a lot?'" he said. The guest explained that this question made him suspicious: "They asked me for a couple of crabs. The first time I played dumb and said 'I can't bring you crabs on the plane'." The presenter asked: "But spider crabs as a drug metaphor?" He confirmed it: "As a metaphor for cocaine from the movie Airbag." Then he finished off with a laugh: "I said no and then I brought him five."

David Broncano observed that Luis Zahera's hair had grown since his previous visit to La Resistencia, since a year earlier he had appeared on the program with a shaved head. "He looks a bit like Wolverine," Grison pointed out. Touching his nose, the guest blurted out: "Ah, because of the paw, right? It's the joke they tell Galicians."

The driver of the format expressed when he understood what he meant: "I am very far from drug metaphors." The actor pointed out: "Well, that's what I live on. What drug did I not sell in a television series? I sold everything." He remembered his time in Sin tetas no hay paraíso and the characters he has brought to life in other productions: "I always sell drugs or kill."

The comedian said: "It is true that you have never been given a notary paper." Zahera stressed that he almost always has to be the villain and asked: "I want them to give me snogging papers all the time." The interviewee concluded: "The problem is not being pigeonholed, the problem is not working."

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