Angie Cepeda
Angie Cepeda, born Angélica María Cepeda Jiménez on August 2, 1974, in Cartagena, Colombia, is a Colombian actress celebrated for her versatile performances in telenovelas, films, and international television series.[1][2] Raised in Barranquilla by parents José Cepeda and Yadhira Jiménez, both lawyers, she followed her older sister Lorna Cepeda into acting, debuting in Colombian television in the early 1990s.[3] Her early role in the telenovela La Maldición del Paraíso (1993) earned her the India Catalina Award for Best New Actress in 1994, marking her as a rising talent in Latin American entertainment.[4] Cepeda's breakthrough arrived with the ensemble telenovela Las Juanas (1997), where she shared the India Catalina Award for Best Lead Actress, followed by her starring role as Fiorella in Pobre Diabla (2000), which became a major success across Latin America and showcased her dramatic range.[5] Transitioning to cinema, she achieved international acclaim for her portrayal of La Colombiana, a sex worker entangled in military intrigue, in the Peruvian film Pantaleón y las visitadoras (1999), adapted from Mario Vargas Llosa's novel.[6] She later starred as the Widow Nazaret in Mike Newell's adaptation of Gabriel García Márquez's Love in the Time of Cholera (2007), opposite Javier Bardem and Giovanna Mezzogiorno, further establishing her in global cinema.[7] Throughout her career, Cepeda has balanced Latin American projects with U.S. television appearances, including recurring roles as Adriana Chavando in Jane the Virgin (2014–2019), voicing Julieta Madrigal in the Disney animated film Encanto (2021), and as Violetta Franco in the Paramount+ series Halo (2022).[1][8][9][10] Her accolades include the Best Actress award at the Viña del Mar International Film Festival in 2004 for Sammy y Yo, a nomination for Best Actress at the 2017 Platino Awards for The Seed of Silence, and the prestigious India Catalina International Lifetime Achievement Award in 2024, recognizing her enduring contributions to Colombian and Ibero-American audiovisual industries.[11][12][13]Early life
Family background
Angélica María Cepeda Jiménez, known professionally as Angie Cepeda, was born on August 2, 1974, in Cartagena de Indias, Colombia.[3] Her parents, José Cepeda and Yadhira Jiménez, were both practicing lawyers whose professional lives centered on the legal field.[3][14] The couple divorced when Cepeda was young, which marked an early shift in the family's structure.[3] Cepeda is the youngest of three daughters, with two older sisters: Lorna Cepeda (who performs under the stage name Lorna Paz and is also an actress) and Ivette Cepeda, who has maintained a more private life.[3][15] Lorna's entry into acting would later serve as an inspiration for Cepeda's own career path.[2] The legal professions of her parents significantly shaped the family's dynamics, fostering an environment where expectations leaned heavily toward pursuing a career in law.[14] Both José and Yadhira actively opposed Cepeda's interest in acting, urging her instead to follow their footsteps into the legal field, a pressure that highlighted her early disinterest in the profession despite its prominence in her upbringing.[14] This familial emphasis on law contrasted with Cepeda's emerging creative inclinations, setting the stage for her divergence from expected paths.Upbringing and education
Following her parents' divorce, Angie Cepeda relocated to Barranquilla, Colombia, where she lived with her mother and two older sisters.[3][16] She spent her childhood and early adolescence in Barranquilla, completing her basic schooling there amid the coastal city's vibrant cultural environment.[3] In her late teens, Cepeda moved to Bogotá seeking broader opportunities, residing with an aunt during this transition.[3][17] Initially contemplating a career influenced by her parents' legal profession, she rejected pursuing law and instead nurtured a growing interest in the arts, particularly drama, which shaped her formative experiences.[3][17]Career
Early television and modeling
After growing up in Barranquilla, where the vibrant coastal culture shaped her expressive appeal, Angie Cepeda moved to Bogotá in the early 1990s to pursue opportunities in the entertainment industry. There, she signed with a modeling agency and began working as a model for various brands, marking her initial foray into the public eye through advertising and promotional campaigns.[17][18] Cepeda transitioned to acting shortly thereafter, making her television debut in 1993 in the role of Laura in the telenovela La Maldición del Paraíso, a production by RTI Colombia that aired from 1993 to 1994. This minor role provided her first exposure on screen, allowing her to gain experience amid a cast including established performers like Alejandra Borrero and Helena Mallarino.[19][17] In 1994, she secured small supporting roles that further built her visibility, notably as Merceditas Nariño in the TV mini-series Crónicas de una Generación Trágica, a two-episode dramatic production exploring generational themes. Her emerging presence in these early projects culminated in recognition at the India Catalina Awards, where she won Revelation Actress of the Year for her work in La Maldición del Paraíso. This accolade, presented by the Cartagena Film Festival, highlighted her potential as a fresh talent in Colombian television.[20][17]Telenovela breakthrough
Cepeda's telenovela breakthrough arrived with her role as Juana Valentina in the Colombian series Las Juanas in 1997, where she portrayed one of five illegitimate sisters discovering their heritage amid family secrets and societal prejudice. The production, broadcast on RCN Televisión, marked her rise to national prominence, attracting attention from producers for more prominent opportunities and establishing her as a rising star in Colombian television.[21][22] Her performance in Las Juanas earned her the Premio India Catalina for Best Lead Actress in a Telenovela in 1998, recognizing her ability to convey emotional depth in a narrative tackling social taboos like illegitimacy and gender roles. This accolade, along with a nomination for Best Lead Actress at the TVyNovelas Awards, affirmed her breakthrough status.[23] Cepeda solidified her leading status with the titular role of Fiorella Morelli in the Peruvian telenovela Pobre Diabla in 2000, a co-production with América Televisión that explored class disparities, inheritance disputes, and women's resilience in a turbulent family saga. The series' success across Latin America highlighted her versatility and broadened her appeal beyond Colombia, contributing to the regional influence of telenovelas addressing social inequities through strong female protagonists.[24][25] Through these roles, Cepeda helped shape the Colombian TV landscape by embodying characters that confronted social issues such as familial rejection and economic inequality, paving the way for more nuanced storytelling in the genre during the late 1990s and early 2000s.[26]Film transition
Following her breakthrough in telenovelas, which provided a launchpad for broader opportunities, Cepeda transitioned to feature films in the late 1990s and early 2000s, embracing roles that demanded greater depth and cinematic nuance. Her film debut occurred in 1996 with the role of Zulema in the Colombian-Italian-French co-production Ilona llega con la lluvia, directed by Sergio Cabrera, a drama exploring themes of friendship and adventure based on Álvaro Mutis's novel. In 1999, Cepeda starred as La Colombiana, a sex worker, in the Peruvian comedy-drama Pantaleón y las visitadoras (Captain Pantoja and the Special Service), directed by Francisco J. Lombardi and adapted from Mario Vargas Llosa's satirical novel about a military operation involving prostitutes. The film highlighted her ability to blend humor with sensuality, contributing to its selection for international festivals. Two years later, she took on a leading role in the Argentine comedy Samy y yo (Samy and Me), directed by Eduardo Milewicz, where she portrayed a woman navigating personal relationships alongside Ricardo Darín's character, a writer facing creative blocks. For this performance, she won the Best Actress award at the 2004 Viña del Mar International Film Festival.[27] Cepeda's early international exposure expanded in 2005 with Love for Rent (Amor en alquiler), an American-Colombian romantic comedy directed by Shane Edelman, in which she played Sofia, a Colombian immigrant and law student who enters a surrogacy arrangement to resolve visa issues—marking her first major English-language role and showcasing her versatility in cultural displacement narratives.[28] She followed this in 2007 with the supernatural thriller The Dead One (El muerto), directed by Brian Cox, portraying Maria, the mother of a young man resurrected as a folk hero, opposite Wilmer Valderrama; the film drew on Mexican legend to explore themes of identity and folklore.[29] This shift from telenovelas to film presented challenges, particularly adapting from television's rapid production pace—often completing episodes in 5-6 days—to film's extended preparation and shooting schedules, which allowed for more artistic depth but required greater patience and character immersion. Nonetheless, it fostered significant growth, enabling Cepeda to move beyond soap opera melodrama into more introspective dramatic and comedic portrayals that highlighted her range.[30]International and recent work
Cepeda received international recognition for her leading role as María del Rosario Durán in the Colombian drama La semilla del silencio (2015), earning a nomination for Best Actress at the 4th Platino Awards for Ibero-American Cinema in 2017, where she competed alongside performers like Emma Suárez and Sonia Braga.[12] This accolade highlighted her ability to portray complex, emotionally layered characters in films addressing social issues such as child abuse and family trauma, marking a pivotal step in her transition to broader Latin American and global audiences.[31] In 2021, Cepeda expanded her reach into Hollywood animation by voicing Julieta Madrigal, the nurturing matriarch of the Madrigal family, in Disney's Encanto, providing the English, Latin Spanish, and Italian dubs of the film.[32] The movie, a cultural milestone celebrating Colombian heritage, became a global box-office success and earned widespread acclaim for its representation of Latin American stories, with Cepeda's warm, grounded performance contributing to the character's resonance as a healer and mother figure.[32] Cepeda continued her international trajectory in television with recurring roles in high-profile series. In 2022, she portrayed Violetta Franco, a key figure in the human resistance, in the Paramount+ adaptation of Halo, based on the acclaimed video game franchise, appearing in the first season alongside Pablo Schreiber.[10] That same year, she played Mary, the devoted wife of salsa legend Joe Arroyo, in the Colombian biographical drama Rebellion, which explored the musician's personal struggles and triumphs, distributed internationally via Netflix.[33] More recently, Cepeda joined the cast of the drama Domestic Animals in 2024, a U.S.-set story about a domestic worker uncovering family secrets in Miami, produced in collaboration with Chile's Juntos Films.[34] In 2025, she starred in the Peruvian-Colombian-Uruguayan co-production Astronauta, directed by Paul Vega, portraying a supporting role in a narrative about a successful TV presenter's existential crisis, which was released in theaters that year.[35] In 2025, Cepeda reprised her role as Jimena García in a special collaboration for the Spanish series Los Protegidos: Un nuevo poder, premiering on December 14, 2025.[36] These projects underscore her ongoing evolution toward diverse, cross-border collaborations in both film and streaming platforms.Personal life
Family relationships
Angie Cepeda maintains a profound and enduring bond with her mother, Yadhira Jiménez, who served as the emotional cornerstone of the family following the divorce of her parents, both of whom were lawyers.[3] Yadhira, described as a loving, supportive, and resilient figure, provided unwavering guidance and stability during Cepeda's formative years, including periods when the family lived together in the aftermath of the separation. This close relationship continued to influence Cepeda's life, with her mother offering constant encouragement amid personal and professional challenges; Cepeda has reflected on Yadhira's strength as transformative, especially after her passing in 2003, which deepened her appreciation for familial ties.[37][38] Cepeda shares a particularly strong connection with her sister Lorna Cepeda, also an actress, forged through their parallel paths in the entertainment industry and mutual encouragement. The sisters have navigated shared experiences, such as industry pressures and creative pursuits, often supporting each other publicly through lighthearted collaborations like joint social media videos that highlight their sibling camaraderie. This bond has been a source of inspiration, with Lorna's established career in telenovelas serving as a motivational example for Cepeda during her own breakthroughs.[39] Her relationship with older sister Ivette Cepeda remains more private, as Ivette has chosen a low-profile life focused on family care rather than public endeavors, yet she provides steadfast behind-the-scenes support to her siblings. Throughout her career transitions, including moves to international projects, Cepeda has credited her family's collective emotional backing—rooted in these sibling dynamics and her mother's legacy—for helping her persevere through uncertainties and relocations.[15][40]Private life and residence
Angie Cepeda is currently single and has no children as of 2025. She has maintained a private approach to her romantic relationships throughout her career, avoiding public disclosures about her personal affairs. Cepeda prioritizes discretion in her personal life, focusing her public presence primarily on her professional endeavors. Cepeda's primary residence is in Mexico City, where she has been based in recent years, while retaining strong ties to Bogotá, Colombia, her long-term home base. She occasionally stays in the United States, including in cities like Los Angeles and Miami, to accommodate work-related commitments. Despite her international fame, Cepeda leads a low-profile lifestyle, emphasizing privacy over publicity in her day-to-day life.Awards and nominations
Television honors
Angie Cepeda's television honors primarily stem from her early work in Colombian telenovelas, where she garnered recognition for her breakout performances that showcased her versatility and emotional depth. These accolades, awarded by prominent industry bodies like the Premios India Catalina and TVyNovelas, marked her rise as a leading talent in Latin American soap operas during the 1990s. Her debut recognition came with the Premios India Catalina in 1994, where she won the Revelation of the Year award for her role in La Maldición del Paraíso, highlighting her emergence as a fresh face in Colombian television.[23] In 1998, Cepeda shared the Premios India Catalina for Best Lead Actress in a Telenovela for her portrayal of Juana Valentina in Las Juanas, an ensemble role alongside co-stars Catherine Siachoque, Xilena Aycardi, and Susana Torres, celebrating the production's innovative storytelling about five sisters discovering their heritage.[5][23] Cepeda also received several nominations from TVyNovelas in the late 1990s and early 2000s, including for Best Lead Actress for Las Juanas (1998) and Candela (1996), underscoring her consistent impact in the genre despite not securing additional wins during this period.[23]| Year | Award | Category | Work | Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1994 | Premios India Catalina | Revelation of the Year | La Maldición del Paraíso | Won |
| 1996 | TVyNovelas | Best Lead Actress in a Telenovela | Candela | Nominated |
| 1998 | Premios India Catalina | Best Lead Actress in a Telenovela | Las Juanas (shared) | Won |
| 1998 | TVyNovelas | Best Lead Actress in a Telenovela | Las Juanas | Nominated |
Film and international recognitions
Cepeda's early film debut earned her recognition at the Cartagena Film Festival in 1996, where she won the Best Newcomer award for her role as Zulema in Ilona llega con la lluvia.[41] This accolade highlighted her transition from modeling to acting in Colombian cinema. In 2004, Cepeda received the Best Actress award at the Viña del Mar International Film Festival for her performance as Lucía in the Argentine drama Sammy y yo.[11] The film, directed by Eduardo Milewicz, showcased her ability to portray complex emotional roles in international co-productions. Cepeda garnered further international acclaim with a nomination for Best Actress at the 4th Platino Awards in 2017 for her lead role as María del Rosario Durán in the Colombian thriller La semilla del silencio.[42] The nomination, announced by the Platino Awards organization, recognized her portrayal of a mother confronting family trauma. No individual film-specific recognitions were noted for her role as Virginia Vallejo in the 2017 biographical drama Loving Pablo. In 2024, Cepeda received the Premios India Catalina International Lifetime Achievement Award (Premio a la Trayectoria Internacional) for her contributions to Colombian and Ibero-American audiovisual industries.[43]Filmography
Television roles
Cepeda began her television career in Colombian telenovelas, marking her debut with a supporting role in the 1993 series La maldición del paraíso, where she appeared in all 120 episodes. She gained prominence with her breakthrough role as Mónica "La Smiling" Echeverría in the 1997 telenovela Las Juanas, a 113-episode production that showcased her versatility in ensemble casts.[21] In 1998, Cepeda starred as the titular character Luz María in the romantic telenovela Luz María, appearing across 176 episodes and earning acclaim for her lead performance opposite Christian Meier.[44] Her role as Fiorella Campoy in the 2000 Peruvian telenovela Pobre diabla spanned 158 episodes, portraying a resilient widow in a dramatic family saga that solidified her status in Latin American television. Cepeda transitioned to international miniseries with the part of Mara in Vientos de agua (2006), a 13-episode Spanish-Argentine production exploring immigration themes, directed by Juan José Campanella. She played Sol in the 2008 Spanish series Fuera de lugar, appearing in 8 episodes of the 11-episode run as a character navigating personal and relational conflicts. From 2010 to 2012, Cepeda portrayed Jimena García, a key figure with special abilities, in the Spanish fantasy series Los protegidos, appearing in 28 episodes across two seasons.[45] In the U.S. series Jane the Virgin (2014–2019), she guest-starred as Adriana Chavando in five episodes across seasons 2 and 3, adding depth to the show's telenovela-inspired narrative. Cepeda appeared as Dolores in the 2019 episode "No Hospital" of HBO's anthology series Room 104, a single installment focusing on family dynamics and supernatural elements.[46] Her role as bounty hunter Violetta Franco in the 2022 episode "Homecoming" of the Paramount+ series Halo contributed to the sci-fi adaptation's first season. In 2025, Cepeda reprised her role as Jimena García in the series Los protegidos: Un nuevo poder.[47]| Year | Title | Role | Episodes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1993 | La maldición del paraíso | Supporting role | 120 |
| 1997 | Las Juanas | Mónica "La Smiling" Echeverría | 113 |
| 1998 | Luz María | Luz María | 176 |
| 2000 | Pobre diabla | Fiorella Campoy | 158 |
| 2006 | Vientos de agua | Mara | 13 |
| 2008 | Fuera de lugar | Sol | 8 |
| 2010–2012 | Los protegidos | Jimena García | 28 |
| 2016–2017 | Jane the Virgin | Adriana Chavando | 5 |
| 2019 | Room 104 | Dolores | 1 |
| 2022 | Halo | Violetta Franco | 1 |
| 2025 | Los protegidos: Un nuevo poder | Jimena García | TBD |
Film roles
Cepeda began her film career in the late 1990s with roles in Latin American productions, gradually expanding to international features and voice work in animation.- 1996: Ilona llega con la lluvia, role: Lina, directed by Sergio Cabrera.
- 2000: Pantaleón y las visitadoras (Captain Pantoja and the Special Service), role: La Colombiana, directed by Francisco Lombardi.[6]
- 2002: Samy y yo, role: Carla, directed by Gustavo Montiel Pagés.
- 2005: Alquilados (Love for Rent), role: Sofia, directed by Juan Carlos Vásquez.
- 2007: El Muerto (The Dead One), role: Maria, directed by Brian Cox.
- 2007: Love in the Time of Cholera, role: Widow Nazaret, directed by Mike Newell.[48]
- 2010: Paff... ¡con o sin Fidel!, role: Claudia, directed by Luis Carlos Vanés.[49]
- 2011: Heleno, role: Diamantina, directed by José Henrique Fonseca.[50]
- 2013: A Night in Old Mexico, role: Patty Wafers, directed by Emilio Aragón.
- 2014: El elefante desaparecido (The Vanished Elephant), role: Cristina, directed by Javier Sarmiento.[51]
- 2014: Elvira, te daría todo, role: Elvira, directed by Manolo Nieto.
- 2015: Wild Horses, role: Maria Phillips, directed by Robert Duvall.
- 2017: Loving Pablo, role: Virginia Vallejo, directed by Fernando León de Aranoa.
- 2019: Kill Chain, role: Detective Baxter, directed by Steven A. Lee.
- 2021: Encanto, voice role: Julieta Madrigal, directed by Byron Howard, Jared Bush, and Charise Castro Smith.
- 2023: Dime lo que quieres, de verdad, role: Ana, directed by Carlos Sedes.
- 2024: Domestic Animals, role: Felicidad, directed by Rafael Martínez Moreno.[34]
- 2025: Astronauta, role: Claudia, directed by Paul Vega.[35]