Invited to review her artistic and personal life, Noemí Alan surprised with the details of his hard story, especially in childhood. Where she even went so far as to tell of being abused by her own father, in a heartbreaking testimony for real secrets (America, Saturday 8 pm)
“When she was little she was so thin she looked like a toothpick. Bold, brunette, she was a bitch… and furious,” she commented with a laugh, when her impressive physique was highlighted during her time as a lookout in the 1980s.
Regarding the traumatic relationship she had with her father, she said that as a girl “My father had a lot of money because he was the first to make carts on the seafront. I remember him filling apple boxes with silver. She would put it in the trunk of the car, leave and come back when he ran out. Meanwhile, my mother worked and kept the money for her.”
However she and her mother went through hell because of that man. “Even though he was doing well out there, we were shoeless. But we were very scared of him because he was a boxer. My mother was very scared of him,” the actress said.
Subsequently, Noemí delved into her relationship with her father and left very harsh definitions. “Terror, that’s the feeling. He was sexually abusive. He couldn’t have a normal relationship or penetrate me, but he did other things to me,” she stated, indignantly Louis Ventura and her companions, for whom the actress lived as a child.
“One day he appeared in the garage where we lived, I was in bed… My mother had left me alone with him because the police had gone looking for him,” he said of a time when he had a bad time with his father.
Then he told the reason that led his mother to take the decision to separate and run away from the marital home, before a tragedy happened.
“The separation and when we left the house it was because he cornered her once by hitting (his mother) and I I took a kitchen knife and when I went to stab it my mother grabbed my hand. There she decided that she didn’t give up anymore and we had to go,” he said, broken with emotion.
For many years she never heard from her father again, until her husband Edgardo Moreira, convinced her to go see him and see if they could mend the bond. “I saw him balled up, he had nowhere to live. We gave him a room and a bathroom in a country house in San Vicente so he could be there,” the actress acknowledged.
His life dedicated to acting
Noemí Alan discovered that she wanted to be an actress when she went to do her first theater season in Mar del Plata with the galancitos. “That’s when I really understood what I wanted to do. It was the first time I was alone without my family and without having a place to live., because the first month the manufacturer canceled and left me without an apartment. I ended up sleeping in a room in the house that Darín and Calvo had rented.”
In the 80s he worked in cinema, theater and television with the greatest comedians of the moment, such as Gerardo Sofovich, Jorge Porcel and Juan Carlos Calabró. And until when Tato Bores. The nightlife in Buenos Aires was very strong and the nightclubs welcomed celebrities looking for relaxation after long hours of work.
“The whole Recoleta area was a world of its own. I lived in Villa del Parque e I took the 110 to the cemetery and a cab three blocks from thereso that they would see me arriving by taxi and not by bus,” she recalled.
His relationship with drugs
The actress stressed that it was her children who helped her get out of the world of drugs and saved her life. “In the beginning it was all fun and energy. Then over time it was all black, menacing. The people who broke into my house and I didn’t even know it. They used me the aguantadero department“.
Eventually, La Tana acknowledged that she had such a dark phase that she even considered committing suicide. “I thought how much better it was to take my own life, how it would have been less traumatic for my children, but there is no way less traumatic. I had train tracks in front of my house and I thought about it. But I called my daughter and she took me to a clinic.”
Source: Clarin