Veteran Hollywood star Susan Sarandon on Friday praised the Spanish government’s support for Gaza, saying it was “on the right side of history”.“I think Spain is doing an incredible job,” Sarandon, her voice trembling with emotion, told reporters in Barcelona. She lauded Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez and actors such as Oscar-winner Javier Bardem for taking a strong public stand in support of Palestine.“When you turn on the TV and see how strong Spain is and how clear you are morally on these issues, it makes you feel less alone,” Sarandon said.
Susan Sarandon on her absence from films
Speaking to reporters, the Oscar winner revealed why she has been relatively absent from films. “I was fired by my agency for marching and calling for a ceasefire in Gaza,” she said and went on to add, “It even became impossible for me to appear on TV. I couldn’t do any major film or anything connected with Hollywood.”She went on to add, “I found agents ultimately in England and Italy and I work there. I just did a film in Italy. I know this talent director that hired me, he was told not to hire me. He didn’t listen, but they had that conversation. I currently specialise on tiny films with directors who have never directed and in independent films.”
Susan Sarandon on censorship
The star of “Thelma and Louise” called Spain’s position “so important” in the United States, which she described as “a place where you feel repression and censorship”.Spain’s Sanchez has been one of the most outspoken critics of Israel’s war on Gaza, becoming the most senior European leader to refer to the conflict as a “genocide”.“Whenever I have seen him, he has been on the right side of history and also said it in a very clear way.” Sarandon said of Sanchez, describing him as “handsome and tall”.Sanchez thanked Sarandon, writing on X that “it is so moving for me that someone the whole of Spain has admired and respected for years has made such a wonderful public statement about our country”.
Susan Sarandon to receive lifetime achievement award
Sarandon is in Barcelona to receive a lifetime achievement honour at Spain’s top film awards, the Goyas.She won the 1996 Best Actress Oscar for “Dead Man Walking”, where she played a nun who supports a man sentenced to death.
