Roser Capdevila i Valls (Barcelona, 23 January 1939) is a Spanish Catalan writer and illustrator, known internationally following the publication of the film adaptation of "Les tres bessones", The Triplets.[1] The characters of "Les tres bessones" were inspired by Capdevila's three daughters, Teresa, Anna, and Helena.
Biography
Interested in drawing from a young age, Roser Capdevila entered the Escola Massana [es] in Barcelona.
During the 1970s, Capdevila collaborated with the French edition of the children's magazine Cuca Fera. In 1979, she was a finalist for the Premi Apel·les Mestres de Literatura Infantil Il·lustrada [ca] (Apel·les Mestres Prize for children's and youth illustrated literature) for her short story, "La cosidora". In 1980, she began to write and illustrate children's books, as well as works of popularization and entertainment for young people and adults. She also began to illustrate textbooks for children with her drawings, characterized by a simple style, but with a fresh and dynamic caricature. Likewise, her work has stood out for a sense of humor and very original situations. In 1983, inspired by her three daughters, Teresa, Anna, and Helena, she created the characters of "Les tres bessones" (The Triplets), whose books have been translated into 35 languages and led to the creation of a television series in 1994 by the production company Cromosoma and in collaboration with Mercè Company, when at that time, there were no girl protagonists in cartoons, which was broadcast in 158 countries.[2]
In 2018, Capdevila published the memoir La nena que volia dibuixar (The Girl Who Wanted to Draw) (Angle Editorial) where she writes about her childhood: a world marked by the post-war period, the power of the Church, and by the persistent attempts to indoctrination, a world where, despite all this, she was able to create her own.[4]
"For me, drawing is breathing. The day I don't draw I'm dead, I'll be taken to the funeral home straight away. But, above all, that they leave me a pencil and a notebook next to me, just in case..." –Roser Capdevila
In 2022, as a special guest, she made her first Les Tres Bessones mural at the 7th edition of the Gargar Festival in Penelles. For four days, the illustrator, together with her daughters and a niece, painted a mural based on the tale Les Tres Bessones, en Ton i la Guida, an adaptation of the traditional tale "Hansel and Gretel". In the large-scale drawing, the three sisters can be seen climbing a tree as they watch the characters from the story make their way to the candy house where the witch lives. All this occurs under the attentive gaze of the "Bored Witch" who observes the scene from behind a tree located on the left margin of the work.[5]
Awards and honours
According to the Index Translationum of UNESCO, Roser Capdevila is the author in the Catalan language that has been translated more times than any other since she surpassed another author, Mercè Rodoreda.
1979 - Finalist in the Apelles Mestres award.
1998 - Nominated as a representative of the Spanish State in the international Hans Christian Andersen Award for illustration.
1984 - Illustration Award of the Generalitat de Catalunya.
1997 - Möbius Award for the Play and Learn CD-ROM.
1999 - National Audiovisual Award of the Department of Culture of the Generalitat of Catalonia.