Antonio Banderas Says Hollywood Once Limited Him to Villain Roles Early in His Career

By the early ’90s, Hollywood had already perfected a quiet typecasting. Faces were mapped to functions before they were ever allowed to become characters. Denzel Washington could command moral authority but was often steered into roles that carried the burden of representation. Salma Hayek was initially framed through hyper-stylized sensuality. And yet, right in the middle of this system arrived Antonio Banderas, not as an accessory to someone else’s story, but as its axis.
In The Mask of Zorro, he was myth, romance, velocity, the hero who moved the narrative rather than interrupting it. Almost three decades after Zorro, Banderas is finally articulating the rules he was once expected to obey.
Antonio Banderas on the rules he was meant to follow
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In a recent interview with The Times of London, Banderas laid out the blunt reality of his early Hollywood years.
“They said, ‘You are here, like the Blacks and the Hispanics, to play the bad guys,’” he recalled.
“The problem was a few years later I had a mask, hat, sword and cape and the bad guy was Captain Love, who was blond and had blue eyes.”
What makes that reversal significant is how deliberately Banderas diversified his early roles. He moved from the emotional precision of Philadelphia to the decadent menace of Interview with the Vampire, then into the kinetic folklore of Desperado and the operatic staging of Evita alongside Madonna.
By the time Zorro arrived, opposite Anthony Hopkins and Catherine Zeta-Jones under Martin Campbell, he had already been testing the elasticity of the roles available to him. Later, his turn in Puss in Boots extended that disruption into animation.
And yet, even as Hollywood expanded to accommodate him, Banderas began to step away from it.
A return to Málaga: Rewriting the final act
In 2017, a heart attack forced a recalibration that no career strategy could anticipate. As Antonio Banderas told The Times,
“Mine was a really serious warning… It changed the way I look at life.”
The transatlantic rhythm of his career, split between industries, time zones, and expectations suddenly felt secondary to something more fundamental: where and how he wanted to live. That answer took him back to Málaga, Spain. He sold his private jet, quit smoking, and invested in a theatre, Teatro del Soho, a return to performance in its most immediate, unmediated form.
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“Faced with death, it made me look back and realize that I am, in fact, a theatre actor,” he said.
While Banderas has physically stepped back from Hollywood, the industry has not quite released him. He continues to take on projects that feel deliberately off-center, most recently joining Danny Trejo in the fantastical sports comedy Armadillo United, a film that reportedly follows a young football team’s surreal journey toward a global tournament
Antonio Banderas outgrew the system that created typecasting, rewriting both his roles and his geography on his own terms. The question now is whether Hollywood ever fully understood him.
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What do you think, did Banderas change Hollywood’s perception of Latino heroes, or was he always operating beyond its limits? Share your thoughts.
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Edited By: Hriddhi Maitra
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