Antonio Banderas
Antonio Banderas, born in Málaga, Spain, didn’t exactly grow up dreaming of Hollywood. Actually, he was all about soccer—until he busted his foot at 14 and got sidelined for good. That’s when he caught the acting bug after seeing a wild production of "Hair." He jumped in with both feet, studying drama and performing in tiny theaters, sometimes landing in trouble with Franco’s regime for, you know, being a little too bold on stage. Arrests? Yeah, more than once.
By 19, he was broke in Madrid, waiting tables and hustling for modeling gigs. He snagged a spot with Spain’s National Theatre and caught the eye of director Pedro Almodóvar, kicking off a wild run in provocative films through the ‘80s. His onscreen kiss with a man in "La ley del deseo" made waves, and his work with Almodóvar set him up for global fame.
When Hollywood called, he barely spoke English, but that didn’t stop him. "The Mambo Kings" was his big American break, and soon he was starring alongside Tom Hanks in "Philadelphia," then slicing it up as Zorro. He trained hard for that—sword fighting, horse riding, the whole nine yards. Banderas kept the hits coming: "Evita," "Frida," voicing Puss in Boots, and directing his own movie with then-wife Melanie Griffith. People magazine even named him one of the world’s most beautiful people. Not bad for a kid from Málaga.