He considers himself one of the people who has moved the most in his life. Elvira Lindo was born in Cádiz, but soon the daughter of Antonia and Manuel would discover that his was called to be a nomadic life. His father’s work took them to Malaga, Tarragona, Madrid, among other places. “Why have parents with such an unstable life touched me”, she asked herself as a child.

Maybe they did it for give you stories to tell, although his father asked him, with a small mouth, not to write more about him. “Sometimes he told me: ‘It’s just this now’ and then I would go to the bar where he always went and they celebrated a lot and he made photocopies and distributed them,” he recalls.

That girl has ended up dedicating herself to the word. “If someone in the future wanted to write my biography it would be fun,” he points out to the cameras. But she continues to be a nomad: “I am from Cádiz, tomorrow from Madrid, in a few days from New York and in the fall Buenos Aires.”

Elvira Lindo She has been a journalist, actress, cabaret singer, screenwriter and film director. In short, she has everything that she has put before her. “I have taken even the frivolous very seriously,” she says. She has also been a writer, always with the theme of the family, one present and also absent, always as the central axis of her work.

In the latter, ‘In the Wolf’s Den’, he has relaxed the story of a young woman who keep a secret secret while traveling with his mother to a town in Valencia. A story that she left empty at the end. “She is a weird feeling that I have not had with other books. Something very intimate.” After this, only the wind knows where it will take her.