Eulàlia Ramon is an actress, photographer and film director.
Currently, she is immersed in various projects, highlighting her work as a director. In 2023, he directed his first short film, Divine Accounts, written by María Zaragoza, which has achieved more than 80 festival selections, 18 awards and a nomination for the Goya Awards in the category of best fiction short film. In 2024, he presents Agonía, his second fiction short film, which premiered at the Closing of the International Fantastic Film Festival of Catalonia.

As a photographer, she has collaborated with the artist Xavier Mascaró, with the painter Pepa Poch and in the selection of works for Carlos Saura’s Fotosaurs collection. Her work has been exhibited in various exhibition centers and galleries, such as the Andalusian Photography Center in Almería, the Antonio Gala Foundation in Córdoba, the Casa del Cine in Saint Petersburg, the Cervantes Institute in Moscow, the Casa Zavala in Cuenca, the Spain Now in London or the Spanish embassy in Abu-Dhabi.

Among her most notable works as an actress are the films Matar al Nani (Roberto Bodegas, 1988), That Thing with Feathers (Óscar Ladoire, 1988), The River That Takes Us (Antonio del Real, 1989), The Sea and Time ( Fernando Fernán Gómez, 1989), Alou’s letters (Montxo Armendáriz, 1990), The stunned king (Imanol Uribe, 1991), Offside (Fernando Fernán-Gómez 1991), The bird of happiness (Pilar Miró 1993), My name is Sara (Dolores Payás, 1999), Empty Hands (Marc Recha, 2003), Svensson Syndrome (Kepa Sojo, 2005), People in Places (Juan Cavestany, 2013), 75 days (Marc Romero, 2021), as well as his collaborations with director Carlos Saura in films such as ¡Dispara! (1993), Pajarico (1997), Goya in Bordeaux (1999), The Seventh Day (2004), Io don Giovanni (2006) and The King of the Whole World (2021), short films such as Goya, May 3 (2021) or the play The great theater of the world in the Naves del Matadero (2013).

Also on stage, her work with the National Theater Company stands out in The Suspicious Truth by Juan Luis de Alarcón directed by Pilar Miró in 1992, in After the Dream by Mario Camus the same year and in Three Defiant Acts by Woody Allen, Elaine May and David Mamet with a montage by José Pascual in 1996. She has also participated in dramatized readings and radio theater, such as Elvira Lindo’s Sound Fiction for RNE Reformatorio (2020), or Hansel and Gretel for Radioteatro de Navidad on Cadena Ser ( 2023). On television, her appearances in fictions such as La mujer de tu vida, produced by Fernando Trueba for TVE, stand out; ABC’s Harem, in which she appears alongside Omar Shariff and Ava Gardner; Truhanes for Tele5; What is a husband for?, by Rosa Vergés or Merlí. Sapere aude, Menna Fité (Movistar+ and CCMA, 2021). Also in this medium, she presented, together with Gran Wyoming and Óscar Ladoire, the TVE program A media voz and hosted the documentary series Amar el cine on TVE which, to this day, is still used as a pedagogical instrument in various European universities. .