Goya Award for Best Original Song
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Goya Award for Best Original Song (Spanish: Premio Goya a la mejor canción original) is one of the Goya Awards, Spain's principal national film awards. The award was first presented at the fifteenth edition in 2001 with the first winner being the song "Fugitivas", written by Manuel Malou, Natboccara and JJ Chaleco for Miguel Hermoso's film of the same name.
Goya Award for Best Original Song | |
---|---|
Awarded for | Best Original Song |
Country | Spain |
Presented by | Academy of Cinematographic Arts and Sciences of Spain (AACCE) |
Currently held by | Rigoberta Bandini for "Yo solo quiero amor" from Love & Revolution (2023) |
Website | premiosgoya |
Spanish singer Leiva is the only person who has won the award more than once with two wins: in 2017 for "La llamada" from the musical Holy Camp! and in 2022 for "Sintiéndolo mucho" from the documentary Sintiéndolo Mucho. Composer Roque Baños holds the record of most nominations in the category with four nominations, followed by Joaquín Sabina and Luis Ivars, each with three nominations. Directors David Trueba, Rodrigo Cortés, Emilio Aragón, Paula Ortiz, Pablo Berger, Paco León and Paul Urkijo, all have been nominated as writers of co-writers for songs from their films, with Berger winning the award in 2012 for the song "No te puedo encontrar" from his film Blancanieves.