His speech after winning the Goya for the best actor revelation for 'Champions' thrilled all of Spain and helped fight invisible barriers. Jesús Vidal now plays a madman in "Someone flew over the cuckoo's nest" , which is performed until September 29 at the Calderón Theater in Madrid.

How do you learn to live without seeing? I have to do with other senses. You have to use the functions that the autocomplete brain has. That is instinctive. People see me going down a subway ladder and think: "Anyone would say he is blind!" What do you see that we don't see? I don't like prejudging people. Can you read with 10% vision in one eye? Yes. What is the image you most miss? My family, childhood, snow ... Although I am blind, my world is full of images. Your speech in the Goya moved us all. Did you imagine the impact it was going to have? It was a speech thought with the heart, that was born from deep inside. I was sure what to say and to whom. "I would like to have a son like me." How many people have thanked you for that phrase? It was a vital response and a nod to one of the most beautiful phrases of 'Champions'. I am glad that many people have felt identified. However, the school continues to crush the different and who has any physical defect. Not only in school. The school is a microcosm. Everything that happens there is because it also occurs in society. You have to work in education and inclusion. Life is not a bubble, it is hard. You have to be strong and, if that happens, keep fighting forever. What qualifier have you received that has offended you the most? Sometimes people confuse the actor with the character. In the movie, you play an intellectual disabled person and the viewers think that you are in real life, don't you? It doesn't offend me either, but I'm shocked that someone who talks to me 10 minutes, thinks I'm having an intellectual disability. The positive side may be that it helps to change the prism one has over those people. Singer Marc Anthony dedicated his prize to the character of the year "to all who said no." How many told you? They told me no and they said yes. To those who told me no, to do pretty. How was your character forged? My father always taught me to be very fighter and competitive with myself. Try to do my best, always. Who did you disobey in your childhood? Almost everyone. Learning consists in making mistakes. When you're a child, you don't always have to obey. What is the most widespread prejudice that exists towards the blind? Sometimes they think that we are inexpressive people or that we are going to develop worse. A blind man can do almost anything. Does paternalism bother you? Yes. When people come to me and talk to me with paternalism, I like to teach them a little. I am neither a hero nor I am a champion, I just do not see. Therefore, I do not believe myself better than anyone. Obviously, it is something that differentiates me from other people. Is fear the greatest disability? Yes, the fear of the different, the different, of not being able to do things ... 'Champions' is a film that has broken many invisible barriers.The fear of family members of people has been broken disabled to let them fly. Many times their wings were cut. Is there too much overprotection? Yes, too much "you won't be able to do this," "they'll laugh at you," "be careful," "don't try." Now, they've seen that they can too. For them and for society it has been a great change. I have seen how women adore Gloria Ramos, who is an actress who makes herself loved and transcends the condition of having Down syndrome. People start to see 'Champions' and it is not considered that these people are different. Empathize, laugh and cry with them. Actor Pablo Pineda told me that he had Down syndrome and was very honored. Should we be proud of what one is? Well, I am neither proud nor I stop being proud of not seeing. It is simply something that has come to me. I am neither proud nor ashamed.Interpets a madman, how many times did they lick you when you said you wanted to be an actor? I had been an amateur actor for a while and, seven years ago, I began to dedicate myself professionally. The people who knew me accepted it very well and supported me a lot. In my case, they didn't call me crazy. Although everyone is surprised when you leave everything to devote to what you really want. The work 'Someone flew over the cuckoo's nest' is a metaphor of today's society, so controlled by the Internet and by mobile phones.Yes, by Internet, by the system, by the politically correct ... There are several vectors that control us and everyone who deviates from that control and that almost magnetic power pays a price. That's what the work is about, the search for freedom. What is the price to pay? You can pay a price at a social, labor or psychological level. You can pay many prices. Do we live in a society 'lobotomized' by mobiles? I don't know if it is lobotomized, but now people are walking crouched looking at the mobile. Before the people they found out who they were next to and that is changing. Who would be the 'Ratched' nurse of today? The politically correct or also certain type of establishment, which shuns the diverse. Is there now more fear of freedom than before? Yes. Unfortunately, people put labels and whoever escapes them is judged. There are some external powers that manipulate us, who are they? Globalization has its good things, but also, if we think, there are four or five brands that they handle us. Google, Facebook, Apple are becoming the masters of the universe without finding any resistance. We are being piloted by these big companies. There is a false sense of freedom, but they know where we are going, what we want to buy ... We are totally guarded. Is there a lot of blind politician? Blindness may be in society. Why do right-wing politicians understand each other and left-wing politicians don't? Politics, I prefer not to speak. I would like everyone to understand each other. THE LAST QUESTION. Philologist, actor, journalist and, now, you also publish a book "Waiting room", what do you want to tell us? I tell part of my experiences as a newspaper for three years. People will be able to see how the Jesus Vidal person is, his family, his friends, his tastes ... And the Jesus Vidal writer. It has part of newspaper, fiction and poetry. I think that for young people this book can be a very nice read.

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