ACTOR

Rodrigo de la Serna

1976 - Today

Photo of Rodrigo de la Serna

Icon of person Rodrigo de la Serna

Lionel Rodrigo de la Serna (Spanish: [roˈðɾiɣo ðe la ˈseɾna]; born 18 April 1976) is an Argentine actor. He is known for playing Alberto Granado in the 2004 biopic The Motorcycle Diaries and Palermo in the Netflix series Money Heist. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Rodrigo de la Serna is the 5,949th most popular actor (down from 5,627th in 2019), the 538th most popular biography from Argentina (down from 513th in 2019) and the 27th most popular Argentinean Actor.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Rodrigo de la Serna by language

Loading...

Among ACTORS

Among actors, Rodrigo de la Serna ranks 5,949 out of 13,578Before him are William Hopper, Gil Gerard, Yevgeny Vesnik, Bill Hader, Jang Keun-suk, and Laura Leighton. After him are Strother Martin, Laverne Cox, Edward Arnold, Brian Aherne, Peter Mark Richman, and Sidney Blackmer.

Most Popular Actors in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1976, Rodrigo de la Serna ranks 192Before him are Gilberto, Ro Khanna, Isha Koppikar, Takashi Imoto, Angelos Basinas, and Rasho Nesterović. After him are Kwon Sang-woo, Amy Acker, Laura Alonso, Ruby Lin, Desmond Harrington, and Bizarre.

Others Born in 1976

Go to all Rankings

In Argentina

Among people born in Argentina, Rodrigo de la Serna ranks 538 out of 1,154Before him are Horacio Accavallo (1934), Aníbal Tarabini (1941), Cristina Rota (1945), Gustavo Alfaro (1962), Alberto Mariotti (1935), and Alberto Zozaya (1908). After him are Gustavo Dezotti (1964), Dick Haymes (1918), Gilda (1961), Jorge Carrascosa (1948), Jorge Griffa (1935), and Alberto Demiddi (1944).

Among ACTORS In Argentina

Among actors born in Argentina, Rodrigo de la Serna ranks 27Before him are Cris Morena (1956), Amelia Bence (1914), Sebastián Rulli (1975), Darío Grandinetti (1959), Néstor Pitana (1975), and Cristina Rota (1945). After him are Dick Haymes (1918), Niní Marshall (1903), Graciela Borges (1941), Zully Moreno (1920), Pedro Quartucci (1905), and Leonardo Sbaraglia (1970).