Actress and model Vera Valdez, artistically known as Vera Barreto Leite, died on Wednesday, January 14, 2026, at age 89 in São Paulo. She had been battling complications from pulmonary insufficiency and was hospitalized after a domestic accident. The news was announced by the Teatro Oficina, where she shone for decades.
Vera Valdez, the artistic name of Vera Barreto Leite, was born in 1936 in Rio de Janeiro to a family of diplomats and artists. Daughter of actress Maria Barreto Leite, she grew up immersed in the world of theater and bohemia. At 15, in 1952, she moved to Paris, catching the eye of designer Elsa Schiaparelli and working as a model. She soon established herself as one of Brazil's first top models, walking for Christian Dior, Victoire Doutreleau, and in 1954, at 17, for Coco Chanel's return after a 14-year hiatus, alongside Marie-Hélène Arnaud.
Though fired from Chanel for absences, she walked again for the brand in 1971. In Brazil, she collaborated with labels like Maison Canadá and designer Dener Pamplona de Abreu. In the 1950s, she married actor Luís Linhares, with whom she had daughter Paula, but they separated after she posed nude for a magazine. In the following decade, she dated filmmakers like Louis Malle and Roger Vadim, and married Pedro de Moraes, son of Vinícius de Moraes, having daughter Mariana de Moraes, also an actress.
Valdez was among TV Globo's founders in 1965 and appeared in films such as 'The Naked Man' (1968) by Roberto Santos, 'The Cariocas' (1966) by Walter Hugo Khouri, and more recently 'Light in the Darkness' (2012) and 'Joy Is Proof of Nine' (2023) by Helena Ignez. Her last role was in 2024's 'Aunt Virginia' with Vera Holtz.
During Brazil's military dictatorship in the 1970s, she faced persecution: arrested for cocaine possession, tortured at Doi-Codi, and committed to a psychiatric hospital. She exiled to France with help from Bernardo Bertolucci and Louis Malle, returning in 1982 under the amnesty law. In the 1980s, she joined Teatro Oficina, performing in plays like 'The Bacchae', 'The Sertão', 'Razor in the Flesh', and 'King of the Candle' (2018). Two years ago, she starred in 'Human Voices', an adaptation of Jean Cocteau's 'The Human Voice', whom she met in the 1950s.
She had been treating pulmonary insufficiency for a year and suffered a domestic accident last week, leading to hospitalization. Teatro Oficina announced: “Today in the afternoon Vera passed. Fly, Vera! Etherna! So much love for this mannequin.” Artists like Debora Bloch and Matheus Nachtergaele mourned on social media. The wake is set for Thursday (15) in central São Paulo. She leaves two daughters, a granddaughter, and four great-grandchildren.