Si Dios me quita la vida
Si Dios me quita la vida | |
---|---|
Genre |
Telenovela Romance Drama |
Created by | Marissa Garrido |
Written by |
María Zarattini Vittoria Zarattini |
Directed by |
Jorge Fons Enrique Lizalde |
Starring |
Daniela Romo César Évora Enrique Lizalde Omar Fierro Rafael Rojas Adriana Roel Luis Felipe Tovar |
Theme music composer |
Luis Demetrio Bebu Silvetti |
Opening theme | Si Dios me quita la vida by Daniela Romo |
Ending theme | Voy by Daniela Romo |
Country of origin | Mexico |
Original language(s) | Spanish |
No. of episodes | 125 |
Production | |
Executive producer(s) |
Pedro Damián Juan Osorio |
Location(s) |
Filming Televisa San Ángel Mexico City, Mexico |
Cinematography |
Carlos Sánchez Zúñiga Juan Carlos Frutos |
Running time | 21-22 minutes |
Production company(s) | Televisa |
Distributor | Televisa |
Release | |
Original network | Canal de las Estrellas |
Picture format | 480i SDTV |
Audio format | Dolby Digital 5.1 |
Original release | February 20 – August 11, 1995 |
Chronology | |
Preceded by | Imperio de Cristal |
Followed by | María la del Barrio |
Related shows |
La leona (1971) Una mujer marcada (1979) A leona (1982) La Leona (2016) |
Si Dios me quita la vida (English title: If God takes away my life) is a Mexican telenovela produced by Pedro Damián and Juan Osorio for Televisa in 1995.[1] This is a remake of the 1971 telenovela La leona starred by Amparo Rivelles and Ernesto Alonso.
Daniela Romo and César Évora starred as protagonists, while Omar Fierro and Alma Muriel starred as antagonists.
Plot
María Sánchez Amaro is a girl from a wealthy family, educated in the moral habits of the 20s, whose live revolves around three men: Alfredo, the seducer, whom she married and procreate a child, Enrico, mature man, noble and protector, with whom he formed a second marriage, and Antonio, who teaches her the promise of true love.
After suffering abuse and betrayal by Alfredo, she is alone with her daughter when he goes to jail. She goes forward with his beautiful voice, but when he was released he returns to harass, María falls into the arms of Enrico, captivated by his love and goodness, and therein lies the love and protection that she has always yearned.
Antonio then appears, as a man who received protection from Enrico when he fled his country, accused of a crime he did not commit. Enrico does not only work but also gave him the same affection that he gave his own son. Antonio falls madly in love with the wife of the man who most wants and respects, and she does, too, although both try to resist this tormented and impossible love.
Cast
Actor | Character |
---|---|
Daniela Romo | María Sánchez Amaro |
César Évora | Antonio Foscari |
Enrique Lizalde | Enrico de Marchi |
Omar Fierro | Alfredo Román |
Rafael Rojas | Francesco de Marchi |
Adriana Roel | Doña Fedora Foscari |
Luis Felipe Tovar | Gregorio "Goyo" Jiménez |
Julieta Egurrola | Antonieta Vidal |
Martha Ofelia Galindo | Gilda |
Alonso Echánove | Tomás Esquivel |
José Elías Moreno | Raúl Guevara |
Karyme Lozano | Esther "Teté" Román Sánchez |
Blanca Guerra | Virginia Hernández |
Fernando Balzaretti | Santiago Hernández |
Wendy de los Cobos | Dinorah Moreno |
Alma Muriel | Eva de Sánchez Amaro/de Hernández |
Gustavo Rojo | Don Jesús Sánchez Amaro |
Tiaré Scanda | Rosario |
Amparo Garrido | Griselda |
Renée Varsi | Lucía |
Juan Carlos Colombo | Teniente Pablo García |
Jorge Poza | Claudio |
Jesús Ochoa | León |
Kala Ruiz | Rosita |
Plutarco Haza | Hugo |
Alan Fierro | |
Roberto Miquel | |
Martha Mariana Castro | |
Andrea Noli | |
María Dolores Oliva | |
Mario Prudom | |
Lucía Paillés | |
Juan Carlos Barreto | |
Raúl Azkenazi | |
Alec Von Bargen | |
Ilean Almaguer | |
Minerva Padilla | |
Gustavo Munguía | |
Ricardo Vera | |
Alfredo Gutiérrez | |
Enrique Borja Baena |
Awards
Year | Award | Category | Nominee | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|
1996 | 14th TVyNovelas Awards | Best Leading Actor | Enrique Lizalde | Won |
Best Supporting Actor | Rafael Rojas | Nominated | ||
Best Decor | Sandra Cortés | Won |
References
- ↑ "Si Dios me quita la vida" (in Spanish). alma-latina.net. Archived from the original on September 11, 2011. Retrieved March 14, 2016.
External links
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