Sin vergüenza (telenovela)

Sin Vergüenza

L-R: Maite, Paloma, Fernanda, Renata
Created by Isamar Hernández
Developed by Valentina Párraga
Starring Gaby Espino
Ivonne Montero
Margarita Ortega
Paola Toyos
Country of origin Colombia
United States
Italy
Original language(s) Spanish
Italian
No. of episodes 86
Production
Executive producer(s) Hugo León Ferrer
Producer(s) Oscar Guarin
Location(s) Bogotá, Colombia Rome, Italy
Camera setup Multi-camera
Running time 42-45 minutes
Release
Original network Telemundo
Picture format NTSC
Audio format Stereophonic sound
Original release April 16, 2007 – August 21, 2007
Chronology
Followed by La Esclava Isaura

Sin Vergüenza (Spanish pronunciation: [sim berˈɣwensa], No Shame/Shameless) is a Spanish-language telenovela produced by Telemundo and RTI Colombia.[1][2] This limited-run series about four beautiful, yet very different women, resembles a Latin version of Sex in the City meets Desperate Housewives.[3][4] Venezuelan actress Gaby Espino stars.[5] The series ran up to three seasons and up to 45 minutes with commercials.

Plot

Sin's stars

Telemundo debuted Sin Vergüenza on weeknights at 10 p.m. ET/PT.[6] After the early weeks received disappointing ratings, it moved to daytime, airing weekdays at 1 p.m. ET/PT from May 7 until August 21, 2007.

Characters

Filmed in Bogotá, this steamy serial features four vivacious, sensual and self-willed heroines, who share an intense friendship and co-own a lingerie store called Sin Vergüenza.

Inseparable since childhood, these passionate women share the most intimate secrets with one another, including romances, adventures and heartaches.[6] Each of them has her own unique personality and seeks love, companionship and fulfillment in a different way.[6] This charming quartet realizes the modern world is not the fairy tale that they dreamed about long ago.

Cast

Main Cast

Actor Character Known as
Gaby Espino Renata Sepulveda Main heroine. Friend of Maite, Fernanda and Paloma, in love with Raimundo; later adoptive mother of Gabriel
Ivonne Montero Maite Contreras Main heroine. Mother of Vicente. Max´s wife
Margarita Ortega Fernanda Montes Main heroine. Wife of Esteban, sister of Raimundo, mother of Ana and Isabel
Paola Toyos Paloma San Miguel Main heroine. Ex-wife of Julian, mother of Roque, Candelaria and Abril
Javier Gómez Raimundo Montes Husband of Meme, father of Paola and Claudio, in love with Renata
Luis Ernesto Franco Kike ex-Boyfriend of Maite
Jorge Aravena Esteban del Rio Husband of Fernanda, father of Ana and Isabel, colleague of Raimundo and Meme
Salvador del Solar Julian Gutierrez Actor, ex-husband of Paloma, father of Roque and Candelaria
Alejandro de la Madrid Rafael Valdez Boyfriend of Paloma
Diana Quijano Mercedes 'Meme' del Solar Villain. Wife of Raimundo, mother of Paola and Claudio. Arrested by the police
Estefania Godoy Paola Montes Daughter of Meme and Raimundo, in love with Kike
Andres Fierro Claudio Montes Son of Meme and Raimundo
Jose Julian Gaviria Vicente Contreras Son of Maite and Max
Cristobal Lander Cristobal Gonzalez Villain. Father of Manuela.killed by the police.''
Alfredo Ahnert Max Aldana ex-Husband of Grace, father of Vicente and Sara. Maite´s husband
Laila Vieira Grace de Aldana Villain. ex-Wife of Max, mother of Sara. Arrested by the police
Lady Noriega Silvia Mother of Renata
Natalia Giraldo Teresa Contreras Mother of Maite
Danilo Santos Mariano Garcia Villain. Colleague of Meme, father of Matilde. killed by Renata
Ines Prieto Ruth Housekeeper in Paloma's house
Ivett Zamora Nelly Maid in Fernanda's house
Luz Marina Martelo Clara Meme's secretary
Martha Liliana Calderon Beatriz Montoya Doctor, ex-friend of Grace, mother of Matilde
Juliana Riano
Martin Galindo
Valeria Celis
Valeria Galindo

Production notes

This show is also known as Cuatro Rosas ("Four Roses") and 4 Lives... For Love.[11] It is based on the 2006 TVN comedy-drama Entre Medias ("In Between"). The four heroines parallel the four temperaments.

On-air promotions for this serial began on Telemundo on March 2, 2007. The network originally announced back in 2006 that the show would join its daytime lineup, airing at 1 p.m. ET/PT,[12] which is where it ultimately wound up. Telemundo originally planned to run 120 original hours from Monday to Friday over about 26 weeks, but the order was apparently cut to 80 hours.[13] Only 14 episodes aired in prime time, three of which were cut to a half hour. Recaps of those shows aired during the first week in daytime. During the initial run, Telemundo broadcast English subtitles as closed captions on CC1,[6] but abruptly dropped them during the afternoon time slot.

Hugo León Ferrer was executive producer. Venezuelan screenwriter Valentina Párraga originally developed the teleplay but dropped out and was replaced by another Venezuelan screenwriter, Isamar Hernández, who made it resemble a story she wrote on early 1990s. The show was directed by Rodolfo Hoyos and Andres Biermann.

External links

Notes

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