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Ferrara demonstrated an interest in acting since he was a young child. But it wasn't until he was 22 that he booked his first job as an actor. He changed his name to Juan Ferrara before playing a small role in the 1965 movie, "Tajimara". In 1966, he got his first major movie role, as Sonny in Los Angeles de Puebla.
The film stars Juan Ferrara, as a TV star who blurs reality with the plot of the soap opera he is shooting. Helena Rojo plays Sandra, his co-star, while Víctor Junco is the TV director and Beatríz Sheridan is the screenwriter. Misterio is adapted from a novel written by Vicente Leñero, who adapted it for the screen.
Juan Ferrara Angélica Vale Angélica Aragón Socorro Bonilla Aldo Monti Virginia Manzano: Opening theme: El hogar que yo robé: Country of origin: Mexico: Original language: Spanish: No. of episodes: 105: Production; Executive producer: Valentín Pimstein: Cinematography: Manuel Ruiz Esparza Noé Alcántara: Running time: 21-22 minutes ...
It stars Juan Ferrara, Diana Bracho, Alicia Machado, Héctor Suárez Gomis, Magda Guzmán Rosa María Bianchi, Julio Bracho, Sergio Corona, Arsenio Campos and Julieta Rosen. Cast [ edit ]
Juan Ferrara Marco Muñoz Arturo Peniche Ana Colchero Cecilia Gabriela Magda Karina: Opening theme: Valeria y Maximiliano by Bebu Silvetti ¿Dónde andará el amor? by Denisse de Kalafe (rebroadcasting 2000) Ending theme: Promesas en la noche by Lourdes Munguía: Country of origin: Mexico: Original language: Spanish: No. of episodes: 90 ...
This telenovela tells the adventures of Victoria a foreign girl who comes to Mexico with the aim of finding a husband, clearly these situations are rare with a dose of melodrama and comedy that gave freshness to the story, despite not being a success equaled the success of the original, this according to critics of the lack of independence between one and the other because they were exactly alike.
Cinémas d'Amérique Latine said that the film "adorned itself with an aesthetic worthy of the most common of soap operas". [2] Some reviews noted the film's feminist themes, with Debate feminista holding it as an example of a film that conveys a narrative of "feminidad odiahombres" ("man-hating femininity"), [3] and Jorge Ayala Blanco in La disolvencia del cine mexicano: entre lo popular y lo ...
Ofelia Guilmáin was born in Madrid, Spain. [citation needed]She was part of the Guerrillas of Theater groups in Spain set up by the republican government. When Francisco Franco came to power, she left her country as did many other artists and intellectuals.