Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
"Blanca Mujer" (transl. "White Woman") is a song by Puerto Rican singer Draco Rosa from his fourth studio album Vagabundo (1996) and twelfth studio album Vida (2013). It was released on 4 February 2013 through Sony Music Latin as a promotional single featuring Colombian singer-songwriter Shakira .
The Lost Woman (Spanish: La mujer perdida) is a 1966 drama film directed by Tulio Demicheli and starring Sara Montiel, Giancarlo Del Duca and Massimo Serato. [1] It was a co-production between France, Italy and Spain. The film's sets were designed by Enrique Alarcón.
It began airing on La 1 on 3 October 2007. [8] The original broadcasting run ended on 29 January 2008. [8] Desaparecida sparked a spin-off, UCO, Unidad Central Operativa. [9] The series and its spin-off UCO were collectively rebranded in Argentina as Bruno Sierra, el rostro de la ley for broadcasting on Canal 7 in 2009. [5]
La viuda de Blanco (double meaning: Blanco's Widow and The Widow in White) is an American telenovela that aired on Telemundo from July 24, 2006, to March 2, 2007. It is based on the 1996 Colombian telenovela of the same name .
Yo Soy La Buena (2003) La Duena y El Senora del Bolero (2000) Antologia Cuba /Blanca Rosa Gil (1999) Besos de Juegos (1999) Tu Me Hiciste Mujer (1998) 15 Super Exitos (1997) Duena y Senora de la Cancion (1996) Hambre (1995) 15 Exitos (1994) La Munequita Que Canta (1993) Boleros (1992) Remastered; Unica Entrega (date unknown)
La impostora (English: The Impostor), is a Spanish-language telenovela produced by United States–based television network Telemundo Studios, Miami. It is based on the Chilean telenovela Cerro Alegre , produced by Canal 13 in 1999.
Lo que la vida me robó (English title: What Life Took From Me) is a Mexican telenovela produced by Angelli Nesma Medina for Televisa, broadcast by Canal de las Estrellas (now known simply as Las Estrellas). The series originally aired from October 28, 2013, to July 27, 2014.
Blanca Martínez Mera was born in 1897 in Ambato, in Ecuador's Tungurahua province. Her parents were Rosario Mera Iturralde and Luis A. Martínez, also a well-known writer. She spent her childhood on the family hacienda known as Quinta de Atocha, but she was orphaned by age 12. She completed her secondary studies at the Colegio de la ...