Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
White Ravens 2001 for "Milú, un perro en desgracia" (Milú, a dog in disgrace). 2002, XIII Ala Delta Prize for "Caracoles, pendientes y mariposas" (Snails, earrings and butterflies) [3] 2004, National Libraries of Venezuela chooses his book "El puente de los cerezos" as the best book published in Spanish. 2004, Critics' Prize of Asturias.
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]
Olderöck was a descendant of Nazi-affiliated Germans - [4] her father hailed from Hamburg and her mother from Munich. [5] She emigrated to Chile with her parents and sisters. . According to Nancy Guzmán, a journalist and author of the book Ingrid Olderöck: The Woman of the Dogs, the future agent was raised in a very authoritarian family environment where there was a certain contempt for ...
The Headless Woman (Spanish: La mujer sin cabeza / La mujer rubia) is a 2008 Argentine psychological thriller art film [5] [6] [7] written and directed by Lucrecia Martel and starring María Onetto. The plot revolves around Vero (short for Verónica) (Onetto), who hits something while driving on a deserted road near Salta. Not being sure if she ...
The Animal's Wife (Spanish: La mujer del animal) is a 2016 Colombian drama film directed by Víctor Gaviria. It was screened in the Contemporary World Cinema section at the 2016 Toronto International Film Festival .
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 .
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.
"Canción sin miedo" was first released on Quintana's YouTube channel on March 7, 2020, performed in collaboration with the "El Palomar" women's choir, with a choral arrangement by Chilean chorister Paz Court. Later that day, Laferte joined the group in performing the song at Zócalo as part of the Tiempo de Mujeres (Women's Hour) festival. The ...