Soy tu dueña
Soy tu dueña | |
---|---|
Genre | Telenovela |
Created by | Inés Rodena |
Developed by | Kary Fajer |
Written by | Gerardo Luna Alejandro Orive |
Directed by | Salvador Garcini |
Starring | Lucero Fernando Colunga Gabriela Spanic Sergio Goyri Jacqueline Andere Ana Martin Eduardo Capetillo |
Theme music composer | Joan Sebastian[1] |
Opening theme | "Golondrinas viajeras" performed by Lucero and Joan Sebastian[1] |
Ending theme | "Dueña de tu Amor" performed by Lucero |
Country of origin | Mexico |
Original language | Spanish |
No. of episodes | 146 |
Production | |
Executive producer | Nicandro Díaz González |
Producer | J. Antonio Arvizu |
Cinematography | Alejandro Frutos Gabriel Vázquez Bulman |
Editors | Susana Valencia Mauricio Coronel |
Running time | 41-44 minutes (Episodes 1-135) 21-22 minutes (Episodes 136-145) |
Production company | Televisa |
Original release | |
Network | Canal de las Estrellas |
Release | 19 April 7 November 2010[2][3] | –
Related | |
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Soy tu dueña (Literal English translation: I’m your owner, International English title: A Woman of Steel)[4] is a Mexican telenovela produced by Nicandro Díaz González for Televisa. It is a remake of the telenovela La Dueña, produced in 1995.[5]
Lucero, Fernando Colunga, Gabriela Spanic, Sergio Goyri, Jacqueline Andere, Ana Martín and Eduardo Capetillo star in this telenovela.
This was Colunga’s second collaboration on-screen with Spanic, since 1998's La Usurpadora and his third collaboration with Lucero, after 2005’s Alborada and 2009’s Mañana es para siempre.
Univision introduced Soy tu dueña in the United States because Corazón salvaje, broadcast weeknights at 9pm/8c, was the least watched telenovela during prime time.[6] It was broadcast from 1 June to 27 December 2010, becoming the most watched telenovela during the 21:00 time slot.[7][8][9] The last episode was broadcast on 27 December 2010 with Triunfo del amor replacing it on 3 January 2011.
Plot
[edit]Valentina Villalba Rangel (Lucero) is a successful businesswoman and the heiress of a great fortune that her parents left to her upon their untimely death during Valentina’s childhood. Valentina has been raised by her aunt, Isabel Rangel (Silvia Pinal). She lives in a beautiful mansion in Mexico City with her aunt, her cousin, Ivana Dorantes Rangel (Gabriela Spanic), and her faithful nanny since her birth, Benita Garrido (Ana Martín). Valentina is a generous woman who shares her fortune and home with her aunt and cousin. But Ivana, Isabel’s only child, is consumed with envy and jealousy toward Valentina and believes she deserves everything her cousin has.
Valentina is in love with and engaged to marry Alonso Peñalvert (David Zepeda). Unbeknownst to Valentina, Ivana and Alonso are having a secret affair and are conspiring to rob Valentina of all she possesses. At the same time, Alonso is unaware that Ivana has an additional lover, Oscar Ampudia (Claudio Baez), who is married. Just prior to Valentina’s wedding day, Ivana runs over Oscar with his car and kills him.
Alonso stands Valentina up at the altar of the church on their wedding day but does not escape with Ivana as they had planned. Instead he flees Mexico and the loan sharks to whom he is deeply indebted. Devastated over Alonso’s betrayal, and unaware of Ivana and Alonso’s secret relationship and also of Ivana’s affair with Oscar Ampudia, Valentina changes from a sweet, fair, kind, and sensible woman into a cold, authoritarian, bitter, and despotic woman. She swears never to fall in love again and decides to isolate herself at her family’s hacienda, “Los Cascabeles”, where she intends to live while managing the hacienda. At “Los Cascabeles” and the neighboring community she becomes known to all as “La Vibora", Spanish for viper or snake, due to her implacable and cold-hearted personality.
There she meets her neighbor, José Miguel Montesinos (Fernando Colunga), an attractive, intelligent, sensitive man who immediately falls in love with her beauty and strong personality. With his father and mother, Federico (Eric del Castillo) and Leonor Montesinos (Jacqueline Andere), José Miguel has relocated from Mexico City to his family’s rundown and neglected hacienda due to his father’s poor health. Despite the poor financial state in which his family finds itself, and against his mother’s wishes, José Miguel is determined to make the hacienda profitable as it was during his youth and a haven for his sick father.
Valentina’s aunt, cousin, and nanny decide to join Valentina at “Los Cascabeles”. Thus begins a story of lies, deceptions, duplicity, and treachery in which José Miguel must fight for Valentina and for her love against not only Ivana (who has fallen in love with José Miguel) but also against the wishes of his own mother and Valentina’s ranch foreman, Rosendo Gavilán (Sergio Goyri) (who has fallen in love with Valentina). Additionally, José Miguel must fight Alonso Peñalvert who has returned and comes to “Los Cascabeles” to convince Valentina of his love and to win her back.
Cast
[edit]Main
[edit]- Lucero as Valentina Villalba Rangel
- Fernando Colunga as José Miguel Montesinos
- Gabriela Spanic as Ivana Dorantes Rangel
- Sergio Goyri as Rosendo Gavilán
- Jacqueline Andere as Leonor de Montesinos
- Ana Martín as Benita Garrido
- Eduardo Capetillo as Horacio Acosta
Also main
[edit]- David Zepeda as Alonso Peñalvert
- Julio Alemán as Ernesto Galeana
- Eric del Castillo as Federico Montesinos
- Carlos Bracho as Father Justino Samaniego #1
- José Carlos Ruiz as Sabino Mercado
- Silvia Pinal as Isabel Rangel Vda. de Dorantes
Recurring
[edit]- Marisol del Olmo as Gabriela Islas
- Fabián Robles as Felipe Santibáñez
- Ana Bertha Espín as Enriqueta de Macotela
- David Ostrosky as Moisés Macotela
- Rossana San Juan as Crisanta Camargo
- Fátima Torre as Iluminada Camargo
- Cristina Obregón as Sandra Macotela
- Paul Stanley as Timoteo
- Mario del Río as Filadelfo Porras
- Claudia Ortega as Teresa de Granados
- Eduardo Rivera as Juan Granados
- Diego Ávila as Chuy Granados
Guest stars
[edit]- Gerardo Albarrán as Nerón Almoguera
- Claudio Báez as Óscar Ampudia
- Tony Bravo as Evelio Zamarripa / Úrsulo Barragán
- Arsenio Campos as Father Justino Samaniego #2
- Guillermo Capetillo as Rogelio Villalba
- Aurora Clavel as Angustias
- Emoé de la Parra as Narda de Ampudia
- Anabel Ferreira as Amparo
- Vicente Herrera as Dante Espíndola
- Martha Julia as Dama de honor
- Pilar Montenegro as Arcelia Olivares[10]
- Diana Osorio as Margarita Corona
- Raúl Padilla "Chóforo" as Father Ventura
- Alejandra Procuna as Brenda Castaño
- Eduardo Rodríguez as Dr. Esteban Noguera
- Alejandro Ruiz as Nazario Melgarejo
- Myrrah Saavedra as Leonela de Castaño
- Marisol Santacruz as Cecilia Rangel de Villalba
- Juan Carlos Serrán as Librado Manzanares
- Tony Vela as Commander Bruno Toledo
Awards and nominations
[edit]Year | Association | Category | Nominee | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|
2010 | People en Español Awards | Best Telenovela | Soy tu dueña | Nominated |
Best Actress | Lucero | Nominated | ||
Best Actor | Fernando Colunga | Won | ||
Best Female / Male Villain | Gabriela Spanic | Nominated | ||
Sergio Goyri | Nominated | |||
Best Couple | Lucero Fernando Colunga |
Nominated | ||
Best Remake | Soy tu dueña | Nominated | ||
Califa de Oro Awards | Outstanding Performance | Eric del Castillo | Won | |
TV Adicto Golden Awards | Best Couple | Lucero Fernando Colunga |
Won | |
Best Male Villain | Sergio Goyri | Won | ||
Best Actor | Fernando Colunga | Won | ||
Best Actress | Lucero | Won | ||
2011 | 29th TVyNovelas Awards[11] | Best Telenovela | Nicandro Díaz González | Nominated |
Best Actress | Lucero | Nominated | ||
Best Actor | Fernando Colunga | Won[12] | ||
Best Antagonist Actress | Jacqueline Andere | Nominated | ||
Best Antagonist Actor | Sergio Goyri | Nominated | ||
Best Leading Actress | Ana Martín | Nominated | ||
Silvia Pinal | Nominated | |||
Best Leading Actor | Eric del Castillo | Nominated | ||
Best Co-lead Actor | David Zepeda | Nominated | ||
Best Female Revelation | Fátima Torre | Won | ||
Best Male Revelation | Paul Stanley | Won | ||
Bravo Awards | Best Leading Actress | Silvia Pinal | Won | |
Best Leading Actor | Julio Alemán | Won | ||
Best Female Revelation | Fátima Torre | Won | ||
Latin ACE Awards | Best Soap | Nicandro Díaz González | Won | |
Best Actress | Lucero | Won | ||
Best Direction | Salvador Garcini Ricardo de la Parra |
Won | ||
ASCAP Awards | Best Telenovela Song | "Dueña de tu amor" by Lucero |
Won | |
2020 | TV Adicto Golden Awards | Best Rerun | Soy tu dueña | Won |
References
[edit]- ^ a b "Golondrinas Viajeras de Joan Sebastian y Lucero". notinovelas.com. 6 April 2010. Retrieved 6 April 2010.
- ^ "Gran final de Soy tu dueña". todotnv.com. Retrieved 5 November 2015.
- ^ "Terminan grabaciones de la exitosa telenovela "Soy tu dueña"". eonline.com. 28 January 2008. Retrieved 9 August 2016.
- ^ "A Woman of Steel". televisainternacional. Retrieved 16 November 2015.
- ^ ""Soy tu dueña" producida por Nicandro Díaz". todotnv.com. Retrieved 11 March 2010.
- ^ "Corazon Salvaje cambia de horario por falta de rating y queda Soy tu dueña". enelbrasero.com. Retrieved 28 April 2010.
- ^ "Univision's Hit "Soy Tu Dueña" (Woman of Steel) is Top Primetime Novela in U.S. Television History". businesswire.com (Press release). Retrieved 28 December 2010.
- ^ "Lucero es la 'Dueña' del rating en la televisión de EU". entretenimiento.terra.com. Retrieved 13 July 2010.
- ^ "'Soy tu duena's' success reflects growing Hispanic aud". variety.com. 14 December 2010. Retrieved 14 December 2010.
- ^ "Pilar Montenegro regresa con "Soy tu dueña"". todotnv.com. Retrieved 17 June 2010.
- ^ "'Soy tu dueña' encabezan nominaciones a premios TVyNovelas". entretenimiento.com. Retrieved 22 February 2011.
- ^ "Ganadores de los Premios TvyNovelas 2011". tvyespectaculos.com. Retrieved 7 March 2011.
External links
[edit]- Soy tu dueña at IMDb