Rosalinda

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Rosalinda
Rosalinda
Directed by Beatriz Sheridan
Karina Duprez
Written by {{{writer}}}
Script by {{{script}}}
Cinematography by Manuel Barajas
Produced by Salvador Mejía
Nathalie Lartilleux
Starring Thalía
Fernando Carrillo
Music by José Antonio "Potro" Farías
Theme song Ay Amor - Rosalinda
Performed by Thalía
Country Mexico
Language Spanish
Network Televisa
Broadcast 1999
No. of episodes 80

Rosalinda is a Mexican telenovela, which was produced by and broadcasted on Televisa in 1999.


Contents

[edit] Series information

Rosalinda is a telenovela starring Thalía directed in by Karina Duprez and Beatriz Sheridan, who also directed La Usurpadora (The Usurper) and La Venganza (Revenge). "Rosalinda" as portrayed by Thalía is a nice woman who lives with her family and caught between two suitors.

[edit] Plot

[edit] Synopsis

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

Rosalinda is a sweet woman living with her family. When her mother, who is not really her mother, dies, she meets Fernando Jose whose father her real mother killed and served prison time for. Because of a complicated illness, she loses her memory and falls in love with another man, Alex. Upon hearing Fernando sing, Rosalinda regains her memory but now must choose which man she will marry.

[edit] Main story line

Rosalinda is a pretty 20-year-old girl who sells flowers and decorates a fancy restaurant. One day, she meets Fernando Jose, a man of high social status. He plays the piano at the restaurant. They eventually fall in love, get married, and have a child named Erika, but his stepmother Valeria desires to split the happy couple up. And she has the perfect way of doing so. Rosalinda's real mother, Soledad, served a 20-year prison sentence for the murder of Fernando Jose's real father. She was innocent, but took the blame. After finding out this horrible news, Fernando Jose abandons Rosalinda and her daughter. Valeria kidnaps Erika. Rosalinda goes into a depression and eventually loses her mind. She is locked up in a mental asylum.

[edit] Flight into the night

One night, the mental hospital catches fire and burns down. Rosalinda fortunately manages to escape. However, her loved ones are convinced she is dead. She loses her memory and takes on the identity of Paloma Dorantes and becomes a singer. She falls in love with a man named Alex, the talent agent who makes her famous. Fernando Jose marries Rosalinda's sister, Fedra.2

[edit] Rejuvenated

Rosalinda's life with Alex seems to be going well. However, things just didn't seem to be totally right. One night, Rosalinda and Alex attend one of Fernando Jose's concerts. He played a song which happened to be the first one he played the day they met. This seemed to trigger Rosalinda's memory of her past. Overwhelmed by these memories, Rosalinda scurries out of the concert hall and gets hit by a car. Alex rushes her to the hospital. It is then that Rosalinda realizes that she is not Paloma, but Rosalinda.

[edit] Choices, choices

Now that Rosalinda has gained her memory back, she must go back and fight to gain her child back, her family, and maybe even Fernando Jose in the process. Along the way, she encounters many life-changing events. She encounters many obstacles with Valeria and her cronies, and even discovers who Fernando Jose's real mother is.

[edit] Here comes the bride

The novela ends with Fernando Jose and Rosalinda leaving the church where Rosalinda had planned to marry another man as a thank you for offering to help provide for her and her daughter.


Spoilers end here.

[edit] Facts

  • The telenovela has been released on a two double-sided DVDs as an edited version of the telenovela.

[edit] Main cast

[edit] Supporting cast

  • Paty Díaz
  • Ninón Sevilla
  • Raúl Padilla
  • Renata
  • Elvira Monsell
  • Anastasia Acosta
  • Eduardo Luna
  • Roberto Guzmán
  • Meche Barba
  • María Teresa
  • Laura Zapata
  • Sergio Reynoso
  • Ana María Aguirre
  • Rafael Amador
  • Alejandro Ávila
  • Eugenio Bartilotti
  • Guadalupe Bolaños
  • Eva Calvo
  • Guillermo García Cantú
  • César Castro
  • Aida Cuevas
  • Susana González
  • Alberto Inzúa
  • Queta Lavat
  • Eduardo Liñán
  • Emiliano Lizárraga
  • Tere López-Tarín
  • Sara Luz
  • Julio Monterde
  • Ivonne Montero
  • Sara Montes
  • Sabine Moussier
  • Juan José Origel
  • Héctor del Puerto
  • Libia Regalado
  • Esther Rinaldi
  • Tina Romero
  • Javier Ruán
  • Jorge Pascual Rubio
  • Milagros Rueda
  • Jessica Salazar
  • Carlos Samperio
  • Juan Carlos Serrán
  • Yamil Sesin
  • Irma Torres
  • Julio Urreta
  • Gabriela del Valle
  • Maricarmen Vela
  • Liza Willert
  • Luz María Zetina

[edit] External links

In other languages