Saints & Sinners (2007 TV series)

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For other uses see Saints and Sinners.
Saints & Sinners
Image:Mysns.jpg
Format Telenovela
Country of origin Flag of the United States United States
Language(s) English
No. of episodes 65 (39 unaired)
Production
Location(s) San Diego, California
Broadcast
Original channel MyNetworkTV
Original run March 14, 2007July 18, 2007
External links
IMDb profile
TV.com summary

Saints & Sinners is a telenovela which premiered on March 14, 2007 at 8 p.m. ET/7 p.m. CT on the American television network MyNetworkTV. Twentieth Television produced this limited-run serial, based on the a 2000 TV Azteca telenovela titled La Calle de las Novias (Brides’ Avenue). Two hour installments aired on Wednesday evenings through April, when the show moved to a one-hour slot on Wednesdays at 9 p.m.

The network dropped the serial from its schedule after the July 18, 2007 broadcast. Most episodes were left unaired. 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment has not annnounced plans to release this series on DVD.

Contents

[edit] Story

This modern-day Romeo-and-Juliet story revolves around two Miami Beach families – the Capshaws and the Martins – who are plagued by a long, bitter rivalry. Julia Capshaw (Tyler Kain) falls is in love with Roman Martin (Scott Bailey), the man accused of killing her father. They find themselves caught between their feuding hotel-owner families, who will stop at nothing to succeed. Meanwhile, a handsome stranger who works for the DEA poses as a priest Marcus Pitt. A powerful drug-running "businesswomen," who is the underworld kingpin Diana Martin who is also known as "the Guerrero" work's her own evil plan's in South Beach.

Mel Harris plays Sylvia Capshaw, Julia's mother. Maria Conchita Alonso (who was secretly "the Guerrero" and made Maria Ginni look like a saint) and Charles Shaughnessy play Roman's parents, Diana and August Martin. Natalie Martinez plays their daughter, Pilar Martin.[1] Robin Givens plays Kelly Dodd, a New York fashion designer who develops a crush on Roman. Michael Duvert and Joe Tabbanella are also in the cast.[2]

Initially, the Capshaw and the Martin clans were named the Oliveras and the Mazzonis. In the Mexican original, they were the Sánchez and Mendoza families. Joe Tabbanella played Marco Manetti on another MyNetworkTV telenovela, Desire, while Natalie Martinez portrayed Michelle Miller on MyNetworkTV's Fashion House.

[edit] Development

The limited-run serial was originally intended to run in syndication as A Dangerous Love under the "Secret Obsessions" umbrella title. Next, MyNetworkTV planned to air 65 one-hour episodes on weekdays with a Saturday night recap. Then the network, facing low ratings, decided to cut back on telenovelas and cancel them.

Initially, new episodes ran on Wednesday nights as a two-hour block, then were cut to one hour per week.[3] While MyNetworkTV stopped development on future telenovelas,[4] Saints and Sinners had already finished shooting before the decision was announced. This show's final broadcast marks the end of the new network's experiment with serialized dramas.

While the show is set in Florida, it was filmed at Stu Segall Productions in San Diego, except for a few exterior shots.[1] The MyNetworkTV Web site lists the show as "part of the Secret Obsessions series." About 75 minutes of program was stretched to fill each two-hour weekly timeslot.[2]

MyNetworkTV announced plans to run this show and American Heiress once per week until October,[5][6] when the remaining episodes will appear online.[7] MyNetworkTV President Greg Meidel previously said the network would air the complete runs of both shows.[8] However, the network unceremoniously yanked both telenovelas after the July 18, 2007 broadcast. Only 26 out of 65 hours aired.

Saints & Sinners is now currently airing on Dish Network's Voom HD channel Ultra, along with reruns of Fashion House.

All 50 episodes of the series recently aired in Australia, on the Seven Network, from 3-4pm.Foxtel's W channel also screens the series with 1 episode on Saturdays 10.30am .

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[edit] External links