Sin Vergüenza (TV series)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Sin Vergüenza

L-R: Maite, Paloma, Fernanda, Renata
Format comedy-drama, telenovela
Created by Isamar Hernández
Developed by Valentina Párraga
Starring Gaby Espino, Ivonne Montero, Margarita Ortega, Paola Toyos
Country of origin Flag of Colombia Colombia
Flag of the United States United States
Language(s) Spanish
No. of episodes 80
Production
Executive
producer(s)
Hugo León Ferrer
Producer(s) Oscar Guarin
Location(s) Bogotá, Colombia
Camera setup Multi-camera
Running time 60 minutes
Broadcast
Original channel Telemundo
Picture format NTSC
Audio format Stereophonic sound
Original run April 16, 2007August 21, 2007
Chronology
Followed by La Esclava Isaura
External links
Official website
Sin's stars
Sin's stars

Sin Vergüenza (No Shame)[1] is a Spanish-language telenovela produced by Telemundo and RTI Colombia.[2][3] This limited-run series about four beautiful, yet very different women, resembles Desperate Housewives[4] and Sex & The City.[5] Venezuelan actress Gaby Espino stars.[6]

Telemundo debuted Sin Vergüenza on weeknights at 10 p.m. ET/PT.[7] After the early weeks received disappointing ratings, it moved to daytime, airing weekdays at 1 p.m. ET/PT from May 7 until August 21, 2007.

Contents

[edit] Characters

Filmed in Bogotá, this steamy serial features four vivacious, sensual and self-willed heroines, who share an intense friendship and co-own a lingerie store called Sin Vergüenza.

  • Renata Sepúlveda (Gaby Espino), an unmarried, childless, upwardly-mobile executive who takes advantage of her affair with her married boss, Raimundo Montes (Javier Gómez). His wife Meme (Diana Quijano) controls half of their company.[8]
  • Paloma San Miguel (Paola Toyos), a bohemian mother who wants to become an art dealer. Her two children are named Roque and Candelaria. Paloma must now choose between her new live-in beau Rafael Velez (Alejandro de la Madrid) and her separated husband, Julián (Salvador del Solar).[9]
  • Maite Contreras (Ivonne Montero) manages the lingerie shop. This fun-loving free spirit who still lives like a teenager -- and dates Kike (Luis Ernesto Franco), a much younger man. She also has a mother (Natalia Giraldo) who won't leave her alone. Her whole life shakes when she discovers her son Vincente (José Julián Gaviria) faces an unexpected illness. Maite must now deal with Max (Alfredo Annert), his father, whom she hasn't seen in eleven years.[10]
  • Fernanda Montes (Margarita Ortega), a teacher is Raimundo's sister. She is a devoted mother to two little girls named Isabel and Ana. Fernanda runs into Cristóbal (Cristóbal Lander), an old flame who reminds her that the passion has left her marriage.[11] Her husband, Esteban del Río (Jorge Aravena), also works for Raimundo and Meme.

Inseparable since childhood, these passionate women share the most intimate secrets with one another, including romances, adventures and heartaches.[12] Each of them has her own unique personality and seeks love, companionship and fulfillment in a different way.[13] This charming quartet realizes the modern world is not the fairy tale that they dreamed about long ago.

[edit] Production Notes

This show is also known as Cuatro Rosas ("Four Roses") and 4 Lives... For Love[14]. It is based on the 2006 TVN comedy-drama Entre Medias ("In Between"). The four heroines parallel the four temperaments.

On-air promotions for this serial began on Telemundo on March 2, 2007. The network originally announced back in 2006 that the show would join its daytime lineup, airing at 1 p.m. ET/PT,[15] which is where it ultimately wound up. Telemundo originally planned to run 120 original hours from Monday to Friday over about 26 weeks, but the order was apparently cut to 80 hours.[16] Only 14 episodes aired in prime time, three of which were cut to a half hour. Recaps of those shows aired during the first week in daytime. During the initial run, Telemundo broadcast English subtitles as closed captions on CC1,[17] but abruptly dropped them in the afternoon time slot.

Hugo León Ferrer is executive producer. Venezuelan screenwriter Valentina Párraga was originally developing the teleplay but was dropped out from the project and was recplaced by the also Venezuelan screenwriter Isamar Hernández making it a very free version of a story she wrote on early 90s in Venezuela. The show is directed by Rodolfo Hoyos and Andres Biermann.

[edit] Links

[edit] Notes