Lazos de Amor

Lazos de Amor

Lazos de Amor
Format Telenovela, Drama
Directed by Miguel Córcega
Starring Lucero
Luis José Santander
Silvia Derbez
Theme music composer José Cantoral
Opening theme "Lazos de Amor"
Lucero
Country of origin Mexico
Language(s) Spanish
No. of episodes 100
Production
Executive producer(s) Carla Estrada
Running time 45 minutes
Broadcast
Original channel Televisa
Original run October 2, 1995 – February 23, 1996
Chronology
Preceded by La Dueña
Followed by Morir dos Veces

Lazos de Amor ("Ties of Love") was a Mexican telenovela from 1995. It aired on Televisa, and starred actress and singer Lucero.

Contents

Plot

The story centers around María Guadalupe, María Paula and María Fernanda, identical triplets (all played by Lucero) with non-identical, complex personalities. Their parents were killed in a car accident when they were very young. María Guadalupe is believed dead after she falls down a mountain and into a river. Instead, she suffers from amnesia and forgets she has a family and two sisters. Ana Salas, who is going through a tragedy coping with her own mothers's death, raises María Guadalupe as her own, even after becoming aware of her true identity. María Fernanda is a sweet girl who hopes to find her sister, but as a result of the accident is left blind. María Paula is different from her sisters in that she's glamorous, selfish and willful. She always wants to be the center of attention, especially around her grandmother, Mercedes, and her uncle, Eduardo Rivas. After an illness brings María Guadalupe and Ana to México City, María Guadalupe falls in love with Nicolás, a cab driver and good-hearted man, who had just moved to México to live with his grandmother. Living in fear that someone may recognize her daughter, Ana restricts María Guadalupe's actions. But Nicolás's grandmother learns Ana's secret without saying a word. The ties of love eventually draw the three sisters together, weaving through the lives of those that surround them in unexpected ways.

Cast

Special invitations

Album

Lazos de amor
Soundtrack album by Lucero
Released 1995 (1995)
Recorded 1995
Genre Pop
Label Melody
Lucero chronology
Siempre Contigo
(1994)
Lazos de Amor
(1996)
Piel de Ángel
(1997)
Singles from Siempre Contigo
  1. "Lazos de Amor"

Due to the telenovela's success, Televisa published a soundtrack, which included previously-released songs by Lucero as well as three versions of the theme song of the series.

# Title Written by Time
1. "Lazos de Amor" José Cantoral 3:24
2. "Lazos de amor (Instrumental Sax.)" Rafael Pérez Botija 4:20
3. "Volvamos a empezar" Rafael Pérez Botija 3:44
4. "Lazos de amor (Reggae)" Rafael Pérez Botija 2:50
5. "Dejame Ir (Remix Radio)" Rafael Pérez Botija 4:57
6. "Como perro al sol" Rafael Pérez Botija 4:44
7. "Caso perdido" J.R. Flores and C. Valle 3:23
8. "Sobreviviré" Rafael Pérez Botija 3:18
9. "Los parientes pobres" Rafael Pérez Botija 4:05
10. "24 horas" Rafael Pérez Botija 3:55
11. "Siempre contigo" Rafael Pérez Botija 4:09

Awards

The series won 8 TVyNovelas Awards in 1996[1] among others accolades.

Year Ceremony Category Nominee Result
1996 14th TVyNovelas Awards[2] Best Telenovela Lazos de Amor Won
Best Lead Actress Lucero Won
Best Lead Actor Luis José Santander Won
Best Supporting Actor Otto Sirgo Won
Best Supporting Actress Verónica Merchant Won
Best First Actress Marga López Won
Best First Actress Silvia Derbez Nominated
Best First Actor Guillermo Murray Nominated
Best Breakthrough Performance Male Orlando Miguel Nominated
Best Writing Original or Adapted Jorge Lozano Soriano
Carmen Daniels
Tere Medina.
Nominated
Best Song for a Telenovela Composer José Cantoral
Singer Lucero
Nominated
Best Direction Miguel Córcega
Mónica Miguel
Won
Best Director of Cameras on Location Isabel Basurto
Alejandro Frutos
Won
29th Diosa de Plata Awards[3] Best Telenovela Lazos de Amor Won
Best Actress Lucero Won
6th Eres Awards[4] Best Telenovela Lazos de Amor Won
Best Actress Lucero Won
Aplauso Awards Best Actress Lucero Won
31st El Heraldo Awards[5] Best Actress[A] Lucero Won

Notes

External links

References