Mónica Ayos
Mónica Ayos | |
---|---|
Born |
Mónica Ayos June 19, 1974 Buenos Aires, Argentina |
Nationality | Argentine |
Occupation | Actress |
Spouse(s) | Diego Olivera (2002-present) |
Children |
Federico Ayos (b. 1992) Victoria Olivera (b. 2004) |
Parent(s) |
Víctor Ayos Mónica Crámer |
Mónica Ayos (born June 19, 1974 in Buenos Aires, Argentina) is an Argentine actress. She studied to be an actress, si ver and dancer, but as she could not get a job, she began her career as a musical comedy or vedette instead. Producer Sebastián Borestein gave her the chance of a notable work in Tiempo Final, and she has kept working as an actress since then.
Biography
Mónica Ayos was born on June 19, 1974, in Buenos Aires. She is the daughter of the dancers Víctor Ayos and Mónica Crámer. As her parents frequently left the country on dance tours, she lived with her grandmother in Mar del Plata, and attended the elementary school. She returned to Buenos Aires, and attended high school in San Telmo. She had small assignments as an actress at the age of 12. She was emancipated at the age of 16, and visited Chile. She had a son with a Chilean that she broke up with a few months later, and raised her son as a single mother.[1]
After several castings, she got minor roles in the TV comedies La Familia Benvenuto, Mi cuñado and Naranja y Media. Working in Canal 9 at midnight, she became a notable dancer and singer, and worked with Nito Artaza, Miguel Ángel Cherutti, Tristán and Jorge Corona. She soon declined that work and worked as an actress instead. She married the actor Diego Olivera in 2002, and had a daughter with him.[1]
Her first main works in television were in Telefe. She worked in Franco Buenaventura, el profe in 2001. She was nominated to the Martín Fierro Award as best actress for this work. Producer Sebastián Borestein gave her the chance of a work in Tiempo Final.[2] In 2006, she moved to El Trece and worked in the comedy Sos mi vida; the telenovela starred by Natalia Oreiro and Facundo Arana was aired in several countries.[3] She was nominated again for the Martín Fierro Award as best actress. She also worked in the drama Mujeres Asesinas and the comedy Por amor a vos, also produced by Pol-Ka.[1]
Diego Olivera was working in Mexico, in the telenovela Triunfo del Amor aired by Televisa, and Ayos visited him during a vacation. The producer Salvador Mejía proposed her to work in the telenovela as well, playing a villain. Ayos declined other proposals she had in Buenos Aires, and joined the cast of the Mexican telenovela.[4] 2014 Unitary Como dice el dicho in paying a villain Norma Iturbide, 2015 the actress to Will be Valeria Mondragón in the telenovela Antes Muerta q Lichita Televisa with the director Benjamin Can and the star production Rosy Ocampo
Works
Television
- Chabonas (2000)
- Un cortado, historias de café (2002)
- Franco Buenaventura, el profe (2002)
- Tiempo Final (2002)
- Costumbres argentinas (2003)
- De pé a pá (2003)
- Panadería los Felipe (2003–2004)
- De la cama al living (2004)
- Amor en custodia (2004)
- Historias de sexo de gente común (2005)
- Pecados capitales (2005)
- Sos mi vida (2006)
- Mujeres asesinas (2007)
- Por amor a vos (2008)
- Botineras (2009)
- Herencia de amor (2010)
- Triunfo del amor (2011)
- Volver al ruedo (2011)
- La pelu (2012)
- El sustituto (2012)
- Dulce amor (2012)
- Como dice el dicho (2014)
- Antes Muerta Que Lichita (2015)
Film
- Tres de corazones (2007)
- Francia (2010)
- La campana (2010)
- Madraza
Theater
- Nación Impossible (1996)
- Ricos y Fogozos (1997)
- Gansoleros (1999)
- Divertidísimo (2000)
- Corona 2003 (2000)
- Movete Chupete Movete (2001)
- El Gran Bar de tu Hermana (2001)
- Reíte País (2001)
- Casi un ángel (2002–2003)
- Taxi 1 (2004–2006)
- Doña Flor y sus dos maridos (2006–2007)
- Eva y Victoria (2007)
- Pichincha al 400 (2007)
- En la cama (2008–2009)
- Super Tango (2013)
- Plan B(2014)
- Atracción Fatal (2014-2015)
References
- 1 2 3 Sergio Contemori. "Biografía" [Biography] (in Spanish). Retrieved July 27, 2013.
- ↑ "Los cambios en la vida de Mónica Ayos" [The changes in the life of Mónica Ayos] (in Spanish). La Nación. January 13, 2006. Retrieved July 27, 2013.
- ↑ "Natalia Oreiro, a Cannes por "Sos mi vida"" [Natalia Oreiro, to Cannes for "You Are The One"] (in Spanish). Clarín. March 21, 2007. Retrieved September 1, 2012.
- ↑ Laura Ventura (March 23, 2011). "Mónica Ayos triunfa en neutro" [Mónica Ayos triumphs in neutral Spanish] (in Spanish). La Nación. Retrieved July 27, 2013.
External links
- Official site (Spanish)
- Mónica Ayos at the Internet Movie Database