Amores de mercado

Amores De Mercado
Created by Basilio Álvarez
Written by Basilio Álvarez
Irene Calacano
Gennys Perez
Eric Vonn
Directed by Rodolfo Hoyos
Andrés Bermann
Starring Paola Rey
Mauricio Islas
Michel Brown
Vanessa Villela
Jorge Cao
Theme music composer Miguel De Narváez
Opening theme Amores de mercado eres tú by Alexa Hernández
Country of origin Colombia
United States
Original language(s) Spanish
No. of episodes 123
Production
Executive producer(s) Hugo León Ferrer
Cinematography Mauricio Cadavid
Roberto Cortés
Editor(s) José Luis Varón
Camera setup Multi-camera
Running time 42-45 minutes
Release
Original network RTI Producciones
Telemundo
Picture format NTSC
Audio format Stereophonic sound
Original release June 14, 2006 – January 12, 2007
Chronology
Preceded by Corazón partido
Followed by Zorro: La Espada y la Rosa
External links
Website www.uk.romantica.tv/milosc_nasprzedaz_o.php

Amores De Mercado (Love at The Market) is a Spanish-language telenovela produced by the United States-based television network Telemundo and RTI Colombia. This limited-run series ran for 125 episodes from June 14, 2006 to January 12, 2007. It aired in Europe and the Middle East on Zone Romantica.[1]

This show was retitled simply Amores in mid-run. Head writer Basilio Alvarez was replaced by Eric Vonn and the storylines and characters went in a new direction. When Telemundo reaired the show in daytime in 2009, the shorter title was used for the entire series. BTV started to air this telenovela on November 22, 2006 in Bulgaria.

Story

Amores De Mercado tells the story of Fernando (Mauricio Islas), an ambitious man who driven by greed will do the unimaginable to his own family, Lucia (Paola Rey), a woman in search of her husband, and Diego (Michel Brown), an athlete who feels defeated by life. Lucia and Diego will meet and find a reason to love again and start over in life, however, destiny will put them to the test. This is a story of second chances and how love can save us when everything else is lost.

Cast

  • Mauricio Islas as Fernando Leyra / Antonio Álamo - Husband of Lucía, Antagonistic Protagonist
  • Paola Rey as Lucía Martínez - Main heroine
  • Michel Brown as Diego "El Rayo" Valdes - Main hero
  • Vanessa Villela as Raquel Savater / Mónica Savater - Sister of Mónica, villain / girlfriend of Diego
  • Jorge Cao as Néstor Savater - Father of Raquel, Mónica and Lucía, villain
  • Lully Bossa as Mercedes Martínez - Mother of Lucía
  • Salvador del Solar as Eulalio Ocando Savater - Nephew of Nestor and his co-worker
  • Juan Pablo Shuk as Manuel Medrano - Boyfriend of Mónica
  • Júlio del Mar as Benjamín Santos - Adoptive father of Diego
  • Sílvio Ángel as Luis Leyra - Father of Antonio / Fernando
  • Silvia de Dios as Fanny - Suitor of Monica and Raquel
  • Raúl Gutierrez as Padre Pablo
  • Leonor Arango as Elvira Leyra - Mother of Antonio / Fernando
  • Christian Tappan as Gerardo
  • Jullye Giliberti as Cristina Moreno - Friend of Lucia
  • Sharmel Altamirano as Martha Aguilar - Second wife of Antonio / Fernando
  • Didier Van Der Hove as Roberto Gutiérrez - Father of Betty and Andrea
  • Carmen Villalobos as Beatriz 'Betty' Gutiérrez
  • Diana Neira as Andrea Gutiérrez
  • Natalia Bedoya as Juliet
  • Dafne Padilla as Laura Moreno
  • Alfredo Ahnetr as Irinea
  • Ramón Cabrer as Julio
  • Ricardo Abarca as Adrián Leyra - Son of Lucía and Antonio / Fernando
  • Jonathan Islas
  • Laura Perico
  • Andrea Montenegro

Script features

When Eric Vonn took the story in his hands, he rewrote all the rest of the story from about episode 40 to the end, and made it in his unique manner providing almost all the dialogues and scenes in ironic, sarcastic manner with lots of allegories full of black humor. Huge amount of violent and sadistic scenes involving main characters, and the manner of setting this scenes are although comic, all this features make novels of Vonn very different from all telenovela writers, in fact he is the only one writing telenovelas in a genre of black humor.

References

  1. "Zone Romantica: Amores de Mercado". www.uk.romantica.tv. Archived from the original on 9 February 2007.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.