Entre el amor y el odio
Entre el Amor y el Odio | |
---|---|
Genre | Telenovela Romance Drama |
Created by | Hilda Morales de Allouis |
Written by | Liliana Abud Jaime García Estrada Orlando Merino Dolores Ortega |
Directed by | Miguel Córcega Édgar Ramírez |
Starring | Susana González César Évora Sabine Moussier Alberto Estrella Marga López |
Opening theme | Entre el amor y el odio by |
Country of origin | Mexico |
Original language | Spanish |
No. of episodes | 124 |
Production | |
Executive producer | Salvador Mejía Alejandre |
Producer | Nathalie Lartilleux |
Production locations | Filming Televisa San Ángel Mexico City, Mexico |
Editors | Marco Antonio Rocha Alberto Frutos Maza |
Camera setup | Multi-camera |
Running time | 41-44 minutes |
Production company | Televisa |
Distributor | Televisa |
Release | |
Original network | Canal de las Estrellas |
Picture format | NTSC |
Original release | February 11 August 2, 2002 | –
Chronology | |
Preceded by | El manantial |
Followed by | Las vías del amor |
External links | |
Website |
Entre el Amor y el Odio (English: Between Love and Hatred) is a Mexican telenovela produced by Salvador Mejía Alejandre for Televisa in 2002.[1] It is based on the radionovela Cadena de odio by Hilda Morales de Allouis. It aired on Canal de las Estrellas from February 11, 2002 to August 2, 2002.
Susana González and César Évora starred as protagonists, while Sabine Moussier and Alberto Estrella starred as antagonists.
Plot[]
After a long absence, Octavio Villarreal (César Évora) returns to Guanajuato in order to see his uncle Fernando (Joaquín Cordero), who is on his deathbed.
Octavio always considered his uncle to be like a father until Fernando prevented him from marrying Frida (Sabine Moussier). Since that day Octavio has only felt resentment towards Fernando. Octavio heads for the Villarreal mansion in his car with Marcial (Alberto Estrella), a trusted employee of Fernando, when they are intercepted by a girl on a horse.
Octavio is taken with the young woman's beauty, but the contemptuous Marcial tells him that Ana Cristina (Susana González) is Fernando's lover. This is a lie, however; Fernando has only protected the girl who lives on the Villarreal grounds with her supposed grandfather, Manuel (Miguel Corcega).
Fernando dies in Ana Cristina's arms, confessing to her that the love of his life was a woman named Leonela. Upon seeing his uncle's body, Octavio remembers the love they had and takes out his pain and frustration on Ana Cristina, calling her a whore.
However, Fernando's will stipulates that his nephew and his protégée will inherit his shoe factory, but only if they marry and live together for a year. The corrupt Marcial goes to Miami to find the ambitious Frida, who renews her relationship with Octavio even though he has married Ana Cristina.
Marcial and Frida want to take over the factory and conspire so that this marriage does not last any longer than necessary, sowing doubts in Octavio's heart about the purity and good intentions of his wife. Although Octavio loves Ana Cristina, his doubts lead him to abandon her and go to Miami with Frida.
From there he returns in the company of the businessman Rogelio Valencia, a man who has a lot to do with the now-pregnant Ana Cristina's past. Frida, also, is pregnant, and Octavio finds himself trapped between his love for his wife and his obligation to the child that Frida carries.[2]
Cast[]
- Susana González as Ana Cristina Robles
- César Évora as Octavio Villarreal
- Sabine Moussier as Frida Díaz de Villareal "Dama de la Corte"
- Alberto Estrella as Marcial Andrade "Napoleón"
- Marga López as Doña Josefa Villareal
- María Sorté as María Magdalena Ortiz
- Enrique Lizalde as Rogelio Valencia
- Carmen Salinas as Consuelo "Chelo"
- Felicia Mercado as Lucila Montes
- Maritza Olivares as Cayetana
- Harry Geithner as Everardo Castillo
- Luz Elena González as Fuensanta de Moreno
- Luis Roberto Guzmán as Gabriel Moreno Ortiz
- Fabián Robles as José Alfredo Moreno Ortiz
- Joaquín Cordero as Fernando Villarreal
- Ninón Sevilla as Macarena Nogales
- Elizabeth Aguilar as Mirna Nogales de Amaral
- Mauricio Aspe as Tobías Morán
- Eduardo Noriega as Moisés Moyano
- Juan Carlos Serrán as Vicente "Chente" Amaral
- Vanessa Guzmán as Juliana Valencia Montes
- Rubén Morales as Padre Jesús Alarcón
- Manuel "Loco" Valdés as Rigoberto "Rigo" Alarcón
- Oscar Traven as Nicolás Villarreal
- Silvia Manríquez as Rosalía
- Jacqueline Bracamontes as Leonela Montenegro de Valencia
- Miguel Córcega as Manuel Robles "Padre"
- Juan Carlos Casasola as El Catrín
- Marlene Favela as Cecilia Amaral
- José Luis Reséndez as Nazario Amaral
- Jaime Lozano as Dr. Edgardo Ramos
- Violeta Isfel as Paz
- José Ángel García as Rodolfo Moreno
- Ofelia Cano as Rebeca Ortiz
- Tatiana Martínez as Lucía
- Blanca Torres as Enriqueta
- Jorge Luis Pascual as Rogelio Valencia (young)
- Freddy Ortega as Caco
- Germán Ortega as Keco
- Patricia Romero as Lucha
- Radamés de Jesús as Marcelino
- Pablo Montero as Ánimas "Alma Caritativa"
- Ernesto Alonso as Abad
- Arturo Peniche as Fabio Sacristan
- Víctor Noriega as Paulo Sacristan
- Aurora Alonso as Prudencia
- Marcial Casale as Trinidad
- Carlos Amador as Chito
- Juan Ignacio Aranda as Facundo
- Alberto Loztin as Rubén Alarcón
- Benjamín Rivero as El Ratón
- Armando Palomo as Libertad
- Héctor Cruz as Father Manuel Robles (young)
- Susana Lozano as Goya
- Claudia Cervantes as Elena
- Humberto Elizondo as Dr. Ortega
- Aldo Monti as Lorenzo Ponti
- Irma Torres as Mirta
- Rodolfo Reyes as Teodoro
- Vicente Torres as Adrián
- Alberto Díaz as Arturo
- Norma Reyna as Luz
- Manuel Benítez as Iván
- Roberto Meza as Ismael
- Fernando Nesme as Oscar
- Andrés Garza as Fernando "Fernandito" Villarreal Díaz Valencia
- Alejandro Hernández as Juan Manuel Villarreal Valencia
- Omar Ayala as El Tractor
- Jessica Jurado as Martha del Castillo
- Aleida Núñez as India
- Gerardo Gallardo as Monje
- Julio Escalero as Monje
Awards[]
Year | Award | Category | Nominee | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|
2002 | 20th TVyNovelas Awards | Best Actor | César Évora | Nominated |
Best Antagonist Actor | Alberto Estrella | |||
Best Supporting Actress | Carmen Salinas | |||
Best Female Revelation | Susana González | Won | ||
2003 | Premios INTE | Telenovela of the Year | Salvador Mejía | Nominated |
Actor of the Year | César Évora | |||
Supporting Actor | Alberto Estrella | |||
Supporting Actress | María Sorté |
DVD release[]
The telenovela was released on DVD in region one on 7 March 2006 with optional English subtitles. The 124-episode series was abridged to a run time of 550 minutes.
In popular culture[]
Entre el Amor y el Odio was the subject of a parody on the Mexican television program XHDRbZ which was called Entre el amor y Elodio. Susana González, Eugenio Derbez and Sammy appeared in the sketch as Elodio.
In television series Los simuladores, pictures of telenovela are shown.[3]
See also[]
References[]
- ^ "Entre el Amor y el Odio" (in Spanish). alma-latina.net. Archived from the original on April 2, 2003. Retrieved May 20, 2016.
- ^ Entre el Amor y el Odio on IMDb
- ^ Pictures of Entre el Amor y el Odio in Los Simuladores: El clon
External links[]
- 2002 telenovelas
- Mexican telenovelas
- 2002 Mexican television series debuts
- 2002 Mexican television series endings
- Spanish-language telenovelas
- Television shows set in Mexico
- Televisa telenovelas