El Zorro, la espada y la rosa: Difference between revisions
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==International airings== |
==International airings== |
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''Zorro'' averaged 635,000 core viewers during March 2007 on Telemundo. The audience jumped 28 percent from February in the network's key demographic, Hispanic adults from age 18 to 49.<ref>[http://nbcumv.com/telemundo/release_detail.nbc/telemundo-20070409000000-telemundo58theo.html]</ref> Overall, the show has had [[Nielsen ratings]] of around 0.6, with a 1 share. The network considered expanding the serial's run,<ref> |
''Zorro'' averaged 635,000 core viewers during March 2007 on Telemundo. The audience jumped 28 percent from February in the network's key demographic, Hispanic adults from age 18 to 49.<ref>[http://nbcumv.com/telemundo/release_detail.nbc/telemundo-20070409000000-telemundo58theo.html]</ref> Overall, the show has had [[Nielsen ratings]] of around 0.6, with a 1 share. The network considered expanding the serial's run,<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.playthings.com/article/CA6434028.html |title=Archived copy |accessdate=2007-04-26 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20070626184606/http://www.playthings.com:80/article/CA6434028.html |archivedate=2007-06-26 |df= }}</ref> but decided against it. |
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''Zorro'' has been sold to broadcasters in 43 countries.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.azcentral.com/lavoz/ent/articles/0227zorra-CR.html|title=Estelariza Marlene Favela "El Zorro"|publisher=}}</ref> Telemundo and Sony split the international rights, with Sony holding the rights for Latin America.<ref>[http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1Y1-103177132.html]</ref> On February 26, 2007, the show started airing in Colombia on [[Caracol TV]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://foro.telenovela-world.com/~diane/elzorrolaespada/SumCol.HTM|title=|publisher=}}</ref> |
''Zorro'' has been sold to broadcasters in 43 countries.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.azcentral.com/lavoz/ent/articles/0227zorra-CR.html|title=Estelariza Marlene Favela "El Zorro"|publisher=}}</ref> Telemundo and Sony split the international rights, with Sony holding the rights for Latin America.<ref>[http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1Y1-103177132.html]</ref> On February 26, 2007, the show started airing in Colombia on [[Caracol TV]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://foro.telenovela-world.com/~diane/elzorrolaespada/SumCol.HTM|title=|publisher=}}</ref> |
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==External links== |
==External links== |
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*[http://www. |
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20091028174543/http://www.geocities.com/thezorrolegend/zorro2007/swordrose.html Telemundo International] ''Zorro'' page (English, requires [[Adobe Flash Player|Flash]]) |
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*{{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20091028174543/http://www.geocities.com/thezorrolegend/zorro2007/swordrose.html |date=October 28, 2009 |title=La espada y la rosa }} ''Zorro'' page with summaries (English) |
*{{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20091028174543/http://www.geocities.com/thezorrolegend/zorro2007/swordrose.html |date=October 28, 2009 |title=La espada y la rosa }} ''Zorro'' page with summaries (English) |
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*[http://foro.telenovela-world.com/n4/list.php?f=419 Telenovela World] (bilingual) |
*[http://foro.telenovela-world.com/n4/list.php?f=419 Telenovela World] (bilingual) |
Revision as of 21:25, 21 December 2016
El Zorro, la espada y la rosa | |
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Genre | Telenovela |
Created by | Humberto "Kiko" Olivieri |
Written by |
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Directed by |
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Starring |
|
Theme music composer |
|
Opening theme | "Amor gitano" by Alejandro Fernández and Beyoncé Knowles |
Country of origin |
|
No. of seasons | 1 |
No. of episodes | 112 122 (International Version) |
Production | |
Executive producers |
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Producer | Marlon Quintero |
Cinematography |
|
Editor | Alba Merchan Hamann |
Production companies | Sony Pictures Television International RTI Colombia Zorro Productions, inc. |
Original release | |
Network | |
Release | February 12 July 23, 2007 | –
Related | |
Zorro (1957) |
El Zorro, la espada y la rosa (The Sword and the Rose) is a Spanish-language telenovela based on Johnston McCulley's characters. Telemundo aired it from February 12 to July 23, 2007. This limited-run serial shows the masked crusader as a hero torn between his fight for justice and his love for a beautiful woman. Telemundo president Don Browne called this show "without doubt the best production offered on Hispanic television in the United States today."[1]
This series was produced by Telemundo, Sony Pictures Television International (SPTI) and RTI Colombia. This series was filmed in Colombia.
It was the network's most successful series of 2007[2] and its biggest seller in international syndication.[3] Sony Pictures Television International (SPTI) has asked Telemundo to produce a sequel.[4]
Plot summary
The melodrama loosely follows the retcon of Zorro from the 2005 novel by Isabel Allende, yet also uses the major characters from the 1950s Disney series. It shows a fantastic, ahistorical version of colonial Los Angeles full of romance, royal intrigue, and witchcraft, even polygamy. The city is populated with gypsies, slaves, clerics, cannibals, conspirators, rebellious Indians and Amazon warriors, along with Spanish settlers, soldiers, pirates and mestizo peasants.
The hero, Don Diego Dela Vega, adopts the secret identity of Zorro, the masked avenger. Instead of being a Spaniard, however, Diego is now a mestizo born in the 1790s to a white father, Don Alejandro Dela Vega, and his wife, a Native American warrior named Toypurnia, who was given the name Regina when she married Alejandro.
Diego learned his acrobatics and fencing skills in Spain, under the tutelage of a great swordmaster. Remembering the injustices he saw as a child, he returned to his family's California hacienda. Now he lives as both a nobleman and a vigilante, fighting imperialist oppression. He is backed by the brotherhood of Zorro, a secret society called the Knights of the Broken Thorn.
Since this is a telenovela, much of the drama focuses on romantic melodrama and family intrigue. Here, Zorro falls in love with a beautiful young widow, Esmeralda Sánchez de Moncada. She arrives in California with her sister Mariángel Sánchez de Moncada and her father, Fernando Sánchez de Moncada, the newly appointed governor—and villainous dictator—of Los Angeles.
The hero must challenge a host of evildoers, branding them with the distinctive Zorro "Z" – made from three swift scratches. The story arc focuses on mysteries concerning Esmeralda's long-lost mother and the man whose atrocities changed Diego's life forever. Their resolution threatens to shake the Spanish Empire.
In this story Don Diego is sexually active. Much of the show spotlights the two sisters whom he allegedly impregnates outside of wedlock. One of these women is Esmeralda, who winds up imprisoned, starved and tortured. The other, Mariángel, plots to steal the Dela Vega fortune.
From Telemundo's promotional copy:
At heart, Zorro is not different from other men in his need to love and to be loved, his desire to fall in love and form a family, and his ambition to find the ideal woman. Will he obtain them?"[5]
The opening sequences show a shot of Diego looking at his mask. "Tú y yo estamos enamorados de la misma mujer", he says. The epigram translates as "you and I are in love with the same woman."
Episodes
Episode 1 The series begins with showing Esmeralda Sánchez de Moncada being forced to marry a wealthy old man by her father. The groom dies at the altar immediately after the marriage in completed. She then leaves for Los Angeles with her violent father Don Fernando, half-sister Mariángel, beloved aunt Almudena and her father’s hunchbacked accountant Olmos.
In Los Angeles, Don Diego de la Vega, alias Zorro, spends the night with the local judge’s daughter before leaving with one of the Judge’s journals. From the journal he discovers the future arrival of a governor, Don Fernando Sánchez de Moncada. Elsewhere in the hacienda his aunt María Pía de la Vega, is horrified to learn her former fiancé, Fernando, is going to return.
Months later on the night of the welcome party for the new governor Esmeralda, choosing not to go to the party to pretend to be a loving daughter, runs into Zorro near the city prison. Their medallions got tangled and the two are forced to look into each other eyes, immediately feeling the spark.
Episode 2 Zorro and Esmeralda fight off the soldiers, escape and then separate. But they have accidentally switched medallions. Once Zorro realizes this he returns to look for Esmeralda as Diego.
In the party three couples meet each others; Diego’s father Alejandro and Almudena are reacquainted, Fernando and María Pía experience an awkward face to face again moment, and Mariángel and the local police commander Montero are introduced and straight away attracted to each others.
Two Indian siblings, Yumalay and Jacó, realize that the new governor is the same man who murdered their family years ago. Including their sister, Regina, who was also Diego’s mother and Alejandro’s wife. Three gypsies Jonás, Azucena, and Renzo discuss Esmeralda and her mother, Sara Kalí. Unbeknownst to Esmeralda her mother, who she knew as Mercedes, is still alive and has been locked up in the local prison ever since she gave birth to Esmeralda.
Episode 3 Esmeralda tells her aunt about the night’s adventures while taking a bath. Once her aunt has left her room Zorro appears from the window. Esmeralda and Zorro soon end up in a passionate kiss and change medallions. Once Diego returns to his Zorro-cave he reflects on his feelings towards Esmeralda, while Esmeralda does the same in her home.
Fernando arrives home, disturbing Mariángel and Montero, who are locked in a passionate embrace. Both of them hide before he can see who it was. Mariángel is seen by Olmos, who is seen by Fernando. Since Olmos is in love with Mariángel, he lies to Fernando and casts suspicion upon Esmeralda. Following Fernando goes to Esmeralda's room and cruelly beats her.
Almudena doctors Esmeralda’s wounds received from Fernando's beating. Esmeralda reflects that her father has inflicted deep emotional scars over the years. She does not understand why he hates her so much. Almudena tries to explain it with saying her father has suffered a lot in his life, but Esmeralda points out that he doesn’t treat Mariángel the same way. Almudena is the only person who cares about her.
The gypsies find a way to communicate with Sara Kalí with the help of a rat. They tell her they’ve finally found her daughter and discover she is being held in the dungeons of the prison wearing an iron mask.
Esmeralda overhears her aunt and Fernando discussing and discovers he is not really her father. She returns to her room, now understanding why he hates her so much. Esmeralda picks up her medallion and remembers what she was told about her destiny. She realizes that her mother may still be alive. While taking a walk the next day she is approached by Azucena and Renzo.
Episode 4 Azucena and Renzo kidnap Esmeralda and take her to the gypsy camp and the gypsies present her with flowers. When Diego learns of Esmeralda's plight, he sets out to rescue her as Zorro.
Yumalay and Jacó try to kill Fernando, but instead Jacó is killed. Fernando chases after Yumalay and briefly catches up with her. She spooks his horse with magic and flees. Fernando swears that they must find her so that he can find out why she wants to kill him. He declares that he will kill all of those savages.
Olmos tells Mariángel that he feels guilty about the events of last night. Mariángel threatens to tell her father of Olmos stealing money from him should Olmos say anything about what really happened.
Fernando is furious that Esmeralda has been abducted — furious with Esmeralda. Alejandro arrives and suggests that they form a search party. Fernando is less than enthusiastic.
Cast
Main cast
Actor | Character | Known as |
---|---|---|
Christian Meier | Don Diego de la Vega \ Zorro | main hero, known as the Zorro, Don Alejandro's son, Regina's son, Almudena's stepson, Mariangel's ex-husband in love with Esmeralda |
Marlene Favela | Esmeralda Sánchez de Moncada | main heroine, Mercedes' daughter, Fernando's stepdaughter, Mariangel's half-sister, Almudena's niece, Ricardo's ex-wife in love with Don Diego |
Arturo Peniche | Fernando Sánchez de Moncada | antagonistic protagonist, later good. Governor, Mariángel's father, Esmeralda's stepfather, in love with Maria Pia |
Osvaldo Ríos | Don Alejandro de la Vega | Military General, Don Diego's Father, in love with Almudena |
Erick Elías | Renzo | gypsy, in love with Esmeralda, later with Ana Camila |
Héctor Suárez Gomís | Capitán Anibal Pizarro | Military Captain, Ricardo's accomplice, villain, in love with Catalina |
Andrea López | Mariángel Sánchez de Moncada | not capable of love, second most evil villain, obsessed with Don Diego, Ricardo's lover |
Harry Geithner | Comandante Ricardo Montero de Avila | Military Commander, enemy of "Zorro", most evil villain, obsessed with Esmeralda, Mariangel's lover |
Jorge Cao | Padre Tomás Villarte | priest, mentor of Zorro, secretly in love with Maria Pia |
Natasha Klauss | Sor Ana Camila Suplicios | troubled nun, in love with Renzo |
César Mora | Sargento Demetrio García López | sergeant, very fond of alcohol |
Lully Bosa | Almudena Sánchez de Moncada | sister of Fernando, aunt of Esmeralda and Mariángel. In love with Don Alejandro |
Raúl Gutierrez | Olmos Berroterran de la Guardia | hunchback, Fernando's secretary, villain, in love with Mariangel |
Andrea Montenegro | María Pía de la Vega | sister of Don Alejandro, in love with Fernando |
Ricardo González | Bernardo | mute, assistant of Don Diego |
Luigi Ayacardi | Tobias del Valle y Campos | dandy |
Germán Rojas | Jonás | gypsy, father of Renzo |
Ana Bolena Meza | Sara Kalí / Mercedes Mayorga de Aragon | mother of Esmeralda, Fernando's ex-wife |
Adriana Campos | Yumalay / Guadalupe - Toypurnia / Regina de la Vega | Indian, in love with Don Alejandro / Deceased wife of Don Alejandro and mother of Don Diego. |
Margarita Giraldo | Azucena | gypsy, mother of Renzo |
Marilyn Patiño | Catalina | Tobias del Valle y Campos' wife, Pizarro's lover, Mariángel's friend |
Natalia Bedoya | Laisha | gypsy, wife of Miguel |
Carmen Marina Torres | Dolores | (probably a slave) nanny of Don Diego |
Supporting cast
- Talu Quintero
- Jose Saldarriaga
- Fernando Corridor
- Alberto Saavedra
- Orlando Valenzuela .... Miguel - gypsy
- David Noreña
- Alejandro Tamayo
- Catalina Vela
- Alejandra Guzmán
- Lina Angarita
- Adriana Martin
- Nicolas Niño
- Anderson Barbosa
- Jesus David Forero
- Mauricio Bravo
- Jaime Rayo
- Julian Alvarez
- Gabriel Gonzalez
- Ivelyn Giró .... María Luísa Burgos de Castilla - Queen of Spain
- Teresa Gutiérrez .... La Marquesa Carmen Santillana de la Roquette - the Marquessa
- Didier van der Hove .... Santiago Michelena - friend of Diego, ex-lover of Mariángel
- El Francés .... Tornado - Zorro's horse
- Valentina Acosta .... Selenia
Supporting Characters
- Aaron, the exorcist
- Agapito, the barber/surgeon/undertaker
- Aguirre, the soldier
- Alejandro, Elena and Fernanda, children
- Alfonso, the suitor
- Camba, the slave
- Catalina, Mariángel's friend
- Don Enrique de Castella y Leon - King of Spain
- Fulgencio, the soldier
- Hermes, the prisoner
- Jacobo Almagro de Castellón, Duke of Albatroz
- Javier, the gypsy
- Juan, the guard of horses
- Judge Quintana
- Leroy, the soldier
- Macario, the soldier
- Maestro Abelardo Samaniego de Villarte
- Mejias, the soldier
- Miguel, the gypsy
- la mujer de la rosa (the lady of the rose)
- Selenia, the witch
- The Kala-Kala, a tribe of cannibals
- White Buffalo, the grandmother of Diego
Episodes
Production
Zorro began filming on November 8, 2006 in Bogotá, Villa de Leyva and Cartagena, Colombia.[6] Telemundo and RTI Colombia developed the show with Sony Pictures Television International (SPTI), while CPT Holdings is listed as copyright holder. Venezuelan screenwriter Humberto "Kiko" Olivieri, a fan of Disney's Zorro, developed the story.[7] Cardinal Olivieri, a supporting character on the show, has the same last name.
Telemundo aired this novela with English subtitles on the default closed captioning channel, CC1. The network normally broadcast translations on CC3, which is not available on many older TV sets. It also expanded two weeks of March episodes to 90 minutes and several episodes in May were extended to 75 and 90 minutes.
On June 22, Telemundo announced Zorro is in its final chapters.[8] After the July 23 finale, La Esclava Isaura expanded into its time slot.[9] This series is also known as Zorro: La Telenovela and Zorro: La Novela.
Changes
The originally-announced storyline began with Don Diego as the protege of a great English knight, Sir Edmund Kendel.[10] He returns home to California to find his land under dictatorship, then taking up Zorro's mantle.[11] When the show aired, it was the Moncada family that arrived in California, with Esmeralda having become a rich widow.
Theme Song
- See also Amor Gitano
Beyoncé and Alejandro Fernández performed Amor Gitano (Gypsy Love), a flamenco-pop track commissioned by Sony for the series. According to the label's translation, Fernández sings, "I'm your gypsy, your pilgrim. I'm your thief, I'm going to love you even if they tear my heart out." [12] Since Beyoncé does not speak Spanish, she sang the lyrics phonetically. The single hit number one on Spain's singles chart.
International airings
Zorro averaged 635,000 core viewers during March 2007 on Telemundo. The audience jumped 28 percent from February in the network's key demographic, Hispanic adults from age 18 to 49.[13] Overall, the show has had Nielsen ratings of around 0.6, with a 1 share. The network considered expanding the serial's run,[14] but decided against it.
Zorro has been sold to broadcasters in 43 countries.[15] Telemundo and Sony split the international rights, with Sony holding the rights for Latin America.[16] On February 26, 2007, the show started airing in Colombia on Caracol TV.[17]
In Romania, Zorro debuted on Acasa TV on March 5, 2007. The pilot episode aired with hard English subtitles in the USA on Universal HD. It premiered in Argentina on March 26, 2007, on Telefé.
In Lithuania, the telenovela started in 2008, January.
In the Philippines, Zorro aired on ABS-CBN from September 10, 2007 to February 21, 2008, weekday afternoons at 3:00pm.
In Puerto Rico, the telenovela officially started airing on Telemundo on October 2, 2007 and in Finland on January 10, 2008, Nelonen
In Bulgaria, the telenovela officially started airing on April 15, 2008 on BTV and started airing on October 9, 2012 on bTV Lady.
In Serbia, the telenovela officially started airing on June 23, 2008 on RTV Pink.
In Hungary: August 25, 2008
In Poland since September 1, 2008 on TV Puls
In People's Republic of China:since October 31, 2008 on CCTV-8
In Slovenia, will start on November 3, 2010 on POP TV
In Spain, the telenovela aired on Antena 3TV weekdays at 16hrs from Monday 27 April 2007 where it achieved moderate success in the tough "second Primetime" afternoon slot.
See also
- Zorro
- Character profiles from the 1950s Zorro series.
References
- ^ http://foro.telenovela-world.com/~diane/elzorrolaespada/News.HTM.
{{cite web}}
: Missing or empty|title=
(help) - ^ "Entertainment/Hollywood News". The Hollywood Reporter.
- ^ Anna Marie de la Fuente. "SPTI reteams with Telemundo". Variety.
- ^ [1]
- ^ [2]
- ^ "Por sus características arquitectónicas Villa de Leyva fue elegida como escenario para El Zorro". eltiempo.com.
- ^ "Kiko Olivieri reinventa El Zorro - Qué Hay - EL UNIVERSAL".
- ^ [3]
- ^ [4]
- ^ [5]
- ^ [6]
- ^ [7]
- ^ [8]
- ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2007-06-26. Retrieved 2007-04-26.
{{cite web}}
: Unknown parameter|deadurl=
ignored (|url-status=
suggested) (help)CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) - ^ "Estelariza Marlene Favela "El Zorro"".
- ^ [9]
- ^ http://foro.telenovela-world.com/~diane/elzorrolaespada/SumCol.HTM.
{{cite web}}
: Missing or empty|title=
(help)
External links
- Telemundo International Zorro page (English, requires Flash)
- La espada y la rosa at the Wayback Machine (archived October 28, 2009) Zorro page with summaries (English)
- Telenovela World (bilingual)
- Zorro: La Espada y la Rosa at IMDb
Spanish
- Telemundo main Zorro page (Spanish)
- Canal Caracol Zorro page (Spanish)
- El Zorro, la espada y la rosa at IMDb
- 2000s American television series
- 2007 telenovelas
- 2007 American television series debuts
- 2007 American television series endings
- 2007 Colombian television series debuts
- 2007 Colombian television series endings
- 2007 Spanish television series debuts
- 2007 Spanish television series endings
- Colombian telenovelas
- RTI Producciones telenovelas
- Spanish-language American telenovelas
- Telemundo telenovelas
- Television series by Universal Television
- Television series by Sony Pictures Television
- Television shows set in Los Angeles
- Western (genre) television series
- Zorro television series