| La Cuaima | |
|---|---|
|  | |
| Genre | Telenovela | 
| Created by | Carlos Pérez | 
| Written by | 
 | 
| Directed by | 
 | 
| Creative director | Rosa Helena Arcaya | 
| Starring | |
| Opening theme | "Soy mujer" performed by La India | 
| Country of origin | Venezuela | 
| Original language | Spanish | 
| No. of episodes | 130 | 
| Production | |
| Executive producer | Jhonny Pulido | 
| Producers | 
 | 
| Production location | Caracas | 
| Cinematography | 
 | 
| Editor | Ray Suárez | 
| Original release | |
| Network | Radio Caracas Televisión | 
| Release | August 6, 2003 – February 9, 2004 | 
| Related | |
La Cuaima, also known as Carmencita, la Cuaima, is a Venezuelan telenovela created by Carlos Pérez that premiered on Radio Caracas Televisión on August 6, 2003, and ended on February 9, 2004.[1] It stars Catherine Correia as the titular character.[2]
Cast
Main
- Catherine Correia as Carmen "Carmencita" Meléndez
- Jonathan Montenegro as Simón Alvarenga
- Juan Carlos Alarcón as Juan Pescao
- Chantal Baudaux as Alfonsina Russo / La Nena
- Luis Fernández as Cristo Jesús Guédez
- Julie Restifo as Arminda Rovaina de Cáceres
- Luis Gerardo Núñez as Basilio Alvarenga
Recurring
- Ámbar Díaz as Yamileth Cáceres Rovaina
- Flor Elena González as Pepita Hamilton de Alvarenga
- Margarita Hernández as Luisa Russo
- Javier Valcárcel as Cruz Esteban Guédez
- Juan Carlos Tarazona as Leonardo José "Leo" Cáceres Rovaina
- Juliet Lima as Daysi Chacón
- Vito Lonardo as Don Piero Russo
- Alejandro Otero as Celso Russo
- Gioia Arismendi as Maigualida Campos
- Aura Rivas as Matea Guaramato
- Maria Alejandra Colón as Carolina "Caro" de Russo
- Ligia Petit as Elda Ramírez
- Kimberly Dos Ramos as Bambi Cáceres Rovaina
- Gabriel López as Coco O'Brian
- Dora Mazzone as Modesta Meléndez
- Carlos Arreaza as Alexis Barragán
- Victoria Robert as Elvia / La Comadre
- Leopoldo Regnault as Comisario Montoya
- Marcos Campos as Emilio
References
- ↑ "Carlos Pérez: "La novela de corte socialista no existe"". eluniversal.com (in Spanish). El Universal Venezuela. Retrieved 20 June 2017.
- ↑ Aguirre, Luis. ""Una buena cuaima no muere"". vencor.narod.ru (in Spanish). Retrieved 20 June 2017.
External links
    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.
