Friday, September 19, 2008
Apparently No Fuego Till Monday
Ibarramedia - I think you asked to have this photo of Susana Zabaleta (who is playing Ruth) posted on the site and so here it is. Per alma-latina.net her last telenovela was Bajo la Misma Piel which was shown in the U.S. in 2004. She plays one mean villana in that one. Don't know what she'll do with this character.
Labels: Fuego
Setting: an agave plantation with a waterfall and swimmin' hole nearby. Oh, and it's set in ye olden days of pirates. There's probably a wicked witch in a castle, too. And the donkey is a detective.
Well, I'm game...especially if they be wearing puffy shirts and tight, thigh-high boots with red heels.
"Cree"
Hmmm, I bet there's even a waterfall nearby...
"Cree"
Could Fernando Colunga be our lead Pirate??? PLease??? ;o)
doris
I must admit the first time I read that, I thought it said "clean underwear shots." It's too late... must call it a day!
doris
Here's an idea for Clean Underwear Shots, Doris: the pirates have to take their undies down to the stream and beat them with rocks. A smart cinematographer should catch some good camera angles on that scene.
"Creemelo"
I can't wait for the recap, so we can all discuss it there.
doris
I wanted to see the Guapos finale, but I'm still catching up on the QEs I missed.
I can hardly wait to see what new developments are going to be added to your make-believe blogger novela.
Nancy (LT addict)
Nobody but nobody writes like Dame du Maurier!
Too bad she's not around to pen telenovelas!
"Creemelo"
I guess Luci's death after only 10years was a shout out to destroying your liver & WTF was up with Al & 10 years and he looks like Ned Flanders?
Yet 50 years later Val & Rocky look like they are maybe in their 40's?
Cree I'm not sure if they have pirate guys in puffy shirts and high heel red boots, but I think there is a special place in the Minneapolis airport that has something similar
:o}
"Creemelo" (or Cree for short)
Nancy (LT addict)
If anyone is interested, here’s a bibliography plus a short biography of Du Maurier: http://www.fantasticfiction.co.uk/d/daphne-du-maurier/
Nancy (LT addict)
I always loved the old pirate movies as a kid, that's why I'm hooked on "Fuego": simple characters, lots of passion, and that feeling that you're stranded somewhere far, far away from the real world.
Too bad Sofia is not more like Maureen O'Hara.
:o)
"Creemelo"
Too bad I forgot it was yesterday, matey!
"Creemelo the Bilgewater Queen"
Creemelo, you stare at the cod piece of course! I love Maureen O'Hara, she is awesome. I love any movie with Errol Flynn or Tyrone Powers. Pirates are so cool!
Of course modern day, Johnny Depp makes a great pirate. My daughter says he is to dirty, I just tell her I would be HAPPY to give him a bath!
Molly, you inquired about La Esposa Virgin. It was the first TN I watched and it had many actors I've seen since then in other TNs, including Sergio Sendel, Adela Noriega, and our sweet Oscar. It had the same Mexidoon time warp feeling as Fuego, but not as bad.
La Paloma
La Paloma
Ibarramedia
I don't care what the setting is, I just want to be cast as the "Tough Love Coach". I want to lecture people like Sofie on the wrongness of her dress, I want her to explain to me the need of walking in the dark alone, after once being raped and once nearly raped. Ah Sofie is this a cry for attention?
I want to hide clues around the office and make Juan try to find one. I would make him hold a flashlight as a reminder you need one when your head is that far up your ass. Maybe the constant reminder would take that Beaver Cleaver look off his face.
Crabi, oh bitch bring it on. Let the snarking begin. Crabi show me
those quotes in the Bible where it says, God had a daughter named Crabi and put her in charge of passing out vengence.
I am not a licensed therapist but I believe "That choosing any therapy of Dr. Phil and then taking a 180.
Yeah, this time around the FELS casting department did get the cast members to look close enough to be related --with the exception of LaGuardia perhaps, but he's such a honey I'll give them a pass on that one.
========
Dorado dave-- It's because I have the utmost respect for all the men who sit with (or even without) their significant others and nightly endure watching grown men cry being elevated to a high art! > ; ? ))
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Beckster - every time I see Juan get that dopey goofy grin on his overly fuzzy face I want to cringe. It always leaves me with the definite urge to have somebody throw a pie in his face.
Yes, men in puffy shirts in stocking have to stay in period or we are in the midst of What Not To Wear and Queer Eye. And a whole Telenovella with the men telling the girls why their fashion sense sucks would not be much fun.
Juan's expression, quite frankly, is probably the LAST thing on my mind when EY comes on screen. Puh-leeze. Care to guess the first? Heh.
I didn't watch GUAPOS, but did tune in to the last ten minutes or so to see how the hero and heroine (I'd heard people talk about) ended up. There were like, what, four deaths back to back? It was kind of strange, all those characters just falling over like that... *shrug*
I think Crabby already died at some point in her life as a result of her bad behavior, went straight to Hell, tried to take over, and Hell tossed her right back out. "Get thee back to Earth, wench. The boss we got's an angel compared to you."
That there would be some telenovela.
But what would she put it on?
"Creemelo"
Hacienda Florian was the top producer of Tequila in the region as well as having the most beautiful horses. As manager of the Hacienda he must oversee the work in the agave fields and tequila production as well as the training and care of the horses. His hope was that his brother Miguel would learn quickly so he could help work with the horses.
Don Roberto Florian was a cruel and selfish man. He met his death in a mysterious “accident.” Some say it was the work of El Chacal but others tell a different story. Rumor had it that perhaps he had a boyfriend but nobody knows for sure.
With a big sigh Raul swam to the edge of the pool and climbed out. As he put on his pants he heard a noise. He silently made his way through the bushes to see what it was. Peering through the vegetation he saw Dona Victoria. At 27 she was too young to be a widow. Her long blond hair reminded him of cornsilk and her blue eyes were more blue than even the sky above. She was the kindest, most beautiful woman Raul had ever known. She pretended to grieve for her husband but deep inside he knew she was happy.
Roberto was twice her age and she never loved him. Her father arranged the marriage as a “business deal” to merge the two tequila enterprises. Soon after they married Victoria’s father “died.”
Victoria made the best of the marriage. She actually tried to love Roberto but nothing she did was right. He would travel on business for days and when he did come home he was always in a foul mood. It didn’t help that his mother Olivia lived with them at the hacienda.
Oliva was almost as cruel as her son. She had a vicious temper and would strike Victoria for the smallest thing. She carried a riding whip with her and whenever the servants displeased her she would strike them also. Now that Roberto was gone Olivia believed herself Queen of the Castle. However, when Victoria’s father died she inherited her father’s half of the business. There was a stipulation that she must outlive Roberto by 3 years in order to inherit the rest.
Victoria was glad to escape from the Hacienda to get away from Olivia who was in a particularly foul mood today. As a means of escape Victoria told Maria (the cook) that she would like to pick the berries for the pie for dinner. Victoria was well liked by the staff because she always treated them with kindness. Maria wouldn’t usually let the Patrona pick berries but she knew it was a way to escape Dona Olivia. Victoria sat on a nearby rock to rest and gazed up into the sky. Olivia said there was an important guest coming for dinner this evening but would not tell Victoria who it was. A small tear escaped her eye and ran down her cheek. She would have to find a way to cover what was left of her black eye so the guest wouldn’t see it. How did she get herself into such a mess. As another tear ran down her face she heard a noise behind her coming from the bushes…..
Fuego en AZ
"Creemelo"
Recappers are able to post things to the actual blog (not just the comments) and therefore can include pictures in a blog post. But, again, that's a blog post, not a comment.
However, you can always include the URL to a photo in your comments, or a link to the URL. There's also the "click my name" trick - when you post a comment, under "Choose an identity," choose the Name/URL option which will send people to that website when they click your name.
Anyway, thank to all who kept the ball rolling...it made our FELS hiatus fade into the background.
Cheers to All,
"Creemelo"
AGAVE Y TEQUILA (working title), Part 2.
The German Shepherd, more black than brown and just over one hundred pounds, darted from the hedges and came at Victoria with tail wagging. “Santo--you scared me!” she scolded, but wiped her tears and broke into a smile at the sight of him. Santo rested both forepaws up on the rock, next to her lap, and nuzzled her until she scratched him behind the ears the way he’d always liked. When he started sniffing at her skirt pockets, Victoria knew just what the dog was after.
Still balancing the basket of fresh berries in one hand, she reached into a pocket with the other, produced a doggie treat and held it over his head. Santo immediately backed off the rock and went to stiff attention, eyes never leaving her, waiting for the slightest command. “Sit...” His hindquarters lowered to the ground without the rest of him moving. He could have been a statue. “Good dog.” With a laugh, Victoria gave Santo his prize. He lapped it greedily--but carefully--without leaving so much as a scratch on her fingers.
Santo’s appearance wouldn’t have scared her so badly, but she was on the verge of finally inheriting the birthright left by her father and she’d been getting crank phone calls lately. Someone would either listen to her breathe for a moment, or hang up without speaking.
An icy chill slid up Victoria’s spine. “Better get these berries to Maria.”
She was sliding off the rock when Santo’s playful mood suddenly changed. The dog stiffened, growled, then began barking as if ready to tear something--or someone--into chunks. He bounded around the flat boulder and put himself between Victoria and the tall foliage that obscured the view to the Florian swimming hole. Victoria quickly got to her feet. “Raul. Is that you?”
A rich chuckle came from behind the tallest bush. “How did you know?”
“You always set Santo off for some reason. I wish I knew why,” she replied, suspicious.
“Patrona, call him off.”
“Call him off... what?”
A long pause. Men and their pride! Finally... “Call him off, please.”
“Down, Santo. Quiet.”
Victoria couldn’t help grinning at the hacienda manager as he slipped between the trees and sauntered over to stand in front of her. Her eyes drank him in as if he were a long, tall glass of ice water. He was that indeed, wearing only pants and no shirt, dripping wet. But Raul Vega’s good looks and strong body weren’t the only things she admired about him. The great respect for her in his expression warmed her heart. The smoldering desire for her in his dark gaze warmed her... somewhere else.
“Am I in trouble for taking too long a work break?” he asked softly.
“Seeing as I’m not my mother in law... no.” He wasn’t touching her, but the way he looked down at her made her swear he was.
“Nice berries, ma’am.”
With a start, Victoria realized she’d been clutching the fruit bowl tightly against her full breasts, right where they strained against her scoop-necked blouse. She lowered it to her waist--and blushed.
“Not so nice shiner.” Seeing Victoria’s eye blackened pissed him off. Raul forced his hand to stay at his side, when all he wanted to do was soothe the injury with his fingers, perhaps take some of the hurt away. It had to be that bitch Dona Olivia again. When the woman wasn’t busy stirring her cauldron, she was laying into somebody with that damn whip, especially Victoria. “You run the hacienda flawlessly. You’re a strong woman. Why do you let Dona Olivia treat you this way?” His hand came up anyway, almost on its own, though he knew hired help had no business touching a patrona.
He never got the chance. An all-terrain SUV came rolling up and skidded to a stop. Santo commenced to barking.
“We pay you to work, not swim at your leisure, you damned swine!”
Raul looked in Dona Olivia’s direction just as she stormed up and drove the handle of her whip into the side of his head.
(Okay... we need an official title, and the name of the town, me hardies!)
Raul Vega--our hero
Miguel Vega--his brother
Don Roberto Estrada--scumbag husband of Victoria (deceased)
Olivia Estrada--Mother-in-law
Victoria Estrada--Heroine
Maria--(cook)
Raul Vega--our hero
Miguel Vega--his brother
Don Roberto Florian--scumbag husband of Victoria (deceased)
Olivia Florian--Mother-in-law
Victoria Florian--Heroine
Maria--(cook)
It's pretty bad when I can't remember my own characters!!! :)
I don't know where Estrada came from.
I wish I could add something, but I'm having enough trouble keeping up with the telenovelas I'm already watching!
I do think the animals should have their own subplot, though.
Jack had originally put the detective team together, but the animals want to use their investigative skills only to fight crime. Jack has a more mercenary attitude, and many of their clients use the information they get for blackmail or other malicious mischief.
(I'm not sure how Jack keeps the animals in line; maybe he's holding all of their babies and eggs hostage.)
The tensions grow between the animals and Jack; the animals scheme to make Jack look bad so that he'll quit the business and move out of town. Then they can become an independent crime fighting team.
And, uh, I guess some of these animals have to fall in love, too, or it wouldn't be a proper telenovela!
How about this: whenever he gets angry, he rips the buttons off of his shirt! And the guy's got a short temper.
Because I have a cat that definitely thinks he is a dog and loves to sleep and play with my dogs. They don't chase him or anything. But my other cat, who knows she is a cat, they treat like a cat.
Posting separately would make it easier to keep up with, Connie, but I'm not sure we'd be allowed because of the purpose of the blog...
Santo is, of course, top detective on Jack's roster; that way, he'd be in charge of the Biggest Plot--who's trying to keep Victoria from getting the other half of her dad's estate, plus he can keep an eye on and thwart that heffer Dona Olivia at every turn. Bwahahahaha!
Other animals could be Raul's horse, Maria's cat, the villanous Jack's talking parrot, and someone in town's got to have a donkey.
Oh no, no, no. I've already thrown a phone in there. I had to. Couldn't stand it! In keeping with telenovela ridiculousness, though, it can be an old rotary type, and the ONLY phone for thousands of miles, because as you know, this town is right at the border of a nuclear waste dump, time is skewed, and there be pirates right off the coast. LOL
My cat had a boyfriend once... the german shepherd next door, named Bullet. They would sit on a log every evening, side by side, and watch the sun set. I kid you not.
Any other dog in the neighborhood got clawed by her.
"Creemelo"
PS I loved the introduction of the dog coming through the bushes when we were all obviously waiting for ...him (Curly-boy).
(You think we can convince the networks to keep FUEGO off for an extra week? Ha.)
Ooooooh, now we know who's calling Vicky on her hand-crank phone. Dread Pirate Jack, wanting the estate. Could he be Raul's long-lost father, thus Santo's incessant barking at our hero?
(LORD I've got to get a hold of myself)
And I bet the animals' families would object, too. "There is no way I'm going to let you go out with that... that.. PIG!"
Maybe it'll work if we limit it to animals of similar size or type. Chickens and ducks yes, dogs and cats yes, cows and horses yes, cows and chickens NO.
How about if we start off with one daring couple exploring this forbidden love, and see how the audience takes it.
G in CA--you called it! I have Tonki from DUELO on the brain. :)
An anonymous commenter suggested this name back on Friday. I think it's perfect, since we're taking stuff from several different novelas and throwing them all together.
CDPAREFSQE. CDPAR for short.
Actually right now I'm picturing Sarita from FELS with her lips all pursed up as she consults a clipboard:
ducks and chickens...yes
Cows and chickens...no
laborers and upper class snobby girls...no
"Creemelo"
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