Éramos Seis (1994 TV series) explained
Alt Name: | "We Were Six" |
Genre: | Telenovela |
Creator: | Sílvio de Abreu Rubens Edwald Filho |
Based On: | Éramos Seis (novel) |
Starring: | Irene Ravache |
Country: | Brazil |
Language: | Portuguese |
Num Episodes: | 180 |
Executive Producer: | Henrique Martins Del Rangel |
Runtime: | 45 minutes |
Network: | SBT |
Éramos Seis (The Six of Us) is a Brazilian telenovela produced by Sistema Brasileiro de Televisão (SBT) in 1994, based on the homonym novel by Maria José Dupré. The television series was written by Sílvio de Abreu and Rubens Ewald Filho and directed by Nilton Travesso, Henrique Martins, and Del Rangel. It was aired from 9 May 1994 through 5 December 1994, in 180 episodes.
It was the fourth adaptation of Dupré's novel to TV: Rede Record made the first version in 1958 and Rede Tupi adapted it twice in 1967 and 1977.[1]
Plot
Éramos Seis chronicles the struggles of a middle-class family in São Paulo through the eyes of its matriarch, Dona Lola.[1]
Cast
- Irene Ravache .... Lola
- Othon Bastos .... Júlio
- Tarcísio Filho .... Alfredo
- Jandir Ferrari .... Carlos
- Luciana Braga .... Maria Isabel
- Leonardo Bricio .... Julinho
- Nathália Timberg .... Aunt Emília
- Jussara Freire .... Clotilde
- Denise Fraga .... Olga
- Osmar Prado .... Zeca
- Paulo Figueiredo .... Almeida
- Marco Ricca .... Felício
- Bete Coelho .... Adelaide
- Mayara Magri .... Justina
- Jandira Martini .... Dona Genu
- Marcos Caruso .... Virgulino
- João Vitti .... Lúcio
- Flávia Monteiro .... Lili
- Yara Lins .... Dona Maria
- Wilma de Aguiar .... Tia Candoca
- Eliete Cigarini .... Carmencita
- Antônio Petrin .... Assad
- Angelina Muniz .... Karine
- Luciene Adami .... Maria Laura
- Umberto Magnani .... Alonso
- Nina de Pádua .... Pepa
- Ana Paula Arósio .... Amanda
- Carla Diaz .... Eliana
- Caio Blat .... Carlos (young)
Awards
- São Paulo Association of Art Critics AwardsThe Associação Paulista dos Críticos de Artes (APCA) honors the best in the fields of stage acting (since 1956), music, literature, film, television, plastic arts (since 1972/1973), and radio (since 1980).[2]
- 1994 – Television: Best Drama
- Troféu Imprensa
- 1994 – Best Drama
- 1994 – Best Actress – Irene Ravache
Notes and References
- Book: Sadlier, Darlene Joy. One Hundred Years After Tomorrow: Brazilian Women's Fiction in the 20th Century. February 1, 1992. Indiana University Press. 58–75. 0-253-35045-X. 9 February 2010.
- Web site: .::: A P C A - Associação Paulista de Críticos de Arte ::: . 2014-04-27 . 2008-06-11 . https://web.archive.org/web/20080611054758/http://www.apca.org.br/ . dead .