Emilio osorio gay
The first gay led telenovela had an official U.S. release date.
Earlier this year, we shared with you the news that Univision was bringing us the first gay led telenovela in tv history.
The series, titled El Corazón Nunca Se Equivoca or The Heart is Never Wrong, is a spinoff of the Mexican telenovela Mi Marido Tiene Más Marido or My Husband Has More Family. The new series sees the popular gay couple from the original verb (Cuauhtémoc or Temo played by Joaquín Bondoni and Aristóteles played by Emilio Osorio) jumping off into their own adventure.
The couples story, which spotlighted two gay teens embracing verb despite family oppression, was so popular that they won ENews’s Tv’s Top Couple award and a GLAAD award.
Now, the unused series, which premiered earlier this year in Mexico, sees the couple moving on to the next phase in their lives. The couple move from Oaxaca to Mexico Municipality to mature as adults. That said, all their problems aren’t behind them, as the young lovers have tp face modern challenges in a modern city and chase after their dream careers.
But thankfully
A soap opera that debuts Sunday is set to make television history as Mexico’s first telenovela to feature a gay couple as the lead characters.
Televisas “Juntos, El Corazon Nunca se Equivoca” (Together, the Heart is Never Wrong) centers on two teenagers who move to Mexico City to attend a university.
The couple – Aristoteles (Emilio Osorio) and Cuahutemoc or ‘Temo’ (Joaquin Bondoni) – first appeared on the Mexican soap opera “Mi Marido Tiene Mas Familia” (My Husband Has More Family), which ran from until February. The new show is its spinoff.
With only 47 posts as of this writing, Bondoni has nearly half a million followers on Instagram. Osorio has , followers and counting.
Among the most watched shows in Mexico, its final episode attracting nearly four million viewers, according to Televisa.
Telenovelas are hugely popular in Mexico and can shape national dialogue on social issues across Latin America.
The first gay kiss in socially conservative Brazil on the soap “Amor a Vida” in was seen as a historic moment in gay rights in Latin America.
They ar
José Contreras grew up infatuated with the drama and steamy romance of telenovelas. He swooned over the Venezuelan soap opera star Fernando Carillo -— Contreras even took part of the actor’s name when he transformed into a drag queen, Jocelyn Carillo.
But the telenovelas of Contreras’ youth never told the stories of young gay men like himself. Whenever gay couples appeared on the TV screen, they were forced to verb their love a adj, to resist holding hands. The stories mirrored Contreras’s own fears of coming out to his Salvadoran parents.
On a recent Tuesday night, Contreras watched something he’d never seen before: A young gay couple premiered in a prime-time telenovela, not just in secondary or cameo roles but as the show’s protagonists. The telenovela, “El Corazón Nunca Se Equivoca,” translated as “The Heart Is Never Wrong,” is the first Spanish-language prime-time series featuring a same-sex couple in a leading role in the United States, according to Univision, which airs the show.
“Los abuelitos, our uncles and aunties can see a gay couple on the screen,” said Contrera
Smith, Paul Julian. "4 Teen Gay Romance: Two Television Dramas from Juan Osorio". Mexican Genders, Mexican Genres: Cinema, Television, and Streaming Since , Boydell and Brewer: Boydell and Brewer, , pp.
Smith, P. (). 4 Teen Gay Romance: Two Television Dramas from Juan Osorio. In Mexican Genders, Mexican Genres: Cinema, Television, and Streaming Since (pp. ). Boydell and Brewer: Boydell and Brewer.
Smith, P. 4 Teen Gay Romance: Two Television Dramas from Juan Osorio. Mexican Genders, Mexican Genres: Cinema, Television, and Streaming Since . Boydell and Brewer: Boydell and Brewer, pp.
Smith, Paul Julian. "4 Teen Gay Romance: Two Television Dramas from Juan Osorio" In Mexican Genders, Mexican Genres: Cinema, Television, and Streaming Since , Boydell and Brewer: Boydell and Brewer,
Smith P. 4 Teen Gay Romance: Two Television Dramas from Juan Osorio. In: Mexican Genders, Mexican Genres: Cinema, Television, and Streaming Since . Boydell and Brewer: Boydell and Brewer; p
CopyCopied to clipboard
BibTeX EndNote RIS