Ana cristina botero wikipedia francais
María Cecilia Botero
María Cecilia Botero en 1991.
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María Cecilia Botero est une actrice colombienne née le à Medellín, en Antioquia.
Biographie
[modifier | modifier le code]Le début
[modifier | modifier le code]Elle a étudié l'anthropologie bien avant de devenir actrice.
Fille du professeur Jaime Botero Gómez e nièce de Dora Cadavid.
Elle débute avec El Fantasma de Canterville , en 1971, aux côtés de Carlos Benjumea, Maruja Toro, Enrique Pontón et Franky Linero. Elle remplacé Mariela Hijuelos, décédée lors de l'enregistrement de La Vorágine (1975). Elle était Manuela Saénz dans la série Bolívar, l'homme des difficultés en 1981. Elle était María Cándida dans La Pezuña del Diablo (1983), Yadira La Ardiente dans Caballo viejo (1988) et Sándalo Daza dans Música maestro (1990).
Ses frères Óscar Botero et Ana Cristina Botero sont également acteurs .
Réussite professionnelle
[modifier | modifier le code]Elle fait ses débuts en tant qu'actrice de cinéma en 1972, lorsqu'elle a joué dans le film María, aux côtés de Fernando Allende.
María Cecilia Botero a assumé le passage des années avec professionnalisme, dignité et force, devenant ainsi l'une des figures les plus aimées du divertissement colombien .
Parallèlement à sa carrière d'actrice, María Cecilia a produit et joué dans plusieurs comédies musicales réalisées par son mari, l'Argentin David Stivel (avec qui elle s'est mariée en 1982), aujourd'hui décédé. Avec lui, elle a eu un fils nommé Mateo Stivelberg.
Son rêve de populariser le théâtre musical en Colombie l'a amenée à réaliser des productions aussi importantes que Peter Pan, Sugar et La Mujer del Año. Elle s'est également fait remarquer en tant que présentatrice du journal télévisé et animatrice des talk-shows Maria C. Contigo et Las Tardes de Maria C..
En 2005, elle a été invitée à faire partie de la telenovela Lorena, produite par RCN Television, où elle a joué so
Ana Cristina Botero
Colombian actress (born 1968)
Ana Cristina Botero | |
|---|---|
Botero in 2017 | |
| Born | Ana Cristina Botero Cadavid 1968 Medellin, Colombia |
| Occupation | actress |
| Known for | Television, theater and movies actress |
| Spouse | Jorge Barón |
| Children | Santiago Barón Botero |
| Parent | Jaime Botero Gómez (father) |
Ana Cristina Botero Cadavid (born in Medellín in 1968), is a Colombian actress, mainly active in the world of television, but also with participation in some Colombian plays and films.
Career
Botero is the daughter of actor, librettist and director Jaime Botero Gómez, niece of actress Dora Cadavid and sister of actors Óscar and María Cecilia Botero. She debuted on television when she was very young in the telenovela Lejos del Nido, starring her sister, María Cecilia and directed by her father, Jaime.
After remaining active in the theater, she returned to television in 1987 to join the cast of the soap opera Destinos Cruzados, a production starring her sister again. Two years later, she appeared in the series Los Dueños del Poder, along with Luis Eduardo Arango, Víctor Mallarino and her sister María Cecilia.
She began the 1990s by joining the cast of the successful telenovela La Casa de las Dos Palmas by Manuel Mejía Vallejo, starring Gustavo Angarita, Vicky Hernández and Edmundo Troya. The same year, she acted in the series Por qué mataron a Betty si era tan buena muchacha? Since 1992, she was part of the cast of the humor series Vuelo secreto, playing Silvia.
In the new millennium, she recorded appearances in the series El Precio del Silencio (2002) and A.M.A. La Academia (2003) before moving to Chile with her husband. She has a child named Santiago Barón Botero, who is very proud of the artistic career of his mother, his aunt Maria Cecilia and his grandfather, Jaime.
Filmography
Televisio
Botero
Botero is a surname of Italian origin, common in Colombia and along with other similar variants (Boter, Boteri, Botter, Botteri, Bottero), it originated in the Piedmont region of Italy, more specifically, in the town of Bene Vagienna, province of Cuneo.
In the present time, Colombia is the country with the largest number of people bearing this surname. The founder of this family in Colombia was Giovanni Andrea Botero Bernavi, born in the Republic of Genoa, region of Liguria, Italy.
Origin and etymology
It is an occupational surname that originated in the Middle Ages, around the year 500 CE, during which time people (coopers) made barrels for the storage and transportation of liquids and solids such as wine, water, honey, gunpowder, grains, salt and sugar.
At that time, when the Piedmont region was part of the Roman Empire, Boterus was the name given to the people who made the barrels in the town of Bene Vagienna.
Botero surname in Colombia
Origins
This surname arrived in today's Republic of Colombia, in the 18th century, after the arrival of the Genoese Giovanni Andrea Botero Bernavi (Juan Andrés, in Spanish) from Cádiz, Spain to the city of Cartagena de Indias, Viceroyalty of New Granada around the year 1715, who worked in the service of the Spanish Crown as naval gunner of the Santa Rosa ship, built in the Republic of Genoa for King Philip V of Bourbon.
The main purpose of this trip was to take to present-day Peru, along with his companions, the Prince of Santo Buono, newly appointed Viceroy of Peru, Carmine Nicolau Caracciol, who suffered a family calamity after the death on board of his wife, when giving birth.
Among other factors, that event caused the boat to make a stop in Cartagena, where due to illness, Botero had to give up continuing his trip to Peru. Not being a Spanish citizen, he had to request a specia
María Cecilia Botero
Colombian actress and TV presenter
In this Spanish name, the first or paternal surname is Botero and the second or maternal family name is Cadavid.
María Cecilia Botero | |
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Botero in 1991 | |
| Born | María Cecilia Botero Cadavid (1955-05-13) 13 May 1955 (age 69) Medellin, Antioquia, Colombia |
| Occupations |
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| Years active | 1971–present |
| Spouse | David Stivel (m. 1983; div. 1992) |
| Children | 1 |
| Relatives | |
María Cecilia Botero Cadavid (born 13 May 1955) is a Colombian actress, television presenter and journalist.
Biography
Beginnings
She studied anthropology long before becoming an actress. She is the daughter of former actor, librettist and director Jaime Botero Gómez. She is the niece of Dora Cadavid.
Botero began her acting career with production El Fantasma de Canterville (1971), alongside Carlos Benjumea, Maruja Toro, Enrique Pontón and Franky Linero. She replaced Mariela Hijuelos, who died during the recording of La Vorágine (1975). She was Manuela Saénz in the series Bolívar, el hombre de las dificultades(1981). She was María Cándida in La Pezuña del Diablo (1983), Yadira La Ardiente in Caballo Viejo (1988) and Sándalo Daza in Música Maestro (1990). Her brothers Óscar Botero and Ana Cristina Botero are also actors.
Professional career
She debuted as movies actress in 1972, when she starred in the film María, alongside Fernando Allende. María Cecilia Botero is known for her professionalism, thus becoming one of the most beloved figures in Colombian entertainment.
Her first television role was obtained in 1971, acting in El fantasma de Canterville. Then she participated in Lunes de Comedia, La Vorágine, Caminos de Gloria, Lejos del Nido, Los novios, La Pezuña del Diablo,