Escrava Mãe

Escrava Mãe (English: The Slave Mother)[1] is a Brazilian telenovela produced by Casablanca for RecordTV. Created by Gustavo Reiz and directed by Ivan Zettel. It premiered on May 31, 2016 and ended on January 9, 2017, replaced by the rerun of A Escrava Isaura.[2][3] It stars Fernando Pavão, Roberta Gualda, Léo Rosa, Milena Toscano, Lidi Lisboa and Thaís Fersoza.[4]

Escrava Mãe
GenreTelenovela
Created byGustavo Reiz
Written byGustavo Reiz
Directed byIvan Zettel
Starring
Opening theme"Anos Solidões" by Lulli Chiaro
Country of originBrazil
Original language(s)Portuguese
No. of episodes159
Production
Production location(s)Paulínia
Camera setupMulti-camera
Production company(s)Casablanca
Release
Original networkRecordTV
Picture format4K (Ultra HD)
Original releaseMay 31, 2016 (2016-05-31) 
January 9, 2017 (2017-01-09)
Chronology
Related showsA Escrava Isaura
External links
Website

The telenovela tells the story of Juliana, the daughter of a slave brought from Africa and raped by a slave trader, who ends up in the Engenho do Sol after the death of her mother and lives under the love and hatred of the Avelar sisters. Pedro Carvalho plays the Portuguese Miguel, who comes to Brazil to seek answers about the mysterious death of his parents and falls in love with Juliana, having to overcome her fear of white men.

The plot won the Seoul International Drama Awards in the Serial-Drama Category.

Plot

The story begins in 1788 in Congo, Africa. A tribe of Khoisans is invaded by white men, who imprison the natives and take them to Brazil on a slave ship, where they will be sold as slaves. During the trip, Luena is raped by the trafficker Osório, giving birth to Juliana and dying after childbirth. Juliana ends up in Engenho do Sol, in the village of São Salvador, where she is raised by Tia Joaquina and becomes a maid of the Avelar family, being protected by them, which generates the hatred of Esmetria, slave who never received the same privileges. After 20 years, Juliana's relationship with the two heiresses of the sugar mill is completely different: while she is taken as a friend and confidant by Teresa, her younger daughter is also treated with contempt by Maria Isabel, the merciless eldest daughter. The life of Juliana changes with the arrival of Miguel, a Portuguese who is in search of clues on the mysterious death of its father and ends up living a love forbidden with her. The terrible Osorio is also in the village, working as a factor at a nearby farm, and is not only linked to the pains of Juliana's life, although she does not know, as well as Miguel, since he was involved in the murder of the boy's father.[5]

Cast

  • Gabriela Moreyra as Juliana dos Anjos
  • Pedro Carvalho as Miguel Sales
  • Thaís Fersoza as Maria Isabel de Avelar
  • Zezé Motta as Tia Joaquina
  • Fernando Pavão as Fernando Almeida 'Comendador Almeida'
  • Roberta Gualda as Teresa de Avelar Almeida
  • Léo Rosa as Átila Duarte
  • Milena Toscano as Filipa Gomes do Amaral / Joana Gomes do Amaral (young)
  • Lidi Lisboa as Esméria / Malica Darrila
  • Roger Gobeth as Guilherme Gomes do Amaral
  • Luiz Guilherme as Coronel Quintiliano Gomes do Amaral
  • Bete Coelho as Beatrice de Avelar
  • Luíza Tomé as Rosalinda Pavão
  • Adriana Lessa as Condessa Catarina Gama de Luccock / Jamala Darrila
  • Jussara Freire as Urraca de Góis Almeida 'Baronesa de Barangalha'
  • Jayme Periard as Osório
  • Robertha Portella as Petúnia
  • Karen Marinho as Beleza Soares 'Belezinha'
  • Raphael Montagner as Tomás Gomes do Amaral
  • Saulo Meneghetti as Charles de Alencastro
  • Cássio Scapin as Antonio José de Alcântara as 'Tozé'
  • Débora Gomez as Violeta Pavão
  • Manuela Duarte as Dália Bem-Me-Quer
  • César Pezzuoli as Nestor Soares
  • Adriana Londoño as Irani Goitacá Soares
  • Sidney Santiago as Sapião
  • Junno Andrade as Capitão Loreto Veloso
  • Mariza Marchetti as Rebeca Andrade Gama 'Lady Rebeca'
  • Marcelo Batista as Kamau / Viriato
  • Rogério Brito as Genésio
  • Marcelo Escorel as Zé Leão
  • Nill Marcondes as Tito Pardo
  • Henri Pagnoncelli as Dr. Augusto Pacheco
  • Elina de Souza as Bá Teixeira
  • Graça Andrade as Gonzalina
  • Júlio Levy as Soldado Crisaldo
  • Ronaldo Reis as Soldado Sereno
  • Théo Salomão as Leôncio Almeida de Avelar
  • Bianca Paiva as Jasmin Duarte / Dorinha
  • Jean Dandrah as Frei Abilio
  • Isabella Bittar as Camélia
  • Priscila Vaz as Margarida
  • Amanda Anequini as Tulipa
  • Taisa Pelosi as Orquídea

Special participation

  • Nayara Justino as Luena
  • Antônio Petrin as Coronel Custódio de Avelar
  • Ivan de Almeida as Velho Tião
  • Neuza Borges as Mãe Quitéria
  • Patrícia Mayo as Elza de Avelar
  • Victor Wagner as Barbudo
  • Luciana Vendramini as Ximena Veloso
  • Moara Semeghini as Joana Gomes do Amaral
  • Lara Córdula as Cigana Selma
  • Kaik Pereira as Sapião (young)
  • Rachel Aguiar as Maria Isabel de Avelar (young)
  • Gaby Benevides as Rosalinda Pavão (young)
  • Joana Rodrigues as Beatrice de Avelar (young)
  • Cristhian Fernandes as Quintiliano do Amaral (young)
  • Kido Mathelart as Soldado Peixoto
  • Taiguara Nazareth as Líder dos quilombolas
  • Evelyn Montesano as Tirinda
  • Ton Crivelaro as Capitão do Mato

Production

Filming began on May 21, 2015.[6] The telenoved used 4K resolution, a format superior to the traditional HD of 1080i, having a dimension of 3840 pixels, the same used by Hollywood films for definition in cinematographic screens, leaving the images with a cinematographic dress.[7] It was the first Brazilian production among all the stations that used this technology.[8] The episode had a budget of R$350,000.[9]

Ratings

Timeslot (BRT/AMT) Episodes First aired Last aired
Date Viewers
(in points)
Date Viewers
(in points)
MonFri 7:30pm 159 May 31, 2016 (2016-05-31) 14[10] January 9, 2017 (2017-01-09) 11[11]
gollark: He is never wrong!
gollark: Hail the God-Emperor TJ09!
gollark: 🌵thinkso🌵
gollark: Or he's too busy subtly adjusting the colours of buttons.
gollark: It's probably embedded in thousands of lines of cryptic PHP spaghetti.

References

  1. "The Slave Mother". recordtvnetwork.com. Retrieved 19 November 2017.
  2. ""A Escrava Mãe" tem data de estreia na Record". entretenimento.r7.com (in Portuguese). Retrieved 18 November 2017.
  3. ""Escrava mãe" termina nesta segunda e Record reapresenta na sequência "Escrava Isaura"". ndonline.com.br (in Portuguese). Retrieved 18 November 2017.
  4. "Escrava Mãe". teledramaturgia.com.br (in Portuguese). Retrieved 18 November 2017.
  5. "Saiba tudo sobre a novela 'Escrava Mãe', da Record". guiadasemana.com.br (in Portuguese). Retrieved 18 November 2017.
  6. "Elenco de "Escrava Mãe" começa a gravar na próxima semana". rd1.com.br (in Portuguese). Retrieved 18 November 2017.
  7. Vivaqua, Arthur. "Visando mercado internacional, Record gravará "Escrava Mãe" com tecnologia 4k". rd1.com.br (in Portuguese). Retrieved 18 November 2017.
  8. Medeiros, Lucas. ""Escrava Mãe" será a primeira novela brasileira captada em 4K, segundo autor". otvfoco.com.br (in Portuguese). Retrieved 18 November 2017.
  9. ""Escrava Mãe" promete salada de estilos para agradar a "família brasileira"". jornaldamanhamarilia.com.br (in Portuguese). Retrieved 18 November 2017.
  10. Peccoli, Vitor. ""Escrava Mãe" estreia com dobro do SBT e eleva audiência da Record em 37%; confira os consolidados desta terça-feira (31/05/16)". otvfoco.com.br (in Portuguese). Retrieved 18 November 2017.
  11. Peccoli, Vitor. "Estreia de "Dois Irmãos" dá mais audiência que novela, mas derruba filme; confira os consolidados desta segunda-feira (09/01/17)". otvfoco.com.br (in Spanish). Retrieved 19 November 2017.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.