La Señora

La Señora (English: The Lady) is a popular Spanish television period drama series set in the 1920s, produced by Diagonal TV for Televisión Española that was broadcast on La 1 of Televisión Española from 2008 to 2010.

La Señora
GenrePeriod drama
Country of originSpain
Original language(s)Spanish
No. of seasons3
No. of episodes39
Production
Production company(s)Diagonal TV for Televisión Española
Release
Original networkLa 1
Original releaseMarch 6, 2008 
January 18, 2010
Chronology
Followed by14 de abril. La República
External links
Website

It was filmed in Asturias, Sepúlveda and Navalcarnero, and viewership exceeded 5 million by the last episode which aired on January 18, 2010.[1]

Plot

In the 1920s Victoria and Ángel fall in love in a small town, northern Spain. They are two people both from a different social class, she is the daughter of a wealthy businessman and he comes from a poor family. They are so in love but social norms and circumstances of the era force them to break up. Several years later, they meet again, Victoria as a powerful businesswoman and Ángel as a priest.

Spin-offs and adaptations

In 2011, Televisión Española created another popular series as a spin-off, 14 de abril. La República (English: April 14, The Republic), which included some of the original characters from La Señora.

gollark: I mean, it's not too bad if your *cable* wears out, but it *is* if the device's does.
gollark: (somehow I wrote microUSB there, oops)
gollark: I'm comparing it to USB-A for point 4.
gollark: <@!111608748027445248> - Too many different things over identical looking physical connectors: a "USB-C" port might support power-delivery *input*, power-delivery *output*, Thunderbolt, two different incompatible kinds of video output, and various speeds from USB 2.0 to USB 3.2 Gen2x2 (whyyy).- The ports on devices can end up wearing out problematically, though I don't know if this is better or worse than on competitors like Lightning or µUSB.- A lot of peripherals still don't support it, though this is hardly *its* fault.- I think the smaller connector means you can't put as much weight on it safely, for bigger USB stick-y devices, though I am not sure about this.
gollark: Eh. Sort of. It has its own problems.

References

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