Chiquititas sin fin

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Chiquititas sin fin
Poster for Chiquititas Sin Fin starring Jorgelina Aruzzi
Also known asChiquititas Sin Fin
Chiquititas 2006
GenreTelenovela
Created byCris Morena
Written byWalter Ferreira Ramos
Delia Maunas
Directed byCarlos Pico
Grendel Resquin
StarringJorgelina Aruzzi
Gastón Ricaud
Stefano de Gregorio
Gonzalo Heredia
María Carámbula
Mariana Briski
Lali Espósito
Peter Lanzani
Candela Vetrano
and Alejo García Pintos
Opening theme"Chiquititas 2006"
Country of originArgentina
Original languageSpanish
No. of seasons1
No. of episodes150
Production
ProducerSofia Izaguirre
Running time45 minutes
Production companiesCris Morena Group
RGB Entertainment
Original release
NetworkTelefe
ReleaseApril 3 (2006-04-03) –
December 11, 2006 (2006-12-11)
Related
Chiquititas

Chiquititas Sin Fin, also known as Chiquititas 2006 is an Argentine 2006 television series created and produced by Cris Morena, to celebrate the 11th anniversary of the original series Chiquititas. Written by Walter Ferreira Ramos and Delia Maunas, and produced by Cris Morena and RGB Entertainment, the series has been aired on Disney Channel in some South American countries, Mexico,[1] Greece and Spain. SBT also aired the show to Brazil in 2008. Sin Fin was adapted in Portugal and Romania, and is the basis for the Wii game Chiquititas: The Magical Journey. Stage presentations at the Gran Rex were also featured.[2]

The series focuses on the search of a young woman for her lost son. After discovering that her child may be living at an orphanage, she goes there under the alter ego of a humorous and magical nanny figure, touching and changing their lives.

Plot[edit]

Magali Garcia (Jorgelina Aruzzi) is a strict businesswoman who got pregnant in the past, and after revealing it to her father Vítor (Ernesto Claudio), was sent to an abandoned place. The Garcias' servant, under Vítor's orders, took the baby to an orphanage and lied to Magali that her baby was stillborn. The repentant servant later told Magali the truth, which made her hate her father. Magali started looking for the baby, and when she is sure it lives in the Modelo Dumont orphanage, she goes there under a new identity: the sweet, adorable, funny, offbeat Lili, helped by her best friend Lúcia (Mariana Richaudeau). In this guise as Magali's distant cousin, she assumes a maternal figure to the orphans. Lili also meets Terezinha (Mariana Briski), an arrogant housekeeper the kids see as an "evil witch"; the orphanage's owners Julieta (María Carámbula) and Pierre (Alejo García Pintos) Dumont; and their spoiled children Marcel (Luciano Ruiz) and Talita (Delfina Varni). The Dumonts are an ambitious, greedy, perverse avaricious family. Kili (Gastón Ricaud) is the orphanage's handsome, adorable chef, and he and Lili soon fall in love. The chiquititas of this series are Miki, Guta, and Mosquito, teenagers forming a loving triangle; the younger orphans are Luana, Anita, Nando, Paula, Pulga, Josep, Eduardo, and Francisco.

Reception[edit]

The soundtrack 24 Horas is among the ten 2006 top-selling albums,[3] the Sin Fin Gran Rex presentation was released on DVD. The series finale was watched by the cast alongside fans at the Shopping Abasto, in Buenos Aires.[4]

Chiquititas: The Magical Journey[edit]

Chiquititas: The Magical Journey is a fantasy-action 2009 game based on Chiquititas Sin Fin, produced by Biodroid Productions and distributed by Emergent. Available for PS2 and Wii, the game provides two playable characters from the 2006 show, Lily and Kili, exploring levels and fighting against enemies.

References[edit]

  1. ^ "La Crónica de Hoy | Estrenará Disney Channel Chiquititas". Archived from the original on June 6, 2014.
  2. ^ "Un clásico que nunca envejece". Old.clarin.com. 2006-06-24. Retrieved 2014-02-21.
  3. ^ "Los más vendidos de 2006". RollingStone. 23 December 2013. Archived from the original on 25 February 2014. Retrieved 21 February 2014.
  4. ^ "Pantallas". Lanacion.com.ar (in Spanish). 13 December 2006. Archived from the original on 26 February 2014. Retrieved 21 February 2014.

External links[edit]