Maria la del Barrio (Philippine TV series)

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Maria la del Barrio
Title card
GenreDrama
Created byABS-CBN Studios
Based onMaría la del Barrio
by Inés Rodena
Written by
  • Dexter Hemedez
  • Jimuel dela Cruz
  • Jerome Co
Directed by
Starring
Opening theme"Patuloy ang Pangarap" by Angeline Quinto
"Pagbigyang Muli" by Erik Santos
"Mariang Taga Barrio" by Thalía
Country of originPhilippines
Original languageFilipino
No. of seasons2
No. of episodes145
Production
Executive producers
  • Carlo Katigbak
  • Cory Vidanes
  • Laurenti Dyogi
  • Ruel Bayani
Producers
  • Sackey Prince Pendatun
  • Marjorie Lachica
  • Malou N. Santos
  • Des M. De Guzman
Cinematography
  • Neil Daza
  • McCoy Ternate
Editors
  • Joy Buenaventura
  • Ayen del Carmen
  • Dennis Salgado
Running time28–33 minutes
Production company
Original release
NetworkABS-CBN
ReleaseAugust 15, 2011 (2011-08-15) –
March 2, 2012 (2012-03-02)

Maria la del Barrio (lit.'Maria of the Barrio') is a Philippine remake of the Mexican telenovela of the same name, starring Erich Gonzales and Enchong Dee. The series premiered on ABS-CBN's Primetime Bida evening block and worldwide on The Filipino Channel from August 15, 2011 to March 2, 2012, replacing Mula sa Puso and was replaced by Wako Wako.

The series was streaming on YouTube.[1]

Synopsis[edit]

Maria Hernandez (Erich Gonzales) is a charcoal maker who dreams of making furniture in her own shop, much like her mother Sandra (Assunta de Rossi), who died years ago in a fire leaving Maria orphaned. Maria grows up with Sandra's best friend Casilda (Ai-Ai de las Alas) in barrio Munting Ilog. When Casilda falls ill, Maria is forced to seek help from Father Honorio for added work. This leads her to meet Fernando de la Vega (Ian Veneracion), the owner of Amore Design, one of the country's top furniture companies. Fernando takes Maria to work for his family as a maid.

Unknown yet to Maria, Fernando was the former love of her mother Sandra. And that Fernando's wife Victoria (Angel Aquino), is Sandra's former friend and partner. Sandra and Victoria founded Amore designs, but Victoria double-crossed Sandra taking both her boyfriend and ownership of Amore. But before the fire, Sandra had bequeathed her shares to Maria, making Maria owner of 50% of Amore Designs.

Working for the De la Vegas leads Maria to meet, for the second time, Luis de la Vega (Enchong Dee), the eldest of the De la Vega children. Among those children are Vanessa (Jane Oineza) and Vladimir (Arron Villaflor). Maria had met and admired Luis before, seeing his work in Viscera, a small furniture shop. But Luis pays to her no mind. Worse, Luis, having had problems with his father Fernando, begins to suspect Maria to be Fernando's mistress. This through the suspicions of Soraya, his friend who is secretly in love with him. Luis makes Maria fall in love with him, with the intention of hurting Maria and making her leave.

Furthermore, he falls in love with Maria. And Maria, despite the pain, cannot help herself from loving Luis. But their love is put to the test by several trials. Such as, Soraya's attempt to break Luis apart from Maria, Sandra's comeback to ruin Victoria's life, lies that caused Maria's insanity which leads her into her wealthy transformation, and Sabrina who will do her best for her to keep Maria's daughter, Andrea. But an unfortunate disease will finally cause Soraya's life. Could this be Soraya's time to pay her sins to Maria?

Cast and characters[edit]

Protagonist[edit]

Main cast[edit]

Supporting cast[edit]

Recurring cast[edit]

  • K Brosas as Carlota
  • Katya Santos as Cha-Cha
  • Badjie Mortiz as Urbano
  • Justin Gonzales as Pedro
  • Atoy Co as Mang Doro
  • Chiqui del Carmen as Lupe
  • Peewee O'Hara as Berta
  • Isay Alvarez as Calixta
  • Gio Alvarez as Anot

Guest cast[edit]

Special participation[edit]

Production[edit]

Production started in February 2011. The series was initially part of ABS-CBN's line-up of afternoon dramas, Kapamilya Gold, together with other television series; Nasaan Ka Elisa?, Mula Sa Puso, and Hiyas.[2] However, teasers were released in July 2011, which stated that the show was to air on primetime. The series premiered on August 15, 2011 on Primetime Bida.

Last July 2016. ABS CBN revived the show by uploading Episode 1-145 on YouTube along with Hiyas, Lumayo Ka Man Sa Akin, Pintada, Nasaan Ka Elisa?, Paraiso and Angelito: Batang Ama.

Adaptation[edit]

María la del Barrio, originally aired on Televisa in 1995. It was the third telenovela in the trilogy of Maria, that starred Thalia. The show first aired in the Philippines through RPN in 1996, ABS-CBN in 1997-1998 and GMA Network in 2002-2003, dubbed in Filipino. After GMA Network's successful adaptations of Thalia's Marimar and Rosalinda, ABS-CBN decided to remake María la del Barrio.

Postponement, reshoots and recasts[edit]

There were speculations that the production had to reshoot several scenes because the network was not convinced with the outcome of the already-shot episodes. In addition, several characters were recast, including a lengthy casting process for the role of Vladimir de la Vega. Inno Martin was originally cast to play the role of Vladimir, but after several failed recastings, the role eventually ended up being played by Arron Villaflor. The role was first offered to Enrique Gil. However, Gil had to decline due to conflicting working schedules.[3] Inno Martin's scenes as Vladimir prior to his replacement appeared in the show's first set of promos. When the show started production for the soon-to-be reshot episodes covering the first few months of the show, Martin was sacked with AJ Perez tapped to take-over the now-vacant role .[4] But after Perez' untimely passing, Villaflor was brought in to take over the role of Vladimir.[5] It finally premiered on August 15, 2011.

Reception[edit]

Ratings[edit]

After the winning 26.0% finale rating of previous time slot occupant Mula Sa Puso, Maria la del Barrio maintained the network's hold on the 6pm slot. The series debuted in fifth place with a 22.5% rating.[6] The series aired its last episode on March 2 and earned fifth place in the ratings, garnering 20% of viewers.[7]

Critical reception[edit]

On a review done by the Philippine Entertainment Portal, they quoted that "Erich looks tailor-made for the role; with her natural ability to summon naïve, childlike qualities with relative ease." They also stated that the scenes between the two lead actors provided the "'kilig' factor commonly sought by local viewers." The review concluded, "Erich has a wonderful opportunity to embrace the character as her own without having to live in the shadow of her famous Mexican predecessor."[8]

Awards[edit]

Year Award-Giving Body Category Recipient Result
2012 GMMSF Box-Office Entertainment Awards Most Popular Loveteam in Movies and Television[9] Enchong Dee and Erich Gonzales Won

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Maria La Del Barrio Full Episodes. YouTube. ABS-CBN Entertainment. Retrieved October 17, 2018.
  2. ^ Nasaan Ka Elisa and Maria la del Barrio lead stars will grace March 13 episode of ASAP Rocks retrieved March 11, 2011 via PEP.ph
  3. ^ "Enrique Gil says it's his time to be given lead roles". Archived from the original on 2011-04-04. Retrieved 2011-09-01.
  4. ^ Castro, Roldan. "AJ Perez remained a true and loyal friend till the end".
  5. ^ Pumaloy, Rey. "Aaron Villaflor admits he ignored Erich Gonzales when they were both finalists in a star search: "May girlfriend kasi ako nung time na yun."".
  6. ^ Maria la del Barrio debuts strongly on August 12, 2011 via www.pep.ph
  7. ^ Santiago, Erwin. "Kantar Media-TNS National Household Ratings (March 2–4): Walang Hanggan keeps lead in weekday primetime; Sarah G Live claims top spot in Sunday primetime".
  8. ^ PEP REVIEW: Erich Gonzales seems a perfect fit for the title role of Maria la del Barrio retrieved on August 18, 2011 via www.pep.ph
  9. ^ "Vice Ganda named Phenomenal Box-Office Star; Derek Ramsay is Box-Office King while Anne Curtis and Cristine Reyes share Box-Office Queen title" Archived 2015-07-01 at the Wayback Machine. Pep.ph. Retrieved 2014-05-20.

External links[edit]