Lydia Echevarría

Lydia Echevarría (born October 14, 1931 in Caguas, Puerto Rico) is a Puerto Rican actress who was convicted of plotting the murder of her husband, Puerto Rican television show producer, Luis Vigoreaux.

Early years

Echevarría met producer Luis Vigoreaux in 1960 during the presentation of a show called "La Hora Cero" (Zero Hour), which Vigoreaux produced with actor Mario Pabón.[1] On February 10, 1960, after they were married, Echevarría joined her husband as co-host in the 1960s and 70s in the television shows Pa'rriba Papi Pa'rriba and Sube Nene Sube transmitted through WAPA-TV. Vigoreaux and Echevarría had two daughters, Vanessa and Glendaly Vigoreaux.[2]

Films

Among the films and Novelas (soap operas) in which Echevarría has participated are the following:[3]

Novelas

  • Vivir para tí (TV series) - as Clara (1982)
  • Yo sé que mentía (TV series) - (1982)

Conviction

In 1982, Luis Vigoreaux allegedly began an affair with model Nydia Castillo, and in 1983, he was found burnt to death inside his car. Almost immediately, a large part of the public started pointing fingers at different people, and in 1984, Echevarría was formally accused of her husband's death. Her trial was one of the most sensational in Puerto Rican history, with a media circus atmosphere because of the celebrity status of the couple.[2]

In 1986, she was found guilty and sentenced to 208 years in a women's prison in Vega Alta, Puerto Rico.[4] However, her health deteriorated and in 1999, Governor Pedro Rosselló allowed her to leave jail to live at home under a curfew. In 2001, she resumed her acting career with the presentation of a play titled Confinadas (meaning, women prisoners) in the same prison where she served her time. Since then she has appeared in plays and some TV shows, on the condition that she be home by 8 p.m. every night.[2] Glendaly Vigoreaux, the couple's eldest daughter, died by suicide in her Arizona residence on July 15, 2008, however, her lawyer, Fátima Seda Barletta, stated that she may have been murdered and that the investigation was incomplete.[5]

See also

References

  1. History of Ceiba Archived 2009-03-05 at the Wayback Machine
  2. "PUERTO RICO HERALD: ECHEVARRIA CASE EXPOSES JUSTICE DOUBLE STANDARDS". puertorico-herald.org.
  3. "Lydia Echevarria". IMDb.
  4. "Headliners". The New York Times. 16 September 1984.
  5. "¿Asesinaron a Glendaly Vigoreaux?". Primera Hora (in Spanish). 6 July 2010.


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