SMS: Sin Miedo a Soñar
SMS: Sin Miedo a Soñar is a Spanish teen drama daily television series. Produced by Globomedia, it was the first Spanish television series aired on laSexta. It was broadcast from July 2006 to March 2007.
SMS: Sin Miedo a Soñar | |
---|---|
Genre | Teen drama |
Created by | Daniel Écija Carmen Ortiz Ernesto Pozuelo |
Starring | Mario Casas Amaia Salamanca Yon González María Castro Raúl Peña Aroa Gimeno Guillermo Barrientos |
Country of origin | Spain |
Original language | Spanish |
No. of seasons | 2 |
No. of episodes | 185 |
Production | |
Running time | 22 min (approx.) |
Production company | Globomedia |
Release | |
Original network | laSexta |
Original release | 10 July 2006 – 30 March 2007 |
Premise
The plot revolves around a group of well-off teenagers studying at the elitist Los Castaños school whose lives change after the arrival of the lower-class Edu, who after escaping from a youth remand centre, is being foster cared by Cristina, a lawyer.[1][2][3]
Cast
- Mario Casas as Javi Llorens.[4]
- Amaia Salamanca as Paula.[4]
- Yon González as Andrés.[4]
- María Castro as Lucía.[4]
- Raúl Peña as Edu Sánchez.[4]
- Aroa Gimeno as Sonia.[4]
- Guillermo Barrientos as Paco.[4]
- Antonio Hortelano as Juan.[4]
- María León as Leti.[4]
- Pablo Penedo as Sebas.[4]
- Lola Marceli as Cristina.[5]
- Javier Albalá as David.[5]
- Josep Linuesa as Gonzalo.[5]
- Virginia Rodríguez as Luisa.[3]
- Marta Hazas as Vicky.[6]
- Martiño Rivas as Moisés.[7]
- Sergio Mur.[5]
- María Cotiello as Eva.[5][8]
- Jesús Ruyman as Pepe.[3]
- Alejandra Torray as Julia.[3]
Production and release
Aiming to attract a young audience to the newly born laSexta,[9] it was the first Spanish series aired on the channel.[10] SMS was also presented as the "first daily television series aired in prime time" in Spanish television.[10] Created by Daniel Écija, Carmen Ortiz and Ernesto Pozuelo, the series was produced by Globomedia.[11] Luis San Narciso worked as casting director.[12] It premiered on 10 July 2006.[5] It comprised 2 seasons featuring 185 episodes with a running time of around 22 minutes.[13] The second season began airing on 1 January 2007.[14] The broadcasting run ended on 30 March 2007.[5] The series proved to be a cradle for highly coveted actors in Spanish television.[11]
Series | Episodes | Originally aired | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
First aired | Last aired | Network | |||
1 | 120 | 10 July 2006 | 29 December 2006 | laSexta | |
2 | 65 | 1 January 2007 | 30 March 2007 |
References
- Nuño, Nuria (4 October 2018). "Del Siete Robles a Las Encinas; un paseo por 11 series juveniles". El Correo.
- ""SMS" se despide tras casi 200 capítulos". Vertele!. eldiario.es. 13 March 2007.
- "Todo sobre 'SMS, sin miedo a soñar'". FormulaTV. 6 July 2006.
- Pereira, Azucena (7 July 2017). "¿Qué fue del reparto de 'SMS (Sin Miedo a Soñar)'?". FormulaTV.
- "'SMS: Sin Miedo a Soñar'". Diez Minutos. 24 January 2019.
- "SMS: Sin Miedo a Soñar". Fotogramas. 9 July 2014. p. 6.
- Da Costa, Diego (12 June 2017). "De ídolos adolescentes a actores de renombre: 9 españoles que han aprendido a ponerse la camiseta". FormulaTV.
- López, Iris (8 August 2013). "María Cotiello: "Iría al psiquiatra si votase a un partido de derechas"". La Nueva España.
- "La Sexta estrena hoy su primera serie de ficción: 'SMS, sin miedo a soñar'". Diario Vasco. 7 July 2006.
- ""SMS, sin miedo a soñar", la primera serie nacional de laSexta". Vertele!. eldiario.es. 7 July 2006.
- Portillo, José (30 November 2020). "SMS, Sin Miedo a Soñar: Así era la serie juvenil de amor y venganzas". Qué!.
- "La Sexta presenta su verano: Globomedia gana por goleada, Pocholo cabrea a la prensa, falta antenizar el 40% pero "la vida puede ser maravillosa"". El Confidencial Digital. 27 June 2006.
- Espino, Jonathan (7 July 2016). "Actores que quizá no recuerdas que salieron en 'SMS: Sin miedo a soñar'". Ecartelera.
- "Ya hace 10 años de 'SMS (Sin miedo a soñar)', y así han cambiado sus protagonistas". Elegimaldia. 3 April 2016.