Cavallari, from submissive mother to lioness

(ANSA) – ROME, NOV 01 – Restless, rebellious, wounded, fragile, strong, courageous, independent women, far from stereotypes. Simona Cavallari, who made her debut on a set at the age of nine, are among the portraits he has given a face between cinema and TV, from La Piovra 4 to Pizza Connection, from The Dream of the Butterfly to Squadra antimafia. Now she is back on the small screen, in a more unprecedented role for her, that of a submissive mother and wife “capable of becoming a lioness for her children”, explains the actress to ANSA, in the four-evening TV series, Storia di una famiglia respectable by Stefano Reali, debuting on November 3 in prime time on Canale 5. The story that has among the interpreters Giuseppe Zeno, Federica Torchetti, Silvia Rossi, Carmine Buschini, Vanni Bramati, Andrea Arru and Marco Falaguasta unravels a tangle of families, crime and destinies to overthrow, set in Bari Vecchia between 1985 and 1992.

The series, produced by March 11 Film, adapts the novel of the same name by Rosa Ventrella (Newton Compton) translated into 17 countries.

The protagonist of the story is Maria (interpreted in different ages by Silvia Rossi and Federica Torchetti), whom we know as a brilliant and rebellious 13-year-old, nicknamed Malacarne for her insolent character, raised in a family of fishermen, by her father Antonio (Zeno), a tough and violent, and the loving mother Teresa (Cavallari) together with the brothers. The ever stronger bond that the teenager forges with his schoolmate Michele (played at different ages by Andrea Arru and Carmine Buschini), his schoolmate, son of the boss Nicola (Vanni Bramati), becomes central in a network of contrasts, choices difficult, tragedy and revelations. “I found it harder at first to love Teresa – explains Simona Cavallari -. Her silence made me angry, but her intelligence and cunning make her understand that it is better to ‘work’ in the undergrowth, to achieve goals, such as trying to study the children, especially Maria “. Teresa does “that somewhat hidden work, which I have seen many women of previous generations do”. Simona Cavallari in reality is more similar in temperament to Maria: “Also thanks to young women like her, a change in an oppressive culture has been achieved”. (HANDLE).

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Source From: Ansa

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