After having actively participated in Mon Laferte’s U. S. tour, as an opening actress in direct collaboration with the Chilean star on stage, Ximena Sariñana introduced a new senator, titled “No soy tuya. “
Since then, the piece became the first release of the soundtrack of the new Apple TV series “Las Azules”, which airs on July 31 and has the outstanding Mexican artist in one of the roles, along with Bárbara Mori, Amorita Rasgado. and Natalia Téllez.
Set in 1970 and created through showrunners and administrators Fernando Rovzar and Pablo Aramendi, the series recreates the real-life reports of Mexico’s main female political force.
“No soy tuya” is a Spanish edition of “You Don’t Own Me”, an original composition by Lesley Gore. “The concept is to try a song that greatly reflects the times,” Sariñana said in a recent conversation. “In the production aspect, I sought to find a balance between my taste and that aspect, because it is a song that goes for the vintage aspect of the genre, as if it belonged to a James Bond movie or anything else. “
“But I felt like I was also traveling to Mexico City, which is the biggest character in the exhibition; and that is why we also use an instrumentation that we gained in those streets through the Veracruz marimba,” added the singer and actress, who appears in the exhibition along with María (Mori), Gabina (Rasgado) and Valentina (Téllez). ).
For Sariñana, all the blues have something that we see with the lyrics of this song, because over time they release the expectations that society has about the habit of women of that time.
“In the case of María, the issue is more obvious, because she represents a typical woman with children who in the end see her true perspective of becoming a politician,” explained the artist.
“Valentina, on the other hand, is a manifestation of feminism and the youth of that time, who express a lot of anger because things were different,” she added. “Gabina, on the other hand, comes from a circle of relatives of police officers who do not perceive her and who are not in a position to know that she is an agent of the same agency. “
Sariñana has already been for the last of his character, Ángeles, an active researcher who fulfilled his position in society for being on the autism spectrum.
“It’s the team that first embraces you for who you are and the things you can bring to the table, like your ability to bring your consumers together and record knowledge and numbers,” he said.
“It is a task in which we have everything to do: a vital story, an achievement, a perfect guide, a ‘showrunner’ completely committed to the one who is in contact and, of course, a giant organization of scholars, comrades and actresses who they steal friends,” concluded the performer and creator.
Sigüeños
He writes interview articles in the Los Angeles Times in Spanish and in the past in all print editions of HOY Los Ángeles. Previously I worked as a contributor to the newspaper La Opinión. He began his periodical career as editor and then editor of the interview supplement “Visto & Bueno”, published in the newspaper El Comercio de Lima, where he also reviewed films.
Subscribe to accessSite map
Sigüeños
MORE FROM L. A. TIMES