Amar es para siempre
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Amar es para siempre | |
|---|---|
| Genre | |
| Country of origin | Spain |
| Original language | Spanish |
| No. of seasons | 12 |
| No. of episodes | 2,829 |
| Production | |
| Running time | 45 minutes |
| Production companies | |
| Original release | |
| Network | Antena 3 |
| Release | 14 January 2013 – 6 March 2024 |
| Related | |
Amar es para siempre (lit. 'To Love is Forever') is a long-running Spanish television period soap opera that originally ran on Antena 3 for twelve seasons, from 14 January 2013 to 6 March 2024, with the plot taking place between October 1960 and September 1984. It is the resumption of Televisión Española's Amar en tiempos revueltos.
Amar es para siempre is a period drama that resumes the previous series Amar en tiempos revueltos and is set around the fictional Plaza de los Frutos in Madrid.[1] Several cast members from Amar en tiempos revueltos resumed their characters in the first season of Amar es para siempre. Only four cast members appear in all seasons of both series: Manu Baqueiro as Marcelino, Itziar Miranda as Manolita, José Antonio Sayagués as Pelayo, and Sebastián Fernández as Sebas.
The story is initially set in 1960.[2] The eighth season is set in 1977.[3] The final episodes are set in 1983.
Production and release
Amar es para siempre is produced by Atresmedia Televisión in collaboration with Diagonal TV.[1] It began airing on 14 January 2013 on Antena 3.[1] It reached the 2,000 episode mark on 1 December 2020, during its ninth season.[1]
It has sparked two spinoffs, #Luimelia and Luimelia 77, both revolving around the love story between Amelia and Luisita.
Episodes
| Season | Episodes | Originally released | Avg. viewers (millions) | Avg. share | Setting | R. | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| First released | Last released | |||||||
| 1 | 165 | 14 January 2013 | 4 September 2013 | 1.640 | 13.4% | October 1960 – June 1961 | [4] | |
| 2 | 256 | 5 September 2013 | 9 September 2014 | 1.673 | 14.1% | September 1961 – March 1963 | [5] | |
| 3 | 256 | 10 September 2014 | 3 September 2015 | 1.712 | 14.7% | July 1963 – May 1964 | - | |
| 4 | 254 | 4 September 2015 | 5 September 2016 | 1.534 | 13.4% | September 1964 - June 1965 | - | |
| 5 | 256 | 6 September 2016 | 11 September 2017 | 1.388 | 12.4% | September 1967 – July 1968 | - | |
| 6 | 256 | 12 September 2017 | 18 September 2018 | 1.385 | 12.1% | September 1969 – September 1970 | - | |
| 7 | 250 | 19 September 2018 | 13 September 2019 | 1.348 | 12.2% | September 1975 – July 1976 | - | |
| 8 | 253 | 16 September 2019 | 15 September 2020 | 1.247 | 10.8% | September 1976 – September 1977 | - | |
| 9 | 251 | 16 September 2020 | 9 September 2021 | 1.246 | 11.3% | September 1978 – September 1979 | - | |
| 10 | 254 | 10 September 2021 | 9 September 2022 | 1.185 | 12.2% | September 1980 – August 1981 | - | |
| 11 | 223 | 12 September 2022 | 25 July 2023 | 1.042 | 11.1% | September 1981 – August 1982 | - | |
| 12 | 155 | 26 July 2023 | 6 March 2024 | 1.102 | 11.5% | August 1982 – September 1984 | - | |