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A [[Mara Clara (2010 TV series)|2010 remake]], starring [[Kathryn Bernardo]] as Mara and [[Julia Montes]] as Clara, aired on ABS-CBN from October 25, 2010 to June 3, 2011.
A [[Mara Clara (2010 TV series)|2010 remake]], starring [[Kathryn Bernardo]] as Mara and [[Julia Montes]] as Clara, aired on ABS-CBN from October 25, 2010 to June 3, 2011.


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==Synopsis==
[[File:Lalaalalalalallalallalallalallalalala|thumbnail]]
</ref>==Synopsis==
Mara and Clara were switched at birth in the nursery when they were born, and the details of this event were recorded by Karlo, a hospital staff, in his diary. Mara lived as the poor daughter of the couple Susan and Gary David and Clara, their real daughter, was brought up by the rich Amante and Alvira del Valle.
Mara and Clara were switched at birth in the nursery when they were born, and the details of this event were recorded by Karlo, a hospital staff, in his diary. Mara lived as the poor daughter of the couple Susan and Gary David and Clara, their real daughter, was brought up by the rich Amante and Alvira del Valle.



Revision as of 04:40, 3 October 2013

Mara Clara
File:MaraClaraTV.png
GenreFamily Drama
Created byEmil Cruz Jr.
Developed byABS-CBN
StarringJudy Ann Santos
Gladys Reyes
Opening theme"Mara Clara" by Therese Amper
Country of originPhilippines
Original languagesFilipino, English, Tagalog
No. of episodes1,209
Production
Camera setupmulticamera setup
Original release
NetworkABS-CBN
ReleaseAugust 17, 1992 –
February 14, 1997
Related
Mara Clara (2010)

Mara Clara is a Filipino primetime television drama on the ABS-CBN network, which ran from August 17, 1992 to February 14, 1997. It was re-aired on Studio 23 and Kapamilya Channel, both ABS-CBN subsidiaries.[1] It is based on a novel of the same title by Emil Cruz Jr. It was adapted into a feature film released by Star Cinema in 1996.

This soap opera made Judy Ann Santos the "Queen of Pinoy Soap Opera" and Gladys Reyes as "Primera Kontrabida" on Philippine television.

The series originally aired at 2:30 p.m. until January 27, 1995. On January 30, 1995, it went to at 2:00 p.m. timeslot. On July 1, 1996, it moved to a primetime slot until it ended in 1997.

A 2010 remake, starring Kathryn Bernardo as Mara and Julia Montes as Clara, aired on ABS-CBN from October 25, 2010 to June 3, 2011.

[2]==Synopsis== Mara and Clara were switched at birth in the nursery when they were born, and the details of this event were recorded by Karlo, a hospital staff, in his diary. Mara lived as the poor daughter of the couple Susan and Gary David and Clara, their real daughter, was brought up by the rich Amante and Alvira del Valle.

The good-natured del Valle couple takes in Mara as a servant and decides to spend for her education not knowing that she is their real daughter. Gary, who is actually a gang/syndicate leader, approves of the idea that Mara lives with the del Valles to extort money. Clara makes life for Mara difficult. But, as time progresses, they find their true identity in the spotlights, damages are paid, and they all know where they stand.

Cast

Main cast

Supporting cast

Reception

Film adaptation

Mara Clara: The Movie
Directed byJerry Lopez Sineneng
Produced byCharo Santos-Concio
Malou N. Santos
StarringJudy Ann Santos
Gladys Reyes
Juan Rodrigo
CinematographyRicardo Jacinto
Edited byJoyce E. Bernal
Music byNonong Buencamino
Distributed byStar Cinema
Release date
  • September 18, 1996 (1996-09-18)
Running time
154 minutes
CountryPhilippines
LanguageEnglish/Tagalog

In 1996, a movie was produced based on the television series. The Mara Clara movie adaptation was the first television series created by ABS-CBN to be adapted by Star Cinema. On the adaptation, the only cast changed was the character of Gary Davis who was portrayed by Eruel Tongco in the television, and was played by William Martinez in the movie due to the former's death from a car accident in 1996.

Remake

During the ABS-CBN trade event held last August 24, 2010 at the World Trade Center Manila, it was announced that a remake of the series will start its production this 2010.[4] Kathryn Bernardo is slated for the role of Mara, with Julia Montes as Clara.[5]

Re-Air

The series re-aired in 2007 by affiliates Studio 23 and Kapamilya Channel (internationally) through 2008.

Production staff

  • Executive Producer: Annaliza A. Goma
  • Producer: Book One: Maru R. Benitez; Book Two: Dagang V. Vilbar
  • Written and Directed by: Emil Cruz, Jr.

Trivia

See also

References