Cárcel de mujeres may refer to:
Candida, or Cándida (Spanish), may refer to:
Ninel Herrera Conde is a Mexican singer, actress and television host known for her performances in Rebelde, Fuego en la sangre, Mar de amor and Porque el amor manda.
Miroslava Šternová, known professionally as Miroslava Stern, was a Czechoslovak-Mexican actress.
Adela Micha Zaga is a Mexican journalist notable for conducting several radio and TV newscasts and pioneering the Big Brother reality show in Mexico. She is a graduate of the Universidad del Nuevo Mundo
Blanca Portillo Martínez de Velasco is a Spanish film, television, and stage actress. She has also worked as theatre director and producer. She made her feature film debut in Entre rojas (1995). She became popular for her portrayal of Carlota in sitcom television series Siete vidas. Portillo is the recipient of numerous accolades, including a Goya Award for Best Actress.
Lo que callamos las mujeres, is a Mexican anthology television series which deals with the social problems of Mexican society. The show started airing on the Mexican television network Azteca 13 as a way to compete with Canal de las Estrellas' Mujer, casos de la vida real. It started airing on the network in 2000 and has run continuously since then. The series continues to be one of the most popular programs on said television station and is currently being broadcast with great acceptance. Some of the most important theater, film and television actors have paraded in its cast. One if it's stars is actress Angélica Magaña.
Karyme Lozano is a Mexican actress. She has appeared on three covers of Los 50 Mas Bellos of People en Español. She has been nominated and won several awards for Best Actress including for Premios TVyNovelas and Las Palmas de Oro.
Elisa Miller Encinas is a Mexican award-winning film director, writer, and producer. She studied English literature at the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM) and film direction at the Centro de Capacitación Cinematográfica (CCC) in Mexico City. She is the first and only Mexican female filmmaker to win the Golden Palm for a short fiction feature at the Cannes Film Festival. Her first short film Ver Llover was nationally and internationally awarded in 2007.
Mujeres Asesinas can mean:
Luz María Aguilar is a Mexican actress from the Golden Age of Mexican cinema.
Antonio Salazar Alejos, professionally known as Antonio Raxel, was a Mexican actor. He was also a dubbing actor for TV shows, movies, and animation.
José Alonso is a Mexican film and telenovela actor.
María Sonia Furió Flores was a Spanish-born Mexican actress.
Mujeres may refer to:
Cárcel de mujeres, is a 1968 Mexican telenovela produced by Televisa and originally transmitted by Telesistema Mexicano.
Women's Prison is a 1951 Mexican drama film directed by Miguel M. Delgado and starring Miroslava, Sara Montiel and Katy Jurado. The film's sets were designed by the art director Gunther Gerszo.
Ladera may refer to:
Mujer, La Mujer or Una Mujer may refer to:
Ángel InfanteCruz was a popular Mexican actor and singer of the Golden Age of Mexican cinema. He appeared in more than 120 films, 47 of which were great successes. In more than 30 films he appeared alongside his brother, the actor and singer Pedro Infante, who died in an aviation accident in 1957. Ángel Infante was known for having visited Cuba on eight occasions, and even having presented his pistols as a gift to Fidel Castro. His daughter is the TV actress Sonia Infante. He appeared in films such as The Two Orphans, Corner Stop, Women's Prison, Here Comes Martin Corona, My General's Women, Full Speed Ahead, What Has That Woman Done to You?, The Atomic Fireman, and Love for Sale.
My Prison Yard is a 2008 Spanish prison drama film directed by Belén Macías. The female-dominated cast stars Candela Peña and Verónica Echegui alongside Ana Wagener, Blanca Portillo, Patricia Reyes Spíndola and Violeta Pérez.