Joan Collins, the great diva of television
Joan Collins is in Spain recording a television series, along with Jane Seymour and Denise Richards, under the command of José Luis Moreno.
Alexis Carrington Colby Dexter ('Dynasty') was the role that won Joan Collins a Golden Globe and she became the villain par excellence: ruthless, attractive, elegant, always with a phrase sharp as a dagger that nailed the brave with a perfidious smile. Now she is in Spain thanks to the producer José Luis Moreno, who offered her to the role of Queen Adelaide of Savoy, wife of Louis VI and mother of nine children, including King Louis VII. One of the reasons that led her to accept this role in Glow and Darkness is that she embodies a woman with great power, something that seduced her from the first moment. Because she also sees herself as a powerful and active woman. Therefore, if there is a question that Joan Collins cannot bear to be asked in an interview, it is if she is thinking about retirement , because it is not in her plans to get away from the cameras. That was another of the reasons that led her to accept this project, the most expensive in the history of our television: 2.6 million euros per episode.
First job in Spain
Joan feels at home, as she lived in Marbella during her marriage to Ron Kass and has spent several summers in a villa in Mallorca that she remembers fondly. However, it is the first time he has come here for work. She arrived in Madrid last Saturday, accompanied by her husband, Percy Gibson, and accompanied by her basic entourage, a makeup artist and a stylist. She has not made special requests for food and on set she behaves like a true professional: they are long , intense days, but she stays as long as it takes for everything to go perfectly.
The series that leads her to share scenes with international stars such as Jane Seymour and Denise Richards, as well as with a national cast led by Eduardo Noriega and Fernando Gil. But the real protagonist is Dominique Andersen , winner of two Golden Globes for the prestigious series 'The Crown', which embodies Saint Francis of Assisi. Determined to give life to the empowered Queen, after reading the script and rehearsing on the set, Joan Collins contributes ideas that she shares with the director. She is not an actress who simply lets herself be directed, she enjoys making her characters grow.
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