Los Beverly de Peralvillo | |
---|---|
Genre | Sitcom |
Written by | Mauricio Kleiff |
Directed by | Antonio Fernández |
Starring |
Guillermo Rivas Leonorilda Ochoa Arturo Castro Amparo Arozamena |
Country of origin | Mexico |
Original language(s) | Spanish |
No. of seasons | 5 |
No. of episodes | Approx. 120 |
Production | |
Running time | 30 minutes |
Production company(s) |
Televisión Independiente de México (now Televisa) |
Release | |
Picture format | Black-and-white (1969–71) Color (1971–73) |
Original release | 28 October 1969 | – 6 January 1973
Chronology | |
Followed by | Los nuevos Beverly |
External links | |
Website |
Los Beverly de Peralvillo is a Mexican sitcom that copied its overall format from "The Beverly Hillbillies" that originally aired from 1969 to 1973. It stars Guillermo Rivas, Leonorilda Ochoa, Arturo Castro, and Amparo Arozamena as the main characters.
The series was a success and spawned two films, Los Beverly de Peralvillo (1971) and ¡Qué familia tan cotorra! (1973), and a follow-up series, Los nuevos Beverly.
El Borras is a taxi driver who falls in love with La Pecas. Not knowing that her shiftless family is waiting for someone to support them, Borras gladly marries her. Doña Chole, Pecas' mother, reveals the truth and forces Borras to provide for the whole family; Borras begins to detest her and calls her "La Tarantula". Borras relies on the help of his mustached friend, El Bigotón, who instantly becomes enamored of Doña Chole. El Comanche, the policeman who issues Borras' traffic citations, also falls in love with Doña Chole. The family lives in Colonia Peralvillo, a poor Mexico City neighborhood.
The series premiered on 28 October 1969 at 8:30 p.m. The series' intro billed the actors in this order: Rivas, Ochoa, Castro, and Arozamena; each character told an individual joke just before their credit appeared. The episodes were filmed in black-and-white until mid-1971, when they changed to color.
The sitcom could be assumed to be the forerunner of "comedic dysfunctional family" sitcoms of Mexico such as La familia P. Luche and Una familia de diez.
In 2006, 20 episodes of the series were released in two disc packages by Televisa Home Entertainment. The first DVD is "Los Beverly de Peralvillo Vol. 1" and the second is "Los Beverly de Peralvillo Vol. 2", both contain ten episodes. The DVDs' special features include a photo gallery and an interview with the series' writer, Mauricio Kleiff.