📷 Alejandra Onieva and Peter Vives on a break from their next show via IG (2022).

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📷 Alejandra Onieva and Peter Vives on a break from their next show via IG (2022).
El Tiempo Entre Costuras (2013 - 2014)
Ya know...I just realised...in Cheetah Girls 2...they really lucked out that Angel wasn’t some hustling heartthrob trying to lure tourists in...
Like he appeared outta nowhere in that restaurant...like ya know he saw them enter, Galleria start ordering in English EXCESSIVELY loud and was like “ooh pretty tourists”, whips out the ole acoustic, and just starts singing to them...
How often does he do this??? How old even is he??? Is he a regular at that restaurant??? Does he work there??? What was that upstairs place above the restaurant that he was coming from??? Was that part of the restaurant or a different place altogether??? Was this the first time he ever did that??? Like that poor waiter was pretty confused when they ran off with him and didn’t drink their Cola so maybe it was the first time, but STILL. They trusted a hot stranger a bit too easily for a bunch of just-graduated teenage girls in a country they’d never been to before...
And THEN he appeared at the night club they went to ummm...like Galleria is all “LOVE HIM. He’s everywhere” yeaaah that shouldn’t happen in a city of 1.6 million people......
All that said...Strut has to be my favourite song from that movie...sooooooo idk why I’m complaining XD
JUST LOOKED HIM UP HE LOOKS LIKE A SCRUFFIER, SKINNIER JUDE LAW WTH!!!! PETER VIVES, CHECK THIS BOI OUT
Remembering that Peter Vives played Angel in Cheetah Girls 2 is the worst thing because now I can’t take him seriously in the Time in Between
Grand hotel modern AU | Leonor Plantagenet + Alfonso VIII of Castile
After the premature death of his parents Sancho and Blanca, young Alfonso becomes the only legitimate heir of his namesake grandfather, the successful hotelier Alfonso Raimúndez Ivrea, founder of the Imperial Grand Hotel of Soria, hence affectionately nicknamed el Emperador. Eager to live up to his family’s expectations – especially the ones of his formidable great-aunt and share-holder of the hotel, Doña Sancha Raimúndez, and his beloved guardian and legal consultant, Nuño Pérez de Lara – and to restore the Imperial to its former splendour, Alfonso decides to challenge the business choices of his uncle Ferdinand, the current managing director of the Grand Hotel.
Determined to refuel the Imperial with new energy and ideas and attract new customers from all around the world, Alfonso looks for new investors, finding one in British hotel entrepreneur Henry Plantagenet, known as Harry Curtmantle for his shrewd business policy, which privileges short, impromptu on-site negotiations instead of long stipulations. After a visit in Castile with his fierce, French-born wife Aliénor, Henry begins to conceive a great liking for the young hotel owner and decides to invest in the Imperial. Meanwhile, Aliénor, after living several years in a passionate, but unhappy marriage, makes up her mind about getting a divorce, but on her own terms. She then encourages secretly her children – Young Henry, Richard and Geoffrey – and convinces the investors of Henry’s company to overthrow him. But her main concern remains her three daughters, Maud, Eleanor and Joanna. Wanting to spare them the humiliation of a family scandal, Aliénor is willing to settle them as soon as possible, beginning with her elder daughter Maud. Marrying her to Alfonso, the dashing and bright heir of her unknowing husband’s last business venture, seems the right plan to follow to secure both her daughter’s future and the Castilian investment – code name la dot gasconne.
But when the Plantagenets reach the Imperial Grand Hotel for an apparently relaxing vacation prior to the celebration of the recently-drawn up agreement and the engagement, hidden tensions and conflicts start to surface. While Maud pretends to be on board with her mother’s plan, she’s secretly planning to elope with a German engineer she’s met few months before, Heinrich Welf. At the same time, Ferdinand tries to convince Aliénor to become his ally and remove from the game both her husband and her presumptive son-in-law to-be, offering to marry Maud himself. Sancha and Nuño learn from the Plantagenets’ faithful lawyer William Hauteville – who is helplessly in love with Henry’s youngest daughter, the good-natured but frivolous aspiring actress Joanna – that Henry’s sons are planning to overthrow him. They then try to talk Alfonso out of his business agreement without compromising Henry’s investment.
In the meantime, Alfonso starts to fall for Henry’s middle daughter Eleanor. Even though her parents want her to become an accomplished socialite, creative Eleanor dreams to own a flower and stastionery shop one day. After Alfonso suggests that she should give herself a chance to pursue her own ambitions, despite the social frame and constrains Henry and Aliénor have settled for her, Eleanor suddenly realises that both share the same experience of living a life that is already arranged for them by someone else. She senses that she has found a kindred spirit in Alfonso, with whom she shares also a common love for literature and poetry.
When Alfonso offers her the chance to order and arrange the floral decoration and the stationery at the Imperial in occasion to his wedding to Maud, Eleanor accepts, though she is torn in two over having to decide if what she really wants is to confess to Alfonso her strong feelings for him or protect her relationship with Maud. Unbeknownst to her, Alfonso dwells upon the same doubts, but doesn’t want to let down Sancha and Nuño and put at risk his whole business venture, on which the whole future of the Imperial Grand Hotel depends. Sensing the danger, Aliénor invites to the wedding Eleanor’s former boyfriend Frederick Hohenstaufen.
Drama ensues.
Aaand... I'M BACK! As you know, guys, I’m a sucker for these two. I just came back from Castile, and well, I had to keep the Castilian flow going. And something very strange came out of my mind: a crossover between a telenovela and a period drama. Creepy.
(P.S. Some feedback would make me überhappy, as usual!)
Fancast:
Peter Vives as Alfonso Ivrea (Alfonso VIII of Castile) Ece Çeşmioğlu as Eleanor Plantagenet