

He boasts of being able to work with two competing global TV networks Telemundo and Televisa, something rare in Latin media, saying that he can join any projects with companies that like and want his performance. This device is unable to display framed content.

I’ve always said that an actor never ‘arrives’ but keeps on learning until the day he dies.”

“I feel good about all that I’ve accomplished so far,” says the actor in his deep, manly timbre during an exclusive phone interview from Mexico City, where he was slated to join the current production of the highly awaited telenovela “Si Nos Dejan” (If They Let Us) for Mexican giant network Televisa. The actor’s career has given a turn for the better during the digital revolution and pandemic, as he is currently appearing in two popular Spanish-language series airing on Netflix with “Falsa Identidad” (False Identity) and “La Reina del Sur,” (The Queen of the South), with the latter expected to return for a third season later this year. THIS was not the article, Instead it was someone else's article about the fact that Davies has done the article in ATTITUDE.Eduardo Yáñez is one of Mexico’s and Latin America’s most well-known heartthrobs, starring as the leading man with his good looks and six feet three inches tall athletic frame in some of the world’s biggest Spanish-language soap operas of the past few decades.Īt 60, Yáñez, who has worked in Hollywood since the mid-1990s, remains busy with projects in both the U.S. Because, as continuous dramas, soaps tend to be especially – and entertainingly – awful at endings. There is nothing more ridiculous than a soap's final episode. But if he isn't, at least we're guaranteed one final treat. That & time of day & support from the royals, etc.

Here, though, our soaps are about miserable grey blobs in horrible anoraks who stand around in the drizzle being depressed all the time, and we lap it up because really we're watching ourselves. In the US, a soap is something you watch to see the glamorous lives of beautiful millionaires who all have evil twins and dastardly surgeons. And, if he's right, that would be a terrible shame. In a new interview with Attitude, he has claimed that they might not even be around 10 years from now.
