Celebrities

Catherine Fulop GTRES

Fulop declares himself a fervent anti-Chavez while exploiting his still spectacular image to become a goddess of fitness

His daughter Oriana Sabatini is dating Paulo Dybala, the most important star of Juventus with Cristiano Ronaldo

Catherine Fulop (54), that unforgettable protagonist of Abigail , is already far from the soap operas, although her life could well be the script of one: goddess of fitness in the networks, furious anti-Chavez, sister-in-law of former tennis star, mother of a of the most successful singers of the new generation and mother-in-law of one of the best soccer players in the world . And the thing does not end there, because during the last year, the Venezuelan was successful in an unusual facet in it, the theater. At 42 he falls in love with a man of 75.

Everyone, however, asks about the courtship of Oriana Sabatini, one of her two daughters, with Paulo Dybala, star of Juventus. Oriana's rise to stardom and the relationship with a soccer crack was a potent cocktail for Fulop and Osvaldo (Ova) Sabatini, her partner. But they drank it and ended up enjoying it.

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"Oh god, God, Ori kills me every time I talk to her, because she finds out everything ..." Fulop says laughing. But then let your guard down. "I love the way they handled it, a little while ago since they flirted. And they waited, they waited to feel that it could be something a little more serious."

The romance between Oriana and Paulo stopped being a matter of two years ago to become the meat of networks. So Dad and Mom Sabatini live in shock in shock at the bold videos of their daughter, who one day appears kissing a woman and another hiding some candles burning under the bed. The logic of the show and the rise of a singer who combines various features of beauty on her face: those of her mother and those of the Sabatini family, with a striking resemblance to her aunt, Gabriela, who became number three in the world in the '90 and great rival of Arantxa Sánchez Vicario.

What is Dybala like? "Super polite, divine, a boy who when he talks connects. He looks you in the eye, sits, talks, tells anecdotes. He is re approved. I see my daughter happy. Yes, when I do not see her happy she will be unfriendly, rude and all that, "says Fulop before starting the nth laugh.

And Tiziana, the daughter that is less talked about? "It's the most, super talented, doing very well in college, super hooked with graphic design."

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Fulop comes from a year of emotions. He tried the theater and it went very well. "The play is The Principle of Uncertainty , by Simon Stephens. A 42-year-old woman who falls in love with a 75-year-old man. When I read the script I told myself this is me! This is done for me. They are two very lonely souls in a work that makes the wrong thing right, because it doesn't look so right that a woman of 42 is with a man of 75. But ... why not? ", he explained during a recent interview in LN +.

The conversation continues, with Fulop while waving his hands and making gestures of all kinds. At 54, the Venezuelan is a song of expressiveness, something that is also visible in her posts and stories on Instagram, become a goddess of fitness and healthy living, something she sometimes surprises herself.

"I like to think that in my family there are athletes, that streak of sport that haunts us. Being a sister-in-law of Gaby and being next to Ova who always followed a healthy life, playing football, playing tennis ... Because I have a chubby inside of me who wants to take over my being! But with so much sportsman nearby she has failed ... ". And new laugh.

The laughs go out for a moment when the memory of what happened to him in 2018 returns, when he intervened in an unfortunate way in the heated debate about the abortion that Argentina lived (lives).

It all started in a television show, in which he said that at 40 he agreed with his partner not to seek a third pregnancy. "At this age it is likely to come with some disease," said his doctor.

"We looked at Ova and said, 'No, we don't have it, of course not,'" Fulop said. The host of the program asked him if he had evaluated the possibility of an abortion if he had become pregnant. "Of course," Fulop said. "If I came with a problem, I don't have it, because who do I charge that problem to? My family. The state doesn't give you anything."

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A politician invited the program, Luis Juez, father of a teenager with cerebral hypoxia, intervened visibly moved. "We thought we had a problem ... And we have an angel. I had the option to abort my daughter and thank God I didn't."

Fulop received harsh criticism and ended up apologizing on social networks. Recalling those moments it highlights that society "is not prepared" for certain debates.

"We are not prepared for many of the discussions that are taking place. What really worries me is the degree of violence we have as a society in the debates. They want to cancel you, you cannot talk, you cannot reach an agreement. I live from love of the people, and for me it was distressing that a bad thing annul everything else. There were people who loved me and now hate me ... ".

And then the laugh comes back: "I was young, crazy, rumbera ... But I started a family, I'm a lady, I pay my taxes!"

The situation in Venezuela becomes the subject and the smile is immediately erased. This year he went to visit his mother in Caracas after six years without stepping on the country. He took medications, which are not available in Venezuela or have crazy prices.

"The memory I have of my youth is that of a happy, prosperous Venezuela, in which we were all very happy. We had everything and maybe we did not know it. In my time the middle class was very strong, that is why I was poor , in short, he was not so poor. He saw corruption coming, yes, a lot. That's why there were also many poor people, but they worked and education was very important for a few decades, students were granted scholarships to study abroad. "

Fulop, the daughter of a Hungarian who lived in the Soviet domain of his country, does not go with half measures when asked about Chavismo and Nicolás Maduro. "It is a regime that has kidnapped my country. They are murderers, genocidal, installed scourges that are sucking and killing a whole town."

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Not afraid of being so blunt? Don't you fear for your family? "Sometimes, yes, but I think they have many more problems to deal with my family. I am very sad to see so many young Venezuelans who have been robbed of the future. Here, in Argentina, they are working. a lot, there's nothing xenophobia, but it's not easy to leave your country. "

Two months ago, he commented on a column published in August in El Mundo that analyzed a controversial phrase by Cristina Fernández de Kirchner, former president and likely vice president since next December: "Sorry, today with food we are the same as Venezuela." "Thanks for the article. I was moved to tears," Fulop wrote in networks.

Is there anything positive that rescuing Chavism? Fulop's face hardens: "Nothing. Nothing. It has been a sinister plan to exterminate the Venezuelan and seize the entire region. They sold us a story of equality that is very nice, which I would like too. And you wonder why everyone the chavistas go in Hummer or 4x4 and travel abroad ... ".

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