Adaptación de la novela Zoya de Danielle Steel. Audio original en inglés. Sin subtítulos, no hay en ningún idioma.
Tras la devastación de la Revolución rusa y la Primera Guerra Mundial, Zoya, la joven prima del zar, vuela de San Petersburgo a París en busca de refugio. Su mundo ha cambiado para siempre, y tras pasar por terribles momentos, logra unirse al ballet ruso en París, con cuyo salario mantiene a su indómita abuela y a sí misma. El amor aparece de nuevo cuando conoce al capitán Clayton Andrews, quien, cautivado por la joven aristócrata, se la lleva a Manhattan como su prometida. Sin embargo, ninguno de los dos imagina las penurias que deberán soportar durante los años de depresión que asolan Norteamérica.
A través de la historia de un siglo convulsionado y cambiante, Zoya representa una de esas mujeres singulares cuyo legado quedará por siempre entre nosotros.
Genuinamente conmovedora.
Melissa Gilbert stars in the title role of this made-for-television adaption of the novel by Danielle Steel. Gilbert stars as Zoya, an Russian orphan who flees her homeland and falls in love with an American Army soldier stationed in Paris. The two settle in New York, start a family and all seems well, but the dramatic twists and turns for Zoya have only just begun.
Melissa Gilbert ... Zoya Ossipov
Bruce Boxleitner ... Clayton Andrews
Denise Alexander ... Axelle
Don Henderson ... Feodor
David Warner ... Prince Vladimir
Diana Rigg ... Evgenia
Samuel West ... Nicolai
Jennifer Garner ... Sasha
Cameron Bancroft ... Nicholas
**NO COPYRIGHT INFRINGEMENT INTEDED. FOR ENTERTAINMENT PURPOSES ONLY. ALL COPYRIGT GOES TO ORIGINAL OWNERS. I DO NOT OWN ANYTHING OF THIS MOVIE**
@Jewel3636 it is a cavalier king charles;
carlinj832000 2 months ago
Sasha is the name of my German Shepherd.
I was suprised to see that she still had the same dog. The dog looks like a Cavalier King Charles which are really sweet dogs and are often used as therapy dogs visiting hospitals and nursing homes. Does anyone know the actress who was the shopkeeper ?
Jewel3636 3 months ago
@Leomaleah Yes, I have read the Bible. God HAD to use force and such in the OT for reasons that would take up too much space here. But God placed ALL His wrath on Jesus at the cross and He is no longer dealing with man the same as in the OT. Proof - there is only ONE instance in the NT where God dealt with a couple as He did in the OT. We "live" in the New Covenant now. Troubles and problems DO come, but they are NOT sent by God.
tgreer72 5 months ago
@tgreer72
have u ever read the Bible lol? God does use tragedy to teach lessons, go back and read the Old Testament
Leomaleah 5 months ago
We can all enjoy the romance. However, keep in mind that millions of Russian people were starving to death before the Revolution and Millions died before and after the revolution and during WWI. The Russian nobility were corrupt and nothing short of abusive towards their people. That doesn't justify murdering the Czar, or ignoring the horrors of the Soviet regime. But, Russians nobles were not the good guys, and many Russian started with far less and lost much more than Zoya. She escaped.
GhostOnTheWind 5 months ago
@tgreer72 Well, I'm more agonistic, but I do believe tragedy is capable of teaching lessons and we can benefit from those lessons. Like they say, that which doesn't kill us can make us stronger.
Karenjadegirl 7 months ago
was this the only story she wrote that takes place in the 1800/1900's?
peacychic831 10 months ago
that would have been soo much better if she would've dumped her drink on their heads!
peacychic831 10 months ago
'Zoya' is my favorite of D. Steele's stories....the other ones I really like are 'The Ring' and 'Jewels'....in 'Jewels', I just LOVE Anothy Andrews!
wiccanlove1 1 year ago
@tgreer72 I couldnt agree more and it makes me so mad when people blame him for everything WRONG in their lives.
papillon1211 1 year ago 2