Susana may refer to:
Susana (Susana, demonio y carne or The Devil and the Flesh) is a 1951 film directed by Luis Buñuel. It is the story of a girl of questionable mental stability who escapes from incarceration and ends up at a plantation where she disrupts a working family's daily routines and chemistry.
Susana is full of the unique touches of Buñuel's surrealism. The heroine, Susana (Rosita Quintana), is a beautiful inmate at a women's reformatory who escapes in the middle of a rainy night. When first seen, Susana's being thrown into a solitary cell for misbehaving and the correction officer says Imagine, she's been here two years and is worse than ever!.
In her cell she asks God's help, facing a shadow of the cross formed by the window bars from where a spider crawls away. The window breaks open and she escapes. She ends up at a ranch. Soon the whole household is involved in possessing her and fighting over her. Jesus, the young ranch helper; Alberto, the family's son and heir; and Guadalupe, Alberto's father, 'a God-fearing man and the faithful husband of the beautiful, patient Dona Carmen'.
Susana is an Argentine magazine for women directed by Susana Giménez, the biggest celebrity in Argentine television. Inspired by other international figures' publications, such as O, the Oprah Magazine by Oprah Winfrey and AR by Ana Rosa Quintana, the magazine is named after her, and she is featured in every cover. It was first published in 2008, and includes articles on women's issues, relationships, sex, health, careers, self-improvement, celebrities, as well as fashion and beauty; and many of the articles revolve around Giménez herself.
Giménez presented her magazine in 2008 in Alvear Palace Hotel with guests Mirtha Legrand, Ricardo Darín, Mauricio Macri, Guillermo Francella, among others. Originally published by Grupo Q, it was purchased by La Nación in 2011.
Some of its columnists include famous sexologist Alessandra Rampolla, radio and television host Maju Lozano, journalist Claudio María Domínguez director and producer Osvaldo Cattone, among others.
Gonzalo may refer to:
Gonzalo (/ˈɡɒnzəloʊ/ GON-zə-loh) is a fictional character in William Shakespeare's The Tempest.
An honest and trusted adviser to King Alonso of Naples, he has a good heart and an optimistic outlook, and is described as noble. For example, when Prospero and his daughter, Miranda, were set adrift at sea, Gonzalo took pity on the two of them, supplying them not only with the food and water necessary to survive but also with those things that make life easier. In addition, Gonzalo is the only character able to see Caliban as more than a demonic beast. Gonzalo first arrives on the Prospero's island with Alonso, Ferdinand, Sebastian, Antonio, Stefano, and Trinculo during a storm while returning from the wedding of Alonso’s daughter. During their time on the island, Gonzalo repeatedly attempts to lighten the mood by discussing the beauty of the island. An old, honest lord, he speaks cheerfully on the miracle of the reconciliation of the lords. Many often see Gonzalo as the mouthpiece of the play, who mirrors Shakespeare's relativist beliefs. The role was portrayed by many of the renowned actors. Recently, the role was portrayed by Sirish Chandrashekar in the adaptation of the play to Kannada, a regional language in southern India. The production was produced by Natana school of theater, Mysore.
Saint Gonzalo (or Gundisalvus) (c. 1040 – c. 1108), a medieval Galician nobleman and clergyman, was the long-serving Bishop of Mondoñedo from 1071. According to one modern source he was a brother of Pedro Fróilaz de Traba. If he was elected at the canonical age of thirty, he would have been born in 1040 or 1041, which would in turn support the contemporary contention that he was old in 1104–5, but cast doubt on his relationship with Pedro Fróilaz. Perhaps he was a more distant relative of the same family, the budding House of Traba.