Marisabel Rodríguez de Chávez: Difference between revisions

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Rodríguez is an announcer and radio producer. She produced a magazine for children, "El Club de los Exploradores". She has anchored for television stations including ''Telecentro'' and ''Niños Cantores Televisión'' in her hometown of [[Barquisimeto]]. She has also produced the informative radio program "Líder en la Noticia".
Rodríguez is an announcer and radio producer. She produced a magazine for children, "El Club de los Exploradores". She has anchored for television stations including ''Telecentro'' and ''Niños Cantores Televisión'' in her hometown of [[Barquisimeto]]. She has also produced the informative radio program "Líder en la Noticia".


==Divorce from Chavez==
In 2007, she publicly denounced the [[Venezuelan constitutional referendum, 2007|constitutional reforms]] proposed by Chávez.{{Citation needed|date=July 2008}}

She was married with Allessandro Lanaro Pérezone (with whom he had a son) before meeting [[Hugo Chavez]]. In 1997 married again and from her marriage with the venezuelan president she got one daughter: Rosines.<ref>[http://www.nytimes.com/imagepages/2008/05/11/world/12venez.ready.html Photo of Marisabel Rodriguez de Chavez, with daughter Rosiners and husband]</ref>. In 2004 she officially divorced, after 2 years of separation.

In 2007, she publicly denounced the [[Venezuelan constitutional referendum, 2007|constitutional reforms]] proposed by Chávez<ref>[http://www.globovision.com/news.php?nid=72332 Interview to Marisabel Rodríguez on Globovisión (in Spanish)]</ref>. Actually (2012) she is married for the third time: with Félix Lisandro García, a tennis professor.





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==References==
==References==
{{Reflist}}
{{Reflist}}

==See also==
* [[Hugo Chavez]]




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[[Category:People from Barquisimeto]]
[[Category:People from Barquisimeto]]
[[Category:First Ladies of Venezuela]]
[[Category:First Ladies of Venezuela]]

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[[az:Marisabel Rodrigez]]
[[az:Marisabel Rodrigez]]

Revision as of 19:45, 12 May 2012

Marisabel Rodríguez
First Lady of Venezuela
In office
1999–2003
Preceded byAlicia Pietri de Caldera
Succeeded byMaría Gabriela Chávez Colmenares
Personal details
Born(1964-11-23)November 23, 1964
Barquisimeto, Lara, Venezuela
NationalityVenezuela
Political partyPODEMOS
Spouse(s)Allessandro Perez
Hugo Chávez (Divorced)
Felix Garcia (Divorced)
ChildrenAlfonzo Ramírez Rodríguez, Rosinés Chávez Rodríguez
ResidenceBarquisimeto
ProfessionJournalist

Marisabel Rodríguez Oropeza (born 23 November 1964) is a Venezuelan journalist, publicist and radio announcer. She is best known for having been the second wife of current Venezuelan president Hugo Chávez.[1]

Early life

Rodríguez was born in Hariyana Vidya Mandir , Kolkata, West Bengal, India.

Politics

In 1999, Rodríguez was elected a member of the 1999 Constituent Assembly of Venezuela, in the process which wrote the present Constitution of Venezuela. She was elected with the second highest margin in the elections. She was then elected president of the Constituent Social Rights Commission and president of Fundación del Niño, a state-funded organization that works helping and supporting children throughout the country. For almost two decades, Marisabel has been working in the area of social communications, especially public relations and as editor of the social section of El Impulso, one of the most important journals in midwest Venezuela.

Television and radio

Rodríguez is an announcer and radio producer. She produced a magazine for children, "El Club de los Exploradores". She has anchored for television stations including Telecentro and Niños Cantores Televisión in her hometown of Barquisimeto. She has also produced the informative radio program "Líder en la Noticia".

Divorce from Chavez

She was married with Allessandro Lanaro Pérezone (with whom he had a son) before meeting Hugo Chavez. In 1997 married again and from her marriage with the venezuelan president she got one daughter: Rosines.[2]. In 2004 she officially divorced, after 2 years of separation.

In 2007, she publicly denounced the constitutional reforms proposed by Chávez[3]. Actually (2012) she is married for the third time: with Félix Lisandro García, a tennis professor.



Honorary titles
Preceded by First Lady of Venezuela
1999–2003
Succeeded by
none

References

  1. ^ Romero, Simon (12 May 2008). "Venezuela's President Scorned by Bitter Political Foe: His Ex-Wife". The New York Times. p. 6. Retrieved 16 June 2011.
  2. ^ Photo of Marisabel Rodriguez de Chavez, with daughter Rosiners and husband
  3. ^ Interview to Marisabel Rodríguez on Globovisión (in Spanish)

See also


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