Stories about La Llorona have not only terrified Latino children for decades around campfires and during sleepovers with cousins, the vengeful ghost in Mexican folklore is quite scary in horror ...
Who remembers being scared of "La Llorona" growing up? La Llorona, a figure from Mexican folklore, is a ghostly woman who drowned her children and now wanders, weeping for them. Her cries are believed ...
A central part of her young life was watching scary movies from Hollywood dubbed in Spanish and listening to eerie Mexican folk tales ... Spanish-language film "La Llorona." ...
And if they find an unfaithful man, they kill him.” Sam is describing a character well known in Mexican folklore as La Llorona, the Weeping Woman. He gives a pretty accurate description of the ...
But one Texas A&M University-Kingsville student is remembering a Mexican folklore legend with her skills ... Cantu sculpted La Llorona. “There’s this beautiful woman. She falls in love with ...
The Angeleno actor and restaurateur talks about lending his voice to a new scripted horror podcast, plus other upcoming ...
The 39-year-old is in her second year as an assistant professor at the University of Arizona School of Theatre, Film, and ...
La Llorona, the Weeping Woman, is one of the most famous figures in U.S.-Mexican folklore. In the traditional version of the story, La Llorona is a woman abandoned by the man she loved and left all ...
Among the most well-known and terrifying legends in Mexican folklore is the tale of La Llorona. It is said that she is the ghost of a woman who cries inconsolably for the loss of her children.
La Llorona is a figure of Mexican folklore who drowned her children in a fit of jealous rage after discovering her husband with another woman. She then drowned herself in regret, or so the story goes.
Halloween and Dia de los Muertos may be behind us, but love for horror, folklore and mythical story ... and of course there were stories like La Llorona— that one got us good." ...