It’s been rumored for a long time that William Levy and Fernando Colunga they do not get along at all, however, neither of them has explained what is happening. However, there is enough evidence that speaks for itself.
The hatred is such that both television stars have come to leave leading roles in order not to work together again and not see each other’s faces.
The news gains relevance these days because both Levy and Colunga star The Count of Monte Cristo, a classic of Alexandre Dumasin two new adaptations.
While the Cuban has just finished filming in Spain with Emerald Pimentelthe Mexican prepares everything for the adaptation to be released in 2023 by Telemundo and in which they will also participate Ana Brenda Contreras and Marjoire de Sousa.
This has generated great comparison about which will be the best, especially due to the rivalry that exists between the actors.
How did the alleged rivalry start?
The stormy relationship began when both Levy and Colunga were part of the cast of the telenovela Passion in 2007, the only production in which both actors worked together and where the different personalities of the leading men made them not stand each other.
At that time, Fernando Colunga’s antipathy grew because, as confirmed by some of those present on the recording set, the Cuban was unpunctual. A defect that the Mexican seems to detest, since he himself is always the first to arrive at the recordings of the projects in which he participates.
The second reason why the protagonist of Real love despises Levy is because of the issue of women because on several occasions the actor has been linked to rumors of romance with one of his co-stars. The Mexican was upset at the Cuban’s alleged flirtation when he was still with Elizabeth Gutiérrez.
The truth is that the rivalry between Fernando Colunga ended up taking hold in 2015, when the actor from Marimar discovered that the actor woman-fragranced coffee I earned much more than him.
In those years some digital media even mentioned that Colunga described Levy as “opportunist, lout and bad actor” to which the Cuban replied that his opponent was already “too old to play leading man roles.”