The Voice Uruguay is coming and will be broadcasted in Channel 10. Natalia Oreiro, who had previously left the lead of “The Voice Kids”, returns to lead this new cycle. The judges will be the same as in the previous edition: Lucas Sugo, Ruben Rada, Valeria Lynch and Agustín Casanova. The exact release date has not yet been announced. The blind auditions were held at the LATU Events Center on Monday, March 22 and Friday, March 24, with free admission.

The leaders of La Poderosa, together with the actress and UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador, Natalia Oreiro, presented the qualitative study “The situation of poverty in popular neighborhoods” in a talk at the National University of Entre Ríos (UNER), within the framework of the Unicef Argentina work plan with that organization. At the meeting, the study was presented, a work that was carried out in the provinces of Santa Fe, Entre Ríos, Tucumán and in the Autonomous City of Buenos Aires (CABA), during July and August 2022, and which was officially launched in last february.

Within this framework, Oreiro met with the neighbors of the neighborhood to meet and talk about the work they do in the canteens and picnic areas, the spaces for school support and child care, as well as the response and containment to cases of violence against women, in the San Martín neighborhood, in Entre Río, reported from the agency.

Natalia Oreiro attended to the play “Cuantas son muchas?”, directed by Valeria Lorca with whom has worked togather in “Muneca brava”. Based on real testimonials and it focuses in Juárez, Mexico, and at the same time extends to the rest of the world the worrisome situation experienced by women victims of gender violence. The Uruguayan artist enjoyed the very attentive show in the front row. The actress Florencia Raggi and the actor Fabio Aste were also present, who at the end greeted and congratulated the cast.

Before premiering her new movie “Casi muerta”, Natalia Oreiro gave an interview to magazine “Ohlala” where she talked about the success, the creative maturity an how she lives now away from the city and more close that ever to her own convictions.

I have someting very Uruguayan and at the same time I have something very Argentinean. Uruguay is my cradle. I arrive to Uruguay and I feel th different air. It clearly lowers me. It’s my origin, my parents, my school, the El Cerro”, she said. “At the same time, there is something that I love from Argentina and with which I feel more identified, that we are more chaotic”, she said. “It happened to me when I reached here where I said: “Thi is the craziness I want””.