
FRANK
Frank understood that great houses were rarely held together by money alone. Wealth could preserve appearances, but it could not create emotional coherence. He knew when silence protected dignity and when silence concealed suffering.
JUDE FOUCHÈ
Some men announce power. Others conceal it so completely that the room itself begins to speak on their behalf. Jude Fouchè belonged to the second order. Jude was not feared because he threatened violence. He was feared because he understood it intimately.
PAULO ZAS
His songs spoke of our quest to be understood although we can’t begin to understand ourselves. He sang from the wound between longing and recognition, where one can spend a lifetime asking to be seen while remaining partly hidden even from his own gaze.
ERIC CONNERY
A career listening to those who never fully belonged. Equal parts skeptic and romantic, he navigates fame, intellect, and loneliness with cultivated wit and quiet exhaustion. His interviews are less theater than excavations—searches for rare moments when people stop pretending and reveal who they are beneath the myth.
ANDRÉS VITÓN
Enrique’s loyal publicist and longtime friend, he protects the myth while quietly witnessing the man beneath it. Sharp, elegant, and emotionally disciplined, Andrés understands that survival often depends on controlling the story.
CELIA
Keeper of the Home.
She keeps Maximo grounded with sharp banter, impeccable dinners, and quiet devotion. Beneath her stern practicality lives a hidden tenderness that has outlasted the house itself.
FR. FELLINI
Priest, psychologist, and scholar of Canon Law, Fr. Carlo Fellini serves where faith and inquiry converge. His gift is not certainty but discernment, bringing patience, humility, and careful judgment to questions that resist easy answers.