Quote
"“I couldnt study. Maybe at that time it was different, and life took me in another direction. What happens is that I lived many years abroad, and it was complicated with my daughters, alone."

Claudia Villafañe
Claudia Villafañe
Claudia Rosana Villafane is an Argentine businesswoman and producer, known for being Diego Maradona's wife and the winner of the first MasterChef Celebrity Argentina edition
"“I couldnt study. Maybe at that time it was different, and life took me in another direction. What happens is that I lived many years abroad, and it was complicated with my daughters, alone."
"Were a very close-knit family, and I think youre born with that. Then comes the personality of each one, it never crossed my mind what I was going to experience, or what my life would become. But I dont regret anything, and Id choose it all again"
"It was gradual, because even in Argentina it was difficult, they always looked for a hair in the egg. It was like wanting to dirty a lot of things that sometimes were true and sometimes werent. I was 15 years old and I saw the cover of Crónica: “The new girlfriend,” and it was with a showgirl with feathers. And I came from high school, nuns uniform, but well, they were stages that everyone overcame in their own way. Nobody is born knowing anything about life itself, and maybe mistakes serve you so you dont make them again."
"“I come from a super normal family. My parents always worked. We lived with my maternal grandparents, my sister, my dad, my mom, me, and my grandparents in Desaguadero and Baigorria, near Devoto prison. I grew up there until I was 12, I did primary school with my sister at a convent school and high school at San Rafael, which was all girls. I grew up next to my cousin Román, whos the same age as me and is the brother I never had. My dad worked on bus line 25, and my mom worked on Jonte and Bermúdez, in a shop where they sewed school uniforms, communion dresses, and thats where I learned the trade. That was my childhood, I went to the neighborhood club, played in the street with the neighbors, and spent the end-of-year holidays with a long table in the street,”"