María Jiménez's son breaks his silence after the artist's death: "There are ten years of cancer and comas"

Friday! returns to the Telecinco grid in the last week of the year with a new interview that promises to give a lot to talk about.

Oliver Thansan
Oliver Thansan
27 December 2023 Wednesday 22:20
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María Jiménez's son breaks his silence after the artist's death: "There are ten years of cancer and comas"

Friday! returns to the Telecinco grid in the last week of the year with a new interview that promises to give a lot to talk about. The program presented by Santi Acosta and Beatriz Archidona in prime time on the Mediaset network will receive, on this occasion, Alejandro Sancho Jiménez, son of Pepe Sancho and the recently deceased María Jiménez.

It is the first time that she will speak in front of the cameras, especially after the death of the artist last September. In this way, Alejandro will take stock of how he has lived the first months without his mother, who was going through a long illness until the last days of his life. "It's been ten years of cancer, comas...", he says in the fragment broadcast by Mediaset before its broadcast.

It was a month ago when it was known that the son of Sancho and Jiménez would sit in a television program, something that raised concern in those around the also missing actor because of what he could say about him. And Alejandro will also talk about the fights between his parents when he was just a child, to the point that María had to take a gun on one occasion to defend herself from Pepe.

These episodes caused the singer to file a complaint for mistreatment against the actor. Subsequently, a media war between the two culminated in Alejandro's breakup with his mother. In Friday!, he will also explain his decision to remove his paternal surname, and how Sancho died without contact with him.

"When I was 30 my father died and when I was 40 my mother died," recalls Alejandro Jiménez in his interview for Friday! on Telecinco. However, it is when remembering the last moments of his mother's life that the man breaks down crying in front of the cameras.

"I go, I hug her, I give her a kiss on the forehead, and she does the same thing with her little eyes," he says, while making the gesture of opening and closing with his hands. "I don't know if she realized it or not," she continues, before bursting into tears. In addition to her testimony, the program will also feature Isabel Jiménez, María's sister, to talk about the humble origins of her family and the artist's struggle to achieve success.