Latest news with #AnaBárbara


Daily Mail
17 hours ago
- Entertainment
- Daily Mail
Operating room tragedy after famous singer 'took her surgeon out on the town' night before her nose and boob job
A singer who died hours after undergoing plastic surgery allegedly went on a boozy night out with her surgeon the night before going under the knife. Ana Bárbara Buhr Buldrini went into cardiac arrest and died at a hospital in Turkey after receiving a breast augmentation, liposuction and a nose job. The singer, 31, traveled with her artist husband, Elgar Miles, from their home in Mozambique to Istanbul last Friday for the surgeries. Miles told Brazilian news outlet O Tempo that she was receiving the procedures in return for promoting Tusa Hospital. 'She wanted to undergo these procedures to improve her aesthetic standards. It was a dream of hers,' Miles said. The couple, who married just a month ago, allegedly partied with the physician doing the surgeries in Istanbul on Saturday night, G1 reports. Miles said they inquired about changing the date of the operation which was scheduled for Wednesday, to allow an extra day to recover. 'Due to scheduling issues, the surgeon decided to bring it forward to Sunday,' Miles said. 'We went to the clinic on Sunday just to see the place, but the doctor wanted to perform the procedure without Ana being prepared.' Despite being out the night before, Miles claims his wife was persuaded to go ahead. 'The doctor assured me that there were no problems and that everything would be fine,' Miles told G1 news outlet. Ana Bárbara underwent the procedures and was out of the operating room by 11 pm Sunday. Miles said the doctor sent him a photo that showed the singer recovering. Staff updated Miles and told him that she was still under anesthesia and that it would not take long for her to wake up. But his concerns grew after he noticed a change in the staff's mood. 'They told me to go to the room, the assistants were acting strangely. I waited for 1 hour and 15 minutes to receive her,' Miles said. 'I went down to the ground floor and a doctor said that her heart was beating slowly, another said that she was already dead.' The doctors were detained at the hospital and later released by the Turkish police. In a statement obtained by Turkish outlet Turkiye Today, Tusa Hospital denied any malpractice and said its staff attempted to revive Ana Bárbara. 'Despite all efforts by our expert anesthesiology team, the patient could not be resuscitated,' the medical facility said. Ana Bárbara and Miles were married May 3 in Maputo, Mozambique, six years after meeting in Rome. At the time she was employed at a tattoo studio next to the music recording studio Miles owned. 'She was the person who cared for me the most, who loved me the most, who believed in me the most,' he said. 'I just want justice to be done and for this case to serve as an example for all people who want to undergo a type of medical intervention like the one Ana underwent.' In a heart-breaking tribute on Instagram, Miles laid bare the extent of his agony. 'Our last few days were too beautiful to end this tragically,' he wrote. 'I will love you forever because I chose you for that. Years and years of building our empire for today I'm here in this room alone with no floor. 'I promised to protect and love you like the queen and beautiful person you are inside and out. It doesn't seem fair living this life without you, not really. 'I want to be wherever you are because none of this makes sense without you.' The Daily Mail has approached Tusa Hospital, the Turkish authorities and the Brazilian Embassy for comment.
Yahoo
07-06-2025
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
Ana Bárbara, Adriel Favela & Horacio Palencia Hope ‘Pase a la Fama' Gives Mexican Music ‘A Different Level of Visibility'
Pase a la Fama, Telemundo's new television series, is set to premiere on Sunday, June 8 featuring a star-studded panel of judges — Ana Bárbara, Adriel Favela and Horacio Palencia — and original music produced by Latin Grammy-winning hitmaker Edgar Barrera. During the show, participants will compete in a bootcamp-like setting where they will 'train, perform and face challenges,' according to a press statement, vying for a $100,000 prize, a record deal with HYBE Latin America and crowned the next regional Mexican band, which will comprised of five participants. More from Billboard Fuerza Regida's JOP, Gabito Ballesteros & Lupillo Rivera Join 'Pase a la Fama' TV Show Jon Bellion Was Tired of Songwriters Getting 'Paid F-king Dirt' - So He Flipped the Script With 'Father Figure' Elvis Crespo, Elena Rose, Kapo & More: Vote for the Best New Latin Music This Week 'The truth is that it's a project we put our hearts into,' Ana Bárbara tells Billboard during a conversation over Zoom, just days before competition kick off. 'I personally feel moved, excited, thrilled and I think it will be a great project.' The judges will be meticulous about who they choose as finalists. They must have 'discipline and respect for the audience and us as judges, all of those are ingredients that for me are very, very important,' Palencia says. 'In fact, I tell the new generation that, for me, discipline is actually even more important than talent, because sometimes it doesn't matter to have talent if you don't have discipline.' So, what were the main qualities the judges looked for? 'It's a band and, at the end of the day, I believe that there are many components that contribute to what brings success to a career,' Palencia adds. 'The [right] attitude, preparation and how they accept more than just criticism, but the constructive advice we give them,' Palencia adds. 'I believe that the winning band will genuinely work towards achieving all of those characteristics.' The show is set to premiere at a time when some música mexicana artists are facing bans in Mexico (if they sing narcocorridos in certain public settings) or visa delays and revocations in the United States. 'I had no idea that all of this could happen, which is both delicate and strong, yet sensitive, and definitely very sad,' Ana Bárbara says. 'Because it affects all of us in some way, it has an impact. We all admire the music of someone who is having problems for various reasons, beyond whatever the reason may be. This show will provide [Mexican] music with a different level of visibility.' The judges will also focus on emphasizing 'clean song lyrics and about love stories,' Favela says. 'It is nice to realize that music is giving us a chance to go beyond the musical aspect. To see our individual values, to see young people singing themes that, nowadays, I dare to say, are being lost, perhaps more and more. And that there is validity in rescuing all of this, which at the end of the day is the pure root of our Mexican essence.' It was previously announced that Lupillo Rivera, Fuerza Regida's JOP and Gabito Ballestero's will join the show as mentors. The first episode of Pase a la Fama will premiere Sunday at 9 p.m. ET on Telemundo. Best of Billboard Chart Rewind: In 1989, New Kids on the Block Were 'Hangin' Tough' at No. 1 Janet Jackson's Biggest Billboard Hot 100 Hits H.E.R. & Chris Brown 'Come Through' to No. 1 on Adult R&B Airplay Chart