The return of Georgina Barbarossa to yours Family house After decades it became a more crowded journey emotions and memories. Next to Cristina Perez in your program way home (Telephone) The driver crossed the threshold of her old home in the Palermo district and found an atmosphere steeped in past experiences. “I haven’t entered this house since I married Vasco”he confessed, showing the intensity of reunification with this important space.

As he walked through the area, Barbarossa animated the Family customs and the memories of his childhood. “We had the dining room, my mom had put it there. And this was the living room, right? And I remember mom had a habit of blowing up pillows and wouldn’t let us sit. We had to go to the living room.”he said, conjuring up a particular scene with Mrs. Margaret, his mother’s English teacher, whom he warned about the strict pillow rule.
The reunion also brought with it the flavors of childhood. While tasting some cookies, Barbarossa expressed his amazement and joy: “Yes, they’re the same. The cookies with the little dots. How nice to be here.”. This small detail shared with Pérez reflected the strength of the Childhood memories and the importance of everyday objects and sensory images in memory building.

The family history was present as he recalled the effort it took for his parents to purchase the house. “The poor old man bought it with a lot of effort, because before we lived in Callao and Vicente López, in my grandparents’ house”said Barbarossa, underscoring the value of this achievement for the whole Family.
In the same house Barbarossa made decisions that shaped his professional fate. “When I was still working in a travel agency, I came here to tell my mom and dad that I wanted to study theater.”he remembered. His father’s reaction was clear and demanding: “Well, but are you studying? Seriously, find really good teachers. Don’t study too much. Study well, take it seriously,” said Barbarossa, realizing the importance of this moment in his life.
On November 2nd, 24 years after the murder of Miguel El Vasco Lecunathe host once again paid tribute to him through social networks, reaffirming the burden of an absence that continues to shape her life and that of her family. The artist chose a retro and bright image in which they appear to be hugging and smiling to accompany a short and emotionally charged message: “Vasquito, my love, 24 years old, I love you and miss you always”. The publication, which quickly garnered thousands of messages of support, shows how memory and love endure even in the face of such brutal loss.

On the anniversary of the crime that changed his personal history, Barbarossa shared with his followers an intimate photo with Lecuna, who was murdered in a taxi robbery in 2001.
As reported in a recent interview in Bondi Live with Angel de Britothe pain of loss remains: “Today I miss Vasco, I still feel his presence and feel that he accompanies me”. During this conversation, Barbarossa remembered the moment she received the news of her husband’s murder. She reported that they called her from the hospital in Rivadavia to say that Lecuna had been in an accident. Upon arrival they confirmed that her husband had died after extensive blood loss and that it took a while for the ambulance to arrive.

The driver admitted that at that moment she could not understand the magnitude of what was happening: “You don’t understand anything. When something is so abrupt that you don’t understand what happened.”. The grieving process was particularly difficult for Barbarossa and her children, who had just turned fourteen at the time of the crime. “It wasn’t until we got to trial and justice was served that I was able to grieve.”she admitted, adding that she felt like she would begin to process the loss once she cremated the body and fulfilled her husband’s wish.
