She is the daughter of Italian actressGioia Lombardini and Cuban director Daniel Farías.[1] Her younger sister,Gioia Arismendi, is also an actress, and her brother, Dionisio, also worked in television.[2] As a child, Farías reportedly did not enjoy the atmosphere of fame around her parents, but still chose to be an actress.[3]
Farías was formerly atelenovela actress inVenezuela. Both uncomfortable with acting[3] and unhappy with the storytelling of the typical novelas, she had her character killed off and then began a new style of telenovela in theUnited States, promoting her networkTelemundo to overtake rivalsUnivision.[4] She began writing with her cousinJosé Ignacio Cabrujas, who had encouraged her to write and not act because it suited her better.[3] Her move to the United States to continue television production in 2005 is considered to be part of theVenezuelan diaspora.[1]
Farías' productions have become popular in the regular prime-time markets:Juana la virgen was remade intoJane the Virgin, andLa Reina del Sur's premiere beat out even English-language programming and stars an unconventional female lead.[1] She has also been applauded for creating shows that depict Latin Americans positively and start discussions.[1][5] She has described creatingLa Reina del Sur as "a big risk",[6] but several years later was steering Telemundo into dramas with fewer telenovela stereotypes, accounting for growing change in tastes and the Spanish-language US broadcast sector.[7]
In 2011 she helped write the musicalMagicus: El Bosque Reciclad, created by her sister.[8] In 2016 she was promoted to be Senior VP of Scripted Development at Telemundo,[9] where she is also Head Writer.[10]
In 2018, some of her creative works were seized and broadcast byRCTV.[11]