Zulma Faiad grew up with her sister Virginia Faiad in the bosom of an Argentine middle-class family of
Lebanese descent. Her parents Jacinto Faiad and Aurora De Faiad were both
Lebanese immigrants. Her parents separated when she was still very young. Her father was an accountant, and worked several hours a day, so her mother, Aurora de Faiad was in charge of giving her artistic training. At age seven, she entered the school of the
Teatro Colón, where she studied choreography and perfected her acting vocation with the theater. At the beginning of the decade of the 1960, she began as an advertising model and her protagonist participation in a television advertisement of an oil brand gave birth to the affectionate popular nickname of "La Lechuguita" alluding to the characterization that she made. From the Teatro Maipo where she worked, she moved to the
Teatro Nacional Cervantes. She worked with comedians
Juan Carlos Mesa and Adolfo Stray. She was one of the three famous "Singles" of Channel 13. In cinema she had a prolific career, acting in 17 films. In Mexico she participated in several films, of which the most remembered are those in which she acted next to
Mauricio Garcés. She had traveled to Mexico for forty days and ended up staying seven years. She also worked as an exclusive figure on commercials for
PEMEX. During the ’70s and early ’80s she ventured with great success as a vedette in theater shows, alongside stars such as
Nélida Lobato,
Dario Vittori,
Silvia Legrand,
Osvaldo Martínez,
Carmen Barbieri and
Moria Casán. In Mexico, she made her debut on the theatrical stages in 1969, in a play along with
Maria Victoria and
Marco Antonio Muñiz. In 1990, she participated as an actress in some television shows. Already withdrawn from the theater and from the television screen, since 2000 she hosted her own radio program at dawn, where she stood out for her Christian spiritual messages. She was also called by
Marcelo Tinelli to be a juror at
Bailando por un Sueño. Since 2015, she performs in the
Aldo Funes play,
Mujeres de ceniza. She entered without success in politics. She was a candidate for first national deputy by the City of Buenos Aires, as a member the Partido de la Esperanza Porteña political party, in the legislative elections of October 23, 2005. ==Personal life==