Ivan Diller
DMA Magazine - Writer
- Joined
- Jan 31, 2001
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Teatro La Tea
in association with
Caicedo Productions & Purple velvet Productions present
Freestyle sensation "Corina" performing her one-woman show.
"Fear And All Of Me"
October 5-10, 2004 @ Teatro La Tea
For more Info: 212-529-1948
www.smarttix.com
Through several different characters, the actress, singer and songwriter explores the difficulties of her abusive childhood and resulting adulthood in Fear and All of Me. Written entirely by Ayala under the direction of Pepper Negron, the show was created to aid her through the healing process of that early abuse, confronting the issues and preventing them from continuing to affect her life today. With humor, candor, grace, and song, each character represents a different struggle Ms. Ayala has faced: Ayelet, a sexually repressed Israeli-woman, humorously recounts her first sexual experience with a man; Nena, a Latina from El Barrio, deals with her religious issues in a very peculiar way -- she becomes a stripper; Damaris, a suicidal Latina raised in the south, is forced to confront her own issues of internalized racism; and Bambi, a streetwise, boyish homegirl from South Central Los Angeles comes to terms with her ambiguous sexuality. Completely autobiographical, deeply moving, and wildly funny, Ms. Ayala, through each monologue and song she sings, unveils a different side of her pain, her grief, and her rebirth into the triumphant woman she is today.
in association with
Caicedo Productions & Purple velvet Productions present
Freestyle sensation "Corina" performing her one-woman show.
"Fear And All Of Me"
October 5-10, 2004 @ Teatro La Tea
For more Info: 212-529-1948
www.smarttix.com
Through several different characters, the actress, singer and songwriter explores the difficulties of her abusive childhood and resulting adulthood in Fear and All of Me. Written entirely by Ayala under the direction of Pepper Negron, the show was created to aid her through the healing process of that early abuse, confronting the issues and preventing them from continuing to affect her life today. With humor, candor, grace, and song, each character represents a different struggle Ms. Ayala has faced: Ayelet, a sexually repressed Israeli-woman, humorously recounts her first sexual experience with a man; Nena, a Latina from El Barrio, deals with her religious issues in a very peculiar way -- she becomes a stripper; Damaris, a suicidal Latina raised in the south, is forced to confront her own issues of internalized racism; and Bambi, a streetwise, boyish homegirl from South Central Los Angeles comes to terms with her ambiguous sexuality. Completely autobiographical, deeply moving, and wildly funny, Ms. Ayala, through each monologue and song she sings, unveils a different side of her pain, her grief, and her rebirth into the triumphant woman she is today.