EVENT – Titty Talks World Aids Day 1/12/2013
I am honoured to be invited to set the frequency for the evening with crystal singing bowls and harmonic sound !
Please come out and support this local event put on by one of my grade school mates ! 😉
This is the Ottawa Show details – for Sunday December 1st –
THIS EVENT HAS MADE THE OTTAWA CITIZEN’S POPULAR PICS FOR DEC 1ST SHOWS IN OTTAWA !
www.tittytalks.ca
@tittytalks
December 1 World Aids Day
Bronson Center
Tickets are $20
There will be Chocolate
Proceeds to be sharred with
www.care.ca
http:// www.stephenlewisfoundation. org/
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
TITTY TALKS: Women’s Monologues
“one foot after the other becomes a sacred dance”
Walking the edge between laughter and tears, Titty Talks takes the audience through the highs and lows that together celebrate all things “Woman”.
Featruing stories from various backgrounds and generations, this is a collaborative play about Bra Straps and Babies, as well as Coming Of Age, Survival, and Womanhood at it’s best.
In 2011, Titty Talks’ debut received glowing reviews (Dec. 1, World Aids Day at the Blacksheep and Dec. 4, at the Bronson Centre).
TITTY TALKS’ two performance Ottawa run opens:
Sneak a Peak Titty Talks
November 28th 18+
8:00 PM
The Black Sheep Inn
753 Riverside Drive
Wakefield, QC
www.theblacksheepinn.com
Titty Talks ~ World Aids Day
Sunday, December 1, 8:00 PM
The Bronson Center
211 Bronson Avenue
Ottawa, ON
www.ticketweb.ca
Proceeds from the project will be shared with CARE CANADA and THE STEPHEN LEWIS FOUNDATION. This empowering show, bursting with humor and reality, promises to be a fun and educational evening for
Women and the Men who love them.
While drugs and education have made HIV/AIDS in Canada more manageable, here are still approximately 42 million people worldwide who have the disease.
In a global “epidemic” of sexual violence — For many women ABC (Abstain, Be faithful or use a Condom) offers no real choices at all. Three-quarters of all Africans between the ages of 15 and 24 who are HIV-positive are women. Globally, HIV/AIDS is the leading cause of death for women of childbearing age. HIV/AIDS is still considered a major epidemic in Africa, where 14.8 million children have been orphaned by AIDS – a number totaling over 92% of the world’s AIDS orphans.