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She Has a Name

She Has a Name
A black square with the words "SHE HAS A NAME" in white letters at the top and an instant photograph below the words, depicting part of a face and a hand
Promotional Facebook/Twitter profile picture for the 2012 cross-Canada tour
Written by Andrew Kooman
Chorus Four dead child prostitutes
Characters Jason
Number 18
Ali
Marta
Mama
Pimp
Date premiered February 23, 2011 (2011-02-23)
Place premiered EPCOR Centre for the Performing Arts in Calgary, Alberta, Canada
Original language English
Subject Child sex tourism
Forced prostitution
Human trafficking
Prostitution of children
Sexual slavery
Genre Legal thriller
Political theatre
Tragedy
Setting Bangkok, Thailand
Official site
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
Calgary Herald 4/5 stars
Calgary Sun 4/5 stars
Canadian Broadcasting Corporation 4/5 stars
The Charlebois Post 5/5 stars
CFEQ-FM 5/5 stars
The Folsom Telegraph 5/5 stars
Times Colonist 3/5 stars
Uptown 3.5/5 stars
Winnipeg Free Press 3.5/5 stars

She Has a Name is a play about human trafficking written by Andrew Kooman in 2009 as a single act and expanded to full length in 2010. It is about the trafficking of children into sexual slavery and was inspired by the deaths of 54 people in the Ranong human-trafficking incident. Kooman had previously published literature, but this was his first full-length play. The stage premiere of She Has a Name was directed by Stephen Waldschmidt in Calgary, Alberta in February 2011. From May to October 2012, She Has a Name toured across Canada. In conjunction with the tour, A Better World raised money to help women and children who had been trafficked in Thailand as part of the country's prostitution industry. The first performances of She Has a Name in the United States took place in Folsom, California in 2014 under the direction of Emma Eldridge, who was a 23-year-old college student at the time.

The script calls for five actors to portray ten characters. The two main characters are Jason, a young Canadian lawyer; and Number 18, a young female prostitute who claims to be fifteen years old and has been a prostitute for six years. The drama centers on Jason's infiltration of a brothel ring that is trafficking girls into Bangkok. Jason comes to believe that Number 18 could be a key witness to a human trafficking incident and tries to gain her trust and persuade her to testify against the ring. The victimized child in the play is known only by the number 18 to reflect that traffickers often dehumanize their victims by giving them a new name or simply a number, which in some cases is branded onto the victim's body. Waldschmidt said he hoped that She Has a Name will educate Canadians about human trafficking and motivate them to act on what they learn, thereby turning them into anti-sexual slavery activists.


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