Sumika in "Pieces of Ass" Monologue
"Pieces of Ass 2005" Broadway showcase featuring Brooke Burke.
(Sumika's on the far Right, in the underwear)
In LA 2005, Thesp-singer Diahnna Nicole Baxter and Juilliard graduate Aya Sumika turn in the two most poetic outpourings. Baxter offers an ethereal, raplike history lesson on the white male's "obsession with colored pussy," summing up her discourse by gleaming provocatively at the row of gentleman occupying the front-row seats, affirming that it is now socially "acceptable to dip your finger in the chocolate."
For Sumika's bit, she glides sensually about the stage as she offers her ode to the morning hours, declaring that a woman is most beautiful when she is completely off-guard and natural. But as she sadly points out, this natural youthful glow will fade and all women will have to endure their greatest enemy, time. Then Sumika catches herself and apologizes for the brief lapse and an interview interrupted a few days earlier.
"I think you asked me when I thought a woman is most beautiful," she recalls.
"Here's what I call my ode to the morning hours."
She whispers: "A woman is most beautiful when she is completely off guard and natural." Then pragmatism kicks in.
"But that natural, youthful glow will fade, and all women will have to endure their greatest enemy, time," she says.
(Sumika's on the far Right, in the underwear)
In LA 2005, Thesp-singer Diahnna Nicole Baxter and Juilliard graduate Aya Sumika turn in the two most poetic outpourings. Baxter offers an ethereal, raplike history lesson on the white male's "obsession with colored pussy," summing up her discourse by gleaming provocatively at the row of gentleman occupying the front-row seats, affirming that it is now socially "acceptable to dip your finger in the chocolate."
For Sumika's bit, she glides sensually about the stage as she offers her ode to the morning hours, declaring that a woman is most beautiful when she is completely off-guard and natural. But as she sadly points out, this natural youthful glow will fade and all women will have to endure their greatest enemy, time. Then Sumika catches herself and apologizes for the brief lapse and an interview interrupted a few days earlier.
"I think you asked me when I thought a woman is most beautiful," she recalls.
"Here's what I call my ode to the morning hours."
She whispers: "A woman is most beautiful when she is completely off guard and natural." Then pragmatism kicks in.
"But that natural, youthful glow will fade, and all women will have to endure their greatest enemy, time," she says.
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