Phina Oruche Is Having An Identity Crisis At The Unity Theatre This June.

Best known for her role as aloof supermodel Liberty Baker in I.T.V.1 drama Footballers’ Wives, Phina, now in her 40s, has started to question who she really is.

Spending more than two decades of her life taking on other people’s identities, first as a New York fashion model and later as an award-winning television actress, has taken its toll.

Her new one-woman show, Identity Crisis, on at the Unity Theatre from  June 22nd till June 24th, was written as part of her Masters degree and although it is based upon her own life story, it explores identity struggles that are common to all of us.

Through its low-key staging, the show provides a perfect vehicle for Phina’s larger than life characterisations. From Amy Tan, a working class white girl with a Scouse brow and a taste for spray tans and black lads to Antonio de Silva, a football crazy Italian living in L.A. who misses his mum, Phina brings a colourful cast of eight characters to life, all of whom are having their own identity crises.

Meet Mary Middle Class, widowed in her 50s, she now picks up men at funerals, Rasta, mixed race, dreadlocked, Liverpool born and bred but talks like a yardie and Mama Nukku, loosely based on her own Nigerian mother.

The tale begins with the real life story of the sudden death of Phina’s 19-year-old niece in her house in 2011 and the ensuing press intrusion.

Phina said, “After years of identity struggles, writing this show has given me the freedom to play characters I would never get cast as. All of my characters are vulnerable, flawed and struggling with who they are and this makes them very human. Many of my characters are working class and are portraying voices and experiences that are often absent on stage and screen.”

Tickets for Identity Crisis are priced at £10 with concessions available at £8. Tickets are available to purchase from the Unity Theatre Box office, by telephone on 0151 709 4988 or online at www.unitytheatreliverpool.co.uk.