Merging Drama and Public Service Dilsey Davis '94, Merging Drama and Public Service
When it was blueberry-picking time, young Dilsey Davis would join
the migrant workers on her family's farm in Pender County, in southeastern
North Carolina. One day, when she was fourteen, a worker developed
heat stroke.
"It took an ambulance two hours to get there, and he died," recalls
Davis. "That's when I decided I wanted to be a doctor."
As a pre-med at Duke, she majored in biological anthropology and
anatomy while still finding the time to pursue her favorite pastimes,
singing and acting. She even briefly considered becoming an actor.
But acting as a profession "felt like a selfish choice," Davis
recalls. Now, with Neustro Barrio (Our Neighborhood), the telenovela
mini-series Davis created, directs, and produces, she has found
a way to blend her passions for helping people and entertaining
them.
The series, which debuted in 2006, was developed as educational
outreach for the Durham-based nonprofit Community Reinvestment
Association of North Carolina, where Davis is media director. It
uses the soap-opera format popular among Latinos to spread the
word about such issues as fair housing, home ownership, and payday
lending and personal finance.
Recorded in Spanish with English subtitles, the show has been praised
by viewers and by agencies that serve the immigrant population.
In its second season, slated to air in mid-2007, the series will
tackle domestic violence, construction safety, and consumer scams,
largely for the benefit of the immigrant population.
Davis, pictured above with actor Riza Salazar, isn't fluent in
Spanish but has been studying it since the show started. With several
ethnicities in her background, she identifies herself as African
American. She jokes that when she studied Spanish last summer in
Honduras, "I looked like everyone else for the first time."
This spring, the show will reach an even wider audience when it
will be distributed by VME, the new Spanish-language service created
by Thirteen/WNET, the PBS affiliate in New York. (Stations airing
the show are listed at www.nuestrobarrio.tv/.)
Before Davis could reach this point in her career, she had to give
herself permission not to become a doctor.
"I really struggled with not going into medicine," says
Davis, who received a master's in public health from the University
of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. "My 'aha' moment was when
I did my first video in grad school." Melding her two interests,
she produced Conquering the Fear, a video designed for patients
and health practitioners about fighting breast and cervical cancer.
"My thing is to take something that has been designed to be
educational but also needs some entertainment," she said. "We're
competing with TV and movies."
When not busy with Neustro Barrio, Davis has focused on film and
television work, both acting and directing. She worked for several
years in the film industry in Wilmington, North Carolina, and recently
took classes and worked in California and New York.
She knows that any time away from Hollywood is time away from mentors,
contacts, and potential work. But at a fairly young age, she's
also been able to do things in Durham she wouldn't have gotten
a crack at in Los Angeles.
"I've produced a series. A lot of people starting out don't
get the opportunity to do that," she says. "My fantasy
setup is producing and acting in something I created, something
that causes people to think, to connect."
She's also pleased with what she's created with Nuestro Barrio.
"I really feel like we're impacting lives," Davis says. "Ultimately,
I realized I can help people here in the same manner I could have
one on one."
— Diane Daniel
Daniel is a freelance writer living in Durham. |