Pereira, who enters the stage carrying a bundle of laundry on her head, states "Traje un montón de ropa para lavar.
I have so much history to wash.")[5] Throughout the rest of the performance, Pereira and the Comadres' candombe music is interspersed with four women reading from the testimonies of the former prisoners and their families about life during the dictatorship.
[4] As a musician and actress, she has worked on various interdisciplinary collaborations with Afro-Cuban, Afro-Peruvian, and folkloric themes and has participated various times in the Uruguayan carnival parade.
[8] Pereira has released a number of CDs including "Comerse una manzana", "Bicho de luz", "Comadres", "Ambrosio", "Pedrito Malasartes" and "Gracias".
[11] According to Pereira, some of her most important musical influences have been Elis Regina, Mariana García Vigil [es], Maria Joao, Lenine, Richard Bona and Hugo Fattoruso.