Since the opening in May 2010, it has been performed for fifteen times on three continents ( Asia, Europe, and Africa).
[4] The setting is similar to the slums where some of the football’s greatest players, such as Diego Maradona and Zinedine Zidane, grew up.
Some of them are from the immigrant families, some are unemployed Italians, but all of them the scugnizzi - a term for Neapolitan street children.
The lives of these emarginati, (the marginalized ones) are suspended between the gloomy reality and their dreams about soccer.
[5] Live music, dance, football, story-telling drama and video interplay are some of the major elements of this production's narrative.