Maddie Corman for Hollywood Life
Maddie Corman is an American actress who is currently starring in her own, one-woman show Off-Broadway, called ‘Accidentally Brave.’ In the show, Maddie takes the audience through learning about her husband, Jace Alelxander’s child porn addiction, for which he was arrested. Performed eight days a week at the D23 Theater, Maddie revealed that she wrote the script to “even just help one or two people,” but she has actually left a lasting mark on everyone who has sat through the show.
“I knew there were people who had been affected by addiction. People who had been affected by a partner who didn’t, in my experience, have a voice. I hadn’t heard the story of what happens in between when you fall down and then you get back up,” she explained in an EXCLUSIVE interview with HollywoodLife.com. “I was really interested in sharing the messy part, the in between part. The thing in my experience that really, really saved me was other people telling their stories. I knew that I wasn’t the only one.”
Maddie Corman for Hollywood Life
Maddie has starred in over 25 films in her career, including “Seven Minutes in Heaven.”
Maddie Corman for Hollywood Life
Maddie’s husband, Jace Alexander, is a former TV and stage director, having worked on 32 episodes of ‘Law & Order.’
Maddie Corman for Hollywood Life
Maddie shares a daughter and two sons with Jace Alexander, who she currently lives with in Harlem.
Maddie Corman for Hollywood Life
In 2016, Jace Alexander pleaded guilty to two felony counts related to possessing and sharing illegal and obscene performances of sexual conduct by a child under 17. He was sentenced to 10 years probation and had to register as a sex offender.
Maddie Corman for Hollywood Life
Maddie Corman revealed that she hopes to travel ‘Accidentally Brave’ across the country, to help others.
Maddie Corman for Hollywood Life
“My intention in telling this story is to be of service,” Maddie told ‘Playbill.’ “Because people reached out to me and told the truth about some really ugly situations. And that was so, so helpful to me. It was a really lonely time and the people who were willing to say, ‘I feel sorry with you and here’s why…’ that really helped.”