![]() “Clyde’s” is set in a truck stop sandwich shop in Berks County, Pa. Karen Stephens plays the domineering title character in Zoetic Stage’s “Clyde’s.” (Photo courtesy of Justin Namon, ra-haus/Adrienne Arsht Center)įor Stuart Meltzer, who is staging “Clyde’s,” he says: “It shows that a systemic circle of negativity doesn’t always have to be there. ![]() This time, though, “Clyde’s” serves up laughs aplenty. Zoetic’s last season opener, Nottage’s “Mlima’s Tale,” was similarly and heartbreakingly serious in its exploration of the illegal ivory trade and the slaughter of a majestic African elephant. ![]() The sandwich metaphor may seem odd when applied to the work of an artist whose Pulitzers were awarded in 2009 for “Ruined” (about women’s struggles to survive the violence of civil war in the Democratic Republic of Congo) and 2017 for “Sweat” (locked-out steelworkers and their families in Reading, Pa., cope with economic disaster). 3, the comedy – which has as many layers as a sky-high old-school Dagwood sandwich – runs through Sunday, Nov. One of those productions will launch the 2023-2024 season for Miami’s Zoetic Stage, which performs in the Carnival Studio Theater at Miami’s Adrienne Arsht Center for the Performing Arts. ![]() From left, Kristian Bikic, Randy Coleman and Gabriell Salgado dissect the magic of a sandwich in Zoetic Stage’s “Clyde’s.” (Photo courtesy of Justin Namon, ra-haus/Adrienne Arsht Center) ![]()
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