French Playwright & Performer Clyde Chabot presents “SICILIA”
Location: Emory University – Convocation Hall, 505 North Kilgo Cir NE, Atlanta, GA 30307
SICILIA covers the history of migrations in the family of Clyde Chabot, left Sicily at the end of the 19th century for the United States and Tunisia then France. She plays it herself around a big table as if the audience were her family. She shares with them a bit of Pecorino with pepper, the only Sicilian relic that has passed through generations. She has performed this show more than 150 times in France and abroad.
This performance will be IN ENGLISH
About Clyde Chabot:
After studies in the Institute of political Studies and in the Institute of Theatrical studies in Paris with a Ph.D on the Theatre of the extreme contemporary in society, Clyde Chabot attended classes at the Unité Nomade de formation à la mise en scène with Matthias Langhoff and Piotr Fomenko. Clyde Chabot assisted François Michel Pesenti from 1989 to 2006. She has created multidisciplinary performances in the Communauté inavouable since 1992.
Clyde Chabot works through the framework of the theatre company The Communauté inavouable, created in 1992. Clyde Chabot stages texts of contemporary authors and, since 2005, her own texts on the dysfunction of love (Another Medea, Time of boys), political utopias and the fall of utopias (How the body is touched), identity and origins (SICILIA [Famiglia Mia], TUNISIA, CHICAGO-reconstitution, A Soldier’s daughter, His Singularities), friendship (Childhood’s friend). She mixes various artforms (music, dance, video…), considering theatre as an art welcoming others to receive a text from the author, as shared through the performer to the public.
The Communauté Inavouable presents its projects in France and abroad as part of long-term partnerships. It has run educational and awareness workshops since its origin (college, high school, prison, hospital, library, community center, etc.).
This event is hosted by Emory University and cosponsored by the University of Notre Dame, the Consulate General of France in Atlanta, the Villa Albertine, and the Alliance Française of Atlanta.