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For some reason, yesterday's Bytes wasn't emailed to subscribers. I don't do the emailing or choose when it is sent, the blog does that, so I will repost it. If you should now happen to get it twice, my apologies.
Otto
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Byter John P sent me a clip about Marcel Marceau that
provided a lot of information that I had not known previously. Thanks John.
Here are some items about Marcel Marceau . . .
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Marcel Marceau (1923 – 2007) was a French actor and mime
artist most famous for his stage persona as "Bip the Clown". He
referred to mime as the "art of silence" and performed professionally
worldwide for over 60 years.
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Marceau was born in Strasbourg, France, to a Jewish family
and was named Marcel Mangel. His father was from Poland and his mother came
from what is today the Ukraine.
At the age of 5 he was taken by his mother to see a Charlie
Chaplin film. He was entranced and
determined to become a mime artist. He
entertained family and friends with his mime performances.
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After Germany invaded France, Mangel, then aged 16, fled and
joined the French Resistance. He and his
brother Alain adopted the last name "Marceau" after a general of the
French Revolution.
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Jewish residents fled Strasbourg but Marceau’s father was
captured by the Gestapo, was sent to Auschwitz and died there. Marceau’s mother survived. Years later Marceau’s cousin, Georges
Loinger, who had been a Commander in the Resistance with Marceau, commented “You
see the pain and the sadness in his mime skits. The origin of that pain was his
father’s deportation.” Marceau didn’t
speak of his war time experiences until he received an award in 2001 (more of
that later), when he said “If I cry for my father, I have to cry for the
millions of people who died. I have to bring hope to people,”
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Masquerading as a boy scout, Marceau evacuated a Jewish
orphanage in eastern France. He told the hildren he was taking them on a
vacation in the Alps and led them to safety in Switzerland. He made this
dangerous journey three times, saving hundreds of Jewish orphans. He was able to avoid detection by
entertaining the children with silent pantomime. Documentary filmmaker Phillipe Mora, whose
father fought alongside Marceau in the French resistance, said, “Marceau
started miming to keep children quiet as they were escaping. It had nothing to
do with show business. He was miming for his life.”
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On one occasion Marceau and a companion ran into a unit of
30 German soldiers in a forest. Marceau
pretended to be an advance guard of a larger French force and convinced the
Germans to surrender
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After the liberation of Paris, Marceau joined the French
army. His excellent command of the English, French, and German languages enabled
him to work as a liaison officer with General George Patton's army.
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Marceau gave his first major mime performance to 3000
American troops after the liberation of Paris in August 1944. Following the
war, he studied dramatic art and mime in Paris.
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The character of Bip the Clown developed by him, in striped
shirt, sailor pants and a battered top hat with single red flower sprouting
from the lid, was modelled on Charlie Chaplin’s The Little Tramp. The name is a reference to Pip in Great
Expectations. According to Marceau, Bip
was a figure of hope.
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In 2001 Marceau was awarded the Raoul Wallenberg Medal for
humanitarianism. There were some ironies
inherent in this award: Could a mime
make an acceptance speech? Also, according
to Professor Irene Button in her introduction, “This year the person chosen to be the
Wallenberg Medallist is unlike all previous medallists in that he is famous all
over the world, yet he is not widely known for his humanitarianism and acts of
courage, for which we honour him tonight.”
Marceau himself said: “I don’t like to speak about myself because
what I did humbly during the war was only a small part of what happened to
heroes who died through their deeds in times of danger.”
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Michael Jackson was friends with Marceau for nearly 20 years
and planned a concert with him in 1995 but this had to be cancelled after
Jackson was hospitalised for exhaustion during rehearsals. According to Jackson
“He was a great guy. I used to go see Marcel Marceau all of the time, before
Off the Wall. I used to sneak in and sit in the audience and watch how he would
defy the laws of gravity, like he was stepping on air. I would take some of
those things and include it into rhythm and dance when I move.” Jackson borrowed his famous moonwalk from a
Marceau sketch, Walking Against the Wind.
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Marceau made a notable film appearance in Mel Brooks’ 1976 film
Silent Movie. In that film producer Mel
Funn (Mel Brooks) seeks to recruit big name actors to star in the first
Hollywood silent film to be made in 40 years.
Everything is done with screen titles as Funn secures such stars as Anne
Bancroft, Liza Minnelli, Burt Reynolds, James Caan and Paul Newman, all playing
themselves. There is one spoken word of
dialogue in the film: Funn approaches Marcel Marceau who gives a firm “No”.
The actual scene reads/sounds as follows:
Mel Funn: [seen as an insert title] Mr. Marceau, how would
you like to appear in the first silent movie made in nearly forty years?
Marcel Marceau: [in French, the only spoken line in the
film] Non!
Dom Bell: [seen as an insert title after Mel hangs up the
phone] What did he say?
Mel Funn: [seen as an insert title] I don't know. I don't
speak French!
See the scene by clicking on: https://vimeo.com/244249479
Note Marceau’s superb mimes and the foot movements that inspired
Michael Jackson’s moonwalk.
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Marcel Marceau died in 2007 aged 84.
The silent man with the sad face would remain silent ever
after
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