Casue of Death of legend Marcel Marceau andGoogle Doodle Celebrates Legendary Mime Marcel Marceau

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364 بار بازدید - پارسال - Casue of Death of legend
Casue of Death of legend Marcel Marceau andGoogle Doodle Celebrates Legendary Mime Marcel Marceau
The legendary French mime Marcel Marceau would have turned 100 years old on March 22nd, and Google is marking the occasion with an iconic Doodle. On March 24th, 1923, he entered the world as Marcel Mangel in Strasbourg, France.
Everything you ever wanted to know about mimes is right here. On March 22, 1923, Marceau was born to a Jewish family with the surname Mangel in Strasbourg, France. With Nazi Germany's invasion of France, the mime changed his identity to Marceau to conceal the fact that he was Jewish. Marceau's mother took him to see a Charlie Chaplin picture when he was five years old, and the experience inspired him to become a mime. Marceau initially put his abilities to use as a mime to aid in the escape of Jewish children from Nazi-occupied France by performing pantomimes for them on the treacherous route to the Swiss border. Marceau undertook at least three of these excursions, and he was responsible for the liberation of 70 children during World War II.
Charles Mangel, Marceau's father, was arrested by the Gestapo in 1944 and sent to the Auschwitz concentration camp, where he perished. Marceau's mother, however, managed to escape death. The war ended in 1945, and Marceau enrolled at the Charles Dullin School of Dramatic Art. He then joined Jean-Louis Barrault's company and played Arlequin in the pantomime Baptiste. A lot of people noticed him following his performance in Baptiste, and his career as a mime took off once he presented his first "mimodrama," Praxitele and the Golden Fish, at the Bernhardt Theatre.
Marceau's most recognizable persona, Bip the Clown, was born in 1947. Marceau, in character as Bip the Clown, sported a striped blouse, white face paint, and a tattered top hat with a flower. Marceau developed the art of silence through his extensive touring and performances in front of cinema and television audiences worldwide. His role as Scrooge in the 1973 production of A Christmas Carol garnered him an Emmy Award for Best Speciality Act in 1956 on the Max Liebman Show of Shows.
In 1968, as Professor Ping in Barbarella, his voice was first heard in a film.

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پارسال در تاریخ 1402/01/02 منتشر شده است.
364 بـار بازدید شده
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