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- Pantomime
- This paper is about pantomime, about it’s origin, it’s people, how it has
- evolved, and how wonderful it is.
- Pantomime is a dramatic performance in which a story is told or a theme
- developed through expressive bodily or facial movement. The origin of pantomime
- can be traced back to classical farce and the Italian Commedia Dell’arte. Not
- all pantomime is silent. The completely silent performance of pantomime was
- invented in Rome. Pantomime is sometimes used to worship.
- Mime is a short way of saying pantomime and also means someone who performs
- pantomime. A mime, if performing on the streets, will have a hat that is passed
- around for spectators to put money in.
- When doing pantomime, it should be noted that the imaginative performance skills
- are illusion and illustration. Also, you should “cultivate an understanding of
- the role that the body plays in suggesting an idea, an impression, a sensation,
- or a character.” Pantomime can be done solo, or in a group of any size.
- Before performing, a mime must do warm-up and relaxation exercises. Miming takes
- mental and physical strength. Perfect coordination of all parts of the body is
- essential for expressive movement and graceful poise in pantomime. A good mime
- must be very flexible. You must be fluid at changing posture to create a
- character. Facial expression changes everything while performing pantomime. You
- must be very relaxed when doing pantomime.
- People speak different languages, but most gestures mean the same thing.
- Animals, insects especially, have probably done pantomime before humans were
- even alive. For example, bees do pantomime when telling others where nectar is,
- and peacocks use pantomime to impress a mate.
- Prehistoric man was next, after animals, to do pantomime. Prehistoric men would
- do pantomime to try to influence nature to let them get a kill while hunting.
- Before language, prehistoric men told about a hunt with pantomime. Prehistoric
- men would use pantomime to tell the history of the tribe.
- A clown named Grock became a very successful mime. He started as an acrobatic
- clown at a very young age. Grock became famous because he succeeded in the
- circus and in the music hall.
- After years of successfully performing in circuses, he tried his clown routine
- in a theater in Berlin. Grock began to move away from broad comedy in the
- Grimaldi tradition, and towards Debureu’s type of performance. In his first
- performance in a theater, the audience did not respond. Grock realized that the
- type of performance required for the theater is different than that required by
- the circus.
- Grock began to use a clown as a pantomime character whose actions comment on
- life. Grock went on to become one of the greatest performers of the variety
- stage. Grock used music to portray man’s struggle with fate, just like
- Beethoven, but in a different way. Before Grock would play violin, he would
- throw the bow up in the air and try to catch it, but miss. Then he would retreat
- behind a screen to practice and the audience could see the bow flying above the
- screen. He returned to face the audience and missed again. He became so
- flustered that he threw the bow in the air and caught it without even knowing
- it!
- When Grock sat down on the piano bench to play piano and found that it was too
- far from the piano, he would struggle to push the piano closer to the bench!
- Like all good comedy, this reflected man’s struggle to tame nature.
- The circus was saved from too much clown tradition in the 1940’s by a man named
- Emmett Kelly. The costumes were getting too elaborate. The usual clown costume
- descended from the vari-colored costume of the Roman mimes. Originally, it was
- intended to symbolize rags, like the clown was an impractical guy who didn’t get
- along in the real world. A long evolutionary process ended up with vari-colored,
- but elaborate costumes. The costumes reached some sort of peak when the
- Harlequin costumes of the English pantomime had as many as fifty-thousand
- sequins on them. Emmett Kelly brought back the original idea and wore a tramps
- costume of actual rags. The usual clown make-up is a bright colored pattern
- which serves as a trademark for each clown. Kelly wore make-up to match his
- raged costume. He invented his own intimate style of pantomime in, but almost
- independent of, the circus. Kelly would beg peanuts from kids in the audience
- and then break the shells with a huge hammer, completely shattering the peanut, and then search stupidly for the meat among the debris.
- Clowns of the modern circus are called “Joeys” after Joseph Grimaldi. In the
- modern American circus, there are many able clowns including Lou Jacobs, Paul
- Wenzel, Otto Griebling, Paul Jung, and Freddie Freeman, but they are almost
- overwhelmed by the sheer size of the circus.Modern circus clowns depend on acrobats, costumes, and mechanical stunts to perform, but a mime just has gestures. The technique of the circus clown is
- limited by the conditions under which he performs, therefore, there is a
- tendency for any successful idea to be repeated so much that it becomes a
- tradition. Most of the clowning is done in what is called a clown promenade, or
- walkaround, in which the clowns circle the arena while performing so that each
- spectator might see a complete performance. Each clown performs something
- different. It is difficult to think of gags to perform while walking in a
- parade. One could carry a heart that lights up like a neon sign when he sees a
- pretty girl, another could drive a really small sportscar, or one may wear a
- trick costume which enables him to change from an old lady to a midget, and back
- again. One clown may run away from a stuffed tiger that is attached to him by a
- thin wire.
- As you can probably see, pantomime has changed over the years and there have
- been ups and downs during the change. There were also some performers who saved,
- or played a big part in the history of pantomime.
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