Marcel Marceau Speaks

audiobook (Unabridged)

By Marcel Marceau

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First issued by Caedmon Records in 1971, this conversation on mime, recorded in English by Marcel Marceau and William Fifield, is an in-depth look at Marceau's art.

In this recording, Marcel Marceau traces the history of mime and discusses his own role in its renewed popularity. Calling mime the art of "making the invisible visible, " he shares how he developed his signature character, Bip, and began performing all around the world, a tour de force career that has lasted for more than 50 years. He speaks with eloquence about the purpose of his art, which, he says, is to show how life is. And branching off to his interests and experiences off the stage, he talks about his paintings, his belief in the universality of man, and his life during World War II, when he took part in the French Resistance and also had to hide from the Gestapo because his father was Jewish.

Digitally remastered, "Marcel Marceau Speaks" was released again by Times Two Audio, a division of the Times Two Publishing Company, on the occasion of Marcel Marceau's October 2000 tour of the United States.

Marcel Marceau Speaks