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  • JAMES DAY: Marcel Marceau is the world's greatest

  • living pantomimist, an eloquent poet of silence

  • who manages to express through the language of a

  • disciplined body the universality of man's

  • struggle against life's minor problems. In the

  • years since World War II, he's toured the world,

  • delighting audiences in Europe, America, and Asia

  • with an artistry that speaks in a language

  • easily and readily understood in every

  • country. Bip, the character of Marceau's

  • lively imagination, is the character of every man set

  • against the vicissitudes of his own tiny and

  • teasing world. Twenty years ago, Marcel Marceau

  • established his own company of pantomimists in Paris,

  • and attached to it a school where the skills of his ancient

  • art are passed on to those who will follow.

  • ♪ [Theme Music] ♪

  • JAMES DAY: Mr. Marceau, I suppose

  • every art has its limitations; it's one

  • thing that makes it art. Do you find limitations in

  • mime in your ability to express all that you might

  • wish to express; in abstractions, for example?

  • MARCEL MARCEAU: Well, there are limitations, as

  • you say very well, in every art. But we have not

  • to mix limitations and limitants. If we are

  • limited, something is missing. But limitations

  • are very good because they force you to become very

  • rich within the borders of a discipline. And I would

  • say that life is limited by death and it could be

  • unlimited because we can go on in the memories of

  • people, as civilizations have done, that it's unlimited.

  • JAMES DAY: Without limitations

  • there'd be no life, and no art.

  • MARCEL MARCEAU: That's right. And I think,

  • for instance, a painting is limited in

  • the frame, a matador in a bull-- and this bull is limited

  • because he is in an arena. A boxer is limited in a ring.

  • I think a piece is limited by the construction, which

  • has to have a beginning, a middle, and an end. But

  • within those rules, what is marvelous is that those

  • limits force us to choose, and the choice is the

  • freedom of expressing one's self within the

  • frames of strict definitions. Like in

  • music, the definitions, the writing -- like

  • writing, itself. And mime has the same discipline.

  • And very often people have thought that pantomime is

  • just gesturing or imitating.

  • JAMES DAY: It is movement. Only movement.

  • MARCEL MARCEAU: It's movement, attitude, and a reflection of

  • situations which happen in our lives which are funny, sad;

  • which could be dreams, which could be hopes, transformations,

  • frustrations. Everything we feel, we hear, we think;

  • expressed through body movement.

  • JAMES DAY: So the fact that there's limited movement does

  • not limit the kind of expression which you --

  • MARCEL MARCEAU: On the contrary,

  • it's more strict than to choose the right

  • movement for the right situation. And it has to

  • be specific. You see, there's a grammar of

  • language. When you look at the Indian mudra, it is a

  • sign language the Indians use. They have 48

  • positions of hands. But if I have to use movements, I

  • would refer also to a grammar which is codified

  • -- we have -- and which comes from Greek, Roman

  • civilization, it comes from all the [PH] sartes

  • of all the civilizations we know about Indian,

  • Japanese, Chinese, Greek, Roman, Latin. But you will

  • be surprised to see that the convention of those

  • gestures -- people do them without being aware that

  • they do conventional gestures. When you say,

  • "Get out," "Come here," "Hello, how are you?"

  • Shaking hands. These are all conventions. And --

  • JAMES DAY: Are they universal conventions?

  • MARCEL MARCEAU: Oh yes. But of course if you go to

  • Japan, the Japanese are the people who have two

  • civilizations in one. They are Western, and they

  • become Japanese when they are home, when the

  • Japanese woman puts on his -- I would say kimono, you see.

  • JAMES DAY: Kimono.

  • MARCEL MARCEAU: And she would move in a different

  • way than when she has Western clothes.

  • JAMES DAY: Even gestures are different. As I recall

  • in Japan, the gesture of waving means, "Come here."

  • MARCEL MARCEAU: Yes.

  • JAMES DAY: Do you have to be conscious of that when you're --

  • MARCEL MARCEAU: Yeah, absolutely.

  • JAMES DAY: - when you're performing

  • in different countries?

  • MARCEL MARCEAU: Well, but you see, in life

  • the gestures people do and the gestures I would do

  • would not be the same I do on a stage. But the

  • gestures I do on a stage are very close to the

  • Japanese. And the choice of the subject is almost

  • very Asiatic sometimes. Let's say the mask maker.

  • Because all the Japanese theater is based with a

  • face expression also and movements of course of the

  • body. But the combination of expression of face and

  • movement is a whole painting in movement. And

  • the Chinese too. And I played very often in Japan

  • and I was amazed to see how immediately -- you see,

  • the world, our world, has grown very quickly in the

  • best and in the worst. But in the best too. For in

  • the best, let's speak a little about the best

  • because we always learn from so -- terrible things

  • happening that sometimes it's good to speak about

  • good things. And the best for me is a knowledge

  • people have about art, which is much stronger.

  • When I arrived in Japan in '55, my stylized

  • character, Bip, or the man in white, was immediately

  • very natural to the Japanese who live in this

  • stylized Kabuki. But for America, it was suddenly

  • something completely new. And maybe because it was

  • so new, it attracted immediately attention.

  • Then critics wrote about the connection of mime

  • with circus, clowns, the difference between I -- or,

  • we, as mimes, because I represent a lot and I will

  • often say "we" instead of saying "I" because in

  • French we say, "le moi ee ay ee sable". I don't

  • know how to say it in English. I don't like to

  • say "I" because I am not alone on a stage. Even

  • being alone, I am with people; I have the

  • technicians, the lighting, the music. It's a whole team.

  • JAMES DAY: What about the relationship

  • between you and the audience? Even as I watch

  • you, I find myself empathizing with your

  • movements. Are you conscious of the audience?

  • MARCEL MARCEAU: Yes.

  • JAMES DAY: Turning their heads,

  • opening their eyes or whatever we do?

  • MARCEL MARCEAU: Absolutely. I can feel them, you see. First

  • of all you have a black hole before you because

  • you don't see the audience. You feel the

  • audience. You feel when they laugh; at one second

  • -- if you miss the cue, they don't laugh anymore.

  • You have to slide over a banana peel the right

  • moment. They will be moved if the movement is

  • lyrical, but they will be moved because they relate.

  • And also, we have not to forget, there are two

  • things which are very important: style and

  • meaning. The public is moved by meaning, but also

  • by the style, though he is not aware that it is a

  • style. I give you an example.

  • JAMES DAY: The artist is well aware that it is a style.

  • MARCEL MARCEAU: Oh, absolutely. I think that when I do

  • "Youth, Maturity, Old Age, and Death," the public

  • cannot be moved because I die, because they know

  • that I am not dead. But they are moved from the

  • poetry, the flow, the [PH] samble of the image of

  • death, the timing, exactly as you're moved through

  • music. It gives to you a soul, a certain excitement

  • and nostalgia. For instance, there's another

  • number called "The Butterfly."

  • JAMES DAY: Very well-known.

  • MARCEL MARCEAU: Well, and I did it when I was very young.

  • And I don't think that this is a mystery.

  • You see, when I create numbers now, I know why,

  • but the first numbers I did, maybe 10, 20 numbers because I

  • have a repertoire now of 80 pieces. 80.

  • JAMES DAY: 80?

  • MARCEL MARCEAU: 80, yes. Some numbers I just

  • did it because it was in me.

  • I think that between 20 and 30, you have in you

  • all the -- it's like an egg. But then it develops,

  • you see, it grows. But a piece like "The

  • Butterfly," I wondered why the public was so moved

  • because a butterfly is dying. But I found out

  • later that when I catch the butterfly, first of

  • all, it's an identification with the

  • butterfly. Then I play with it, and I kill the

  • butterfly, and then in the wings -- and there was

  • utter silence the moment the butterfly is dead. And

  • suddenly it was a reflection of our hearts.

  • It was no more a butterfly. It became --

  • JAMES DAY: It's the beating of the heart.

  • MARCEL MARCEAU: It was the beating of the heart. And

  • when the heart stops to beat, it was as if our

  • heart would have stopped beating.

  • JAMES DAY: A moment of terror, I suppose.

  • MARCEL MARCEAU: Well, of terror, and of suspension of time. And

  • then -- Bip was a butterfly hunter; he had many

  • butterflies. And there is one -- and then he

  • understood what death is, to destroy, he has to

  • love. And he took a butterfly, and he let him

  • free. But the same moment he let him free, he was

  • crying inside because it was like losing his own

  • freedom or losing his own youth, trying to protect

  • freedom. At the same time there was a loss because

  • he has lost something. And there was a remembrance,

  • still, of death. You see? And then the public begins

  • to dream. And I think -- I defined one day that mime

  • is a language of identification of men with

  • elements, people, and nature which surrounds us.

  • JAMES DAY: Over the past 20 or more years that

  • you've been creating this repertoire of more than 80

  • pieces, are you conscious of the passage of time

  • over those years? Do you have to be conscious of

  • contemporary thought, contemporary opinion?

  • MARCEL MARCEAU: Yes.

  • JAMES DAY: Does it change?

  • MARCEL MARCEAU: Yes. Time, and time. There is time

  • with us because, well, time passes. Then there

  • has to be growth. The older one gets, the better

  • one has to be, or he has to quit. You see? You have

  • to grow like a tree. If there is no more growth,

  • you stop. And, like Maria Rilke said, "The

  • further we go, the further the aim." And of course,

  • life has changed, and the mime is a silent witness

  • of his time. And then first of all I created

  • what we call pantomime distill, which was to make

  • a public aware that man is struggling against the

  • wind, fire, air, tight ropes. Mountains were on

  • the stage and the mountains were there. I

  • did not go to the mountain; the mountain was

  • in me. I was a flower, a tree, I break through

  • walls. And I create the character of Bip, who

  • first was pretending to skate, going in the social

  • party, hunting butterflies. But life

  • learned me also to look at life with not my two eyes,

  • but I would say a third eye. You have an eye here,

  • you have an eye here. Here. And in the center.

  • And then the world became much nearer, smaller, but

  • at the same time, infinite. And then I chose

  • themes like Bip in confrontation with

  • technology, modern and future life, heart

  • transplants, brain transplants, going in the

  • search of eternity, and lost in space and

  • discovering that if he's a small point among millions

  • of stars and planets, he is the center of the world

  • because our thought is still that we know about

  • the universe, that the universe knows about us.

  • You see? This is the great enigma of life. And I was

  • aware to go deeper in subjects like, Bip Dreams

  • of a Better World. And I think that mime is a very,

  • very modern and futuristic art because...going to the

  • moon -- have you seen? It's like a ballet, you know?

  • The astronauts are like ballet, they're doing

  • ballet slow motion. And we always played in slow

  • motion, you see? And we do this. I think that the

  • greatest problem of mime, though there is no

  • language -- words -- is time. Because in silence

  • we have to give a structure to the movement,

  • that in time it is like vibration of music, or

  • like words you understand because you know the

  • language. And the silence has -- in tragic moments --

  • to be a silent music for the soul.

  • JAMES DAY: Yes. Which must be very difficult, and require a

  • high degree of skill. Let me ask you how you first

  • became interested in mime. Because I'm told that this

  • interest goes back to the age of five, six years?

  • MARCEL MARCEAU: I say I was a mime in the womb of

  • my mother, you see?

  • JAMES DAY: You were.

  • MARCEL MARCEAU: Yes, certainly. Because I think that

  • everything is written before even you are born,

  • and you have it in you what you will become if

  • fate gives you the chance to express it. When I was a child--

  • JAMES DAY: And fate gave you the chance.

  • MARCEL MARCEAU: Well, fate gave me the chance, it's

  • true. And I'm very grateful for that because

  • when I was a child, I was forming with kids, I was playing

  • in the streets of Paris and in the streets of France. I had a

  • small group and we played -- you know, I was Charlie Chaplin.

  • I stole the clothes of my father.

  • JAMES DAY: Did you see Charlie Chaplin in the movies?

  • MARCEL MARCEAU: Of course,

  • when I was five years old. And when it was

  • funny, I cried, you see? Well, this is another

  • story. And then I was Jesus Christ, I was the

  • great heroes Napoleon, upon that curl, you

  • know. Children always are heroes, you know. I was a

  • bird, I was a tree. And it was such a part of my life

  • that I did not think I would become a mime one

  • day. It was -- I lived to be an actor. It was life.

  • I played all the time. I was before a mirror and I

  • played that there was in the desert a thirsty

  • traveler who dies because he has nothing to drink.

  • And I looked at myself, and I loved very much to

  • see how I'd die, you see? I was playing all the

  • time. It was my camera. The mirror of my room was

  • my camera. And I listened through walls. There were

  • rumors of other worlds. I played with my double. And

  • slowly I wanted to become a painter. I went to art

  • school. Then we had, unfortunately, the German

  • occupation when we were kids, you know, five

  • years? I went in the underground, in the French

  • underground. I went in the French army. And after --

  • JAMES DAY: Some of the effects; your father was

  • killed, was he not?

  • MARCEL MARCEAU: Yes. Yes.

  • JAMES DAY: As a result of your brother

  • being in the underground.

  • MARCEL MARCEAU: Yes. We were both. My brother and myself.

  • JAMES DAY: What did you

  • do in those years with respect to your art?

  • MARCEL MARCEAU: In one way I was in the art school,

  • and I was in a cell, as you say, doing underground.

  • Sabotage, you know, doing forging cards

  • with my brother, I did it. Forging cards.

  • JAMES DAY: Forging.

  • MARCEL MARCEAU: Forging cards, identity cards. And I brought

  • children through borders who were threatened

  • because they were Jewish or because the parents

  • were political -- well, the patriots. And, well, this

  • is another story. It's a whole -- but it's so near,

  • now that I speak about it, it's so near that it is

  • possible that I became the mime I am because I've

  • witnessed all these -- I would have become the mime

  • anyhow. I wonder if I would have been --

  • JAMES DAY: But life's experiences has added to that.

  • MARCEL MARCEAU: Yes. It has certainly added a

  • dimension. And then after the war, Paris was Paris,

  • and all arts came to Paris. It was really the

  • center, you know? Saint Germain de Prés, jazz, you

  • know? We were fans of jazz also, you know? Armstrong

  • were our heroes, you know? And also Sartre, Camus,

  • and...you know? We had this thirst for life. But --

  • JAMES DAY: It was Jean-Louis Barrault, however, who was

  • your godfather, was he not? In a sense?

  • MARCEL MARCEAU: Well, when you say

  • "godfather," you remind me of something else.

  • JAMES DAY: It has a new meaning now, doesn't it?

  • MARCEL MARCEAU: Yes. Well, he was, if you want, because

  • Jean-Louis Barrault did a marvelous thing called

  • Les Enfants du Paradis where he played the great

  • Pierrot, who was a great mime of the 19th century,

  • the white face signed act of the 19's. And I played,

  • then -- I was very young -- I played Arlequin,

  • opposite to him. There's a confusion because people

  • think I was the white face, but he was.

  • JAMES DAY: He was the white face.

  • MARCEL MARCEAU: Yes. And then I created my own company.

  • And with a company -- you would be surprised,

  • but America has not seen my work as a director.

  • JAMES DAY: It's never been played here in the full length.

  • MARCEL MARCEAU: Well, in '60, in 1960 we arrived in New

  • York and Chicago, and I played with my company,

  • and we produced and played the "The Overcoat" by

  • Nicolai Gogol, the great Russian novelist of the

  • 19th century. And the laws of mime with a company are

  • completely different from the laws of mime when I'm

  • alone. If you have one minute I will just give an --

  • JAMES DAY: Yes.

  • MARCEL MARCEAU: When I'm alone,

  • I make the invisible visible, the abstract

  • concrete, and the concrete abstract, to give an

  • example. You know, there are no walls; you see the

  • walls. There is no butterfly; you see the

  • butterfly. A man passes, I look at him. Is he tall?

  • Is he small? The invisible world becomes tangible,

  • it's here. I lean against a mantelpiece, I take a

  • flower, I eat a piece of cake. Everything is mimed.

  • When you have a company, you play with characters

  • like in a play. Then the characters are women,

  • also; men. And you play with the characters, and

  • you limit yourself because the --

  • JAMES DAY: It's an ensemble.

  • MARCEL MARCEAU: It's an ensemble, you see?

  • And then you play "The Overcoat," which is a

  • story you have to read, because if I would tell

  • the story, it would be too long. But the great thing

  • about "The Overcoat" was to express that this poor

  • clerk who worked all his life to gain a coat had to

  • work ten years in an office. But to make the

  • change of time, we worked and worked, and became old

  • on our bench. And this concentration of time was

  • something completely new, even in the theater. And I

  • think, really, that mime has brought new blood to

  • the contemporary theater today, and even has

  • influenced ballet, exactly like ballet has influenced mime.

  • JAMES DAY: And how have you been influenced

  • by people outside of mime? Have you been influenced

  • by ballet; have you been influenced by particular

  • people in what you do?

  • MARCEL MARCEAU: You are always influenced by culture. You are

  • influenced when you go to museums, when you know --

  • for instance, when I see the [PH] Gordan. I'm

  • influenced through Michelangelo; when you see

  • The Last Judgment, Chapel Sistine in Rome. You are

  • influenced through the movement, you learn that

  • the movement -- to have style -- has to be like the

  • painters and the sculptures do it. And I

  • think this is so important that all the reflection of

  • a civilization goes through art. And of course

  • ballet has been influenced by us; we have been

  • influenced by them. I have met interesting people in

  • all fields; scientists, writers.

  • JAMES DAY: And they've influenced you and your art?

  • MARCEL MARCEAU: Certainly. The ideas have influenced me, of

  • course. Astronauts, certainly, and so writers also. But I

  • would say that life is so strong that sometimes you

  • meet people who are unknown who can be very

  • important in your life too.

  • JAMES DAY: Are you constantly observing those around you?

  • MARCEL MARCEAU: Yes. I think that a mime has to be an active

  • witness of his time. And, like a writer or like a

  • painter, he paints the deeds and thoughts of men

  • of his time, and it is reflected through his art.

  • JAMES DAY: You mentioned earlier, going to art

  • school during the war -- you still paint, do you not?

  • MARCEL MARCEAU: Yes. I have done two books. One

  • is called the La ballade de Paris et du Monde,

  • where you see something happened which is a little

  • sad. When I was a child, I painted -- as a child, but

  • they are good painters sometimes. But when I went

  • to art school it became more serious; in a sense,

  • more disciplined, if you want. Because I think that

  • children paint, they are serious too, and they have

  • also a great discipline because they make

  • fantastic drawings. The example of painting is

  • very strange with children, because to be a

  • mime you have to have knowledge of life. A child

  • can be a great painter without knowledge of life

  • because it's color, and it can be absolutely

  • realistic and fantastic. But, nevertheless, the

  • renaissance painter had the knowledge of men, and

  • you can see it through the art.

  • JAMES DAY: Yes.

  • MARCEL MARCEAU: And I wanted to give the example

  • because -- what was the beginning of the question?

  • JAMES DAY: I think to do with your own painting.

  • Because I want to --

  • MARCEL MARCEAU: Oh yes, yes.

  • My own paintings actually. I'm lost in my thoughts. I

  • painted when my company collapsed and I was the

  • one man, I painted. My company was no more there,

  • and you could see mimes in the street of Paris, mimes

  • flying over the roofs of Paris which was Bip.

  • JAMES DAY: We have some of your paintings. If we can take

  • a look at them, perhaps if we can take a look at them

  • you can tell us exactly what they are.

  • MARCEL MARCEAU: I painted -- I imagined all the Pierrots,

  • which were the French mimes of the 19th century,

  • gathering one night at 12:00 or 1:00 in the

  • morning, or 12:00 night -- it's more romantic -- on

  • the moonlight they all gather and there is

  • Chaplin, Keaton, Harpo Marx, Jean-Louis Barrault,

  • Etienne Decroux was my master. Myself. We are all

  • dressed in costumes of Pierrot in white, and we

  • are gathering in the same place. It was a dream.

  • JAMES DAY: What satisfactions do

  • you get from painting?

  • MARCEL MARCEAU: The satisfaction, first of all,

  • of never being alone. And not of

  • noticing the time is passing. And just -- it is

  • projecting on a piece of paper the frames of life,

  • exactly as I project on a stage every night myself.

  • But at the same time, I have a feeling that I

  • share 2,000 lives. Because I laugh, I make people

  • laugh, I laugh inside. I cry, I make people cry,

  • and this moment you are part of the 2,000 people.

  • And when I paint, I think it's beautiful to just

  • draw life. You see, sometimes words give us an

  • image which is right, and sometimes words go beyond

  • our thought. This is what the poet does when

  • somebody would say, "A train entered my room."

  • It's absolutely impossible --

  • JAMES DAY: Yes.

  • MARCEL MARCEAU: - but it's an image. And this is what a

  • painter, a mime, has to do; the impossible possible.

  • JAMES DAY: What you do is a highly

  • disciplined art. Are there moments on the stage when

  • you get a particular satisfaction when something

  • happens that, in a sense your own heart stops beating for the

  • moment to say, "This is a lovely moment."

  • MARCEL MARCEAU: Well, sometimes a baby was crying

  • because it was in the lap of his

  • mother in the moment which is very dramatic. I'm not

  • very glad at that moment. Sometimes it has happened

  • -- you see, surprisingly, the audience has never,

  • never said, "Shut up," or "Speak louder." You know,

  • it could happen that somebody wants to be -- to

  • make fun. Never. It's very interesting that you are

  • moved because you have a feeling that, among those

  • 2,000 people who watch every night -- and I play

  • 300 nights a year in 65 countries -- you would

  • imagine that there could be somebody who is crazy!

  • Somebody just who does something absolutely -- no,

  • I've witnessed people collapsing from an

  • illness, you know? I've witnessed somebody

  • collapsing on his chair because he laughed so much

  • that he falls from his chair; because I can hear

  • it, I don't see it. But in general, I witness silence

  • when it had to be. And if you would have put a [PH]

  • magnetophone in Tokyo, New York, Paris, San

  • Francisco, or India at the same second people laugh,

  • at the same second they're moved, this is really a proof

  • that mime is really a common denominator to every man.

  • JAMES DAY: Thank you.

  • ♪ [Theme Music] ♪

JAMES DAY: Marcel Marceau is the world's greatest

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