Comedy revisited
The news about two great comics, IMHO, came up recently. The first was late Rodney Dangerfield, whose bug-eyed appearance and self-bashing jokes - 'I can't get no respect...' - made him famous.
Currently, his widow and his best friend are in court over the sharing of the proceeds from an upcoming unauthorized documentary about his last days on Earth in ill health. Apparently, he still can't get some respect even after his death.
Next in the headlines was the obituary of the mime master, Marcel Marceau. I just discovered that his surname was actually Mangel, not Marceau.
A summary of his achievements:
[....Ms Soum-Wasson said Marceau had created Bip early in his career: "He always told me the idea of Bip came to him very early on, when he was a student... he suddenly had the idea in class one day then developed it."
Marceau was credited with single-handedly reviving the art of mime after World War II, after two decades of being eclipsed by the silent movie.
Marceau was inspired to become a mime by the great Hollywood actors of the silent era such as Charlie Chaplin, Buster Keaton and Harry Langdon.
His Compagnie Marcel Marceau was the only mime troupe in the world in the 1950s and 1960s - it enjoyed as much acclaim abroad as at home.
From 1969 to 1971 he directed the Ecole Internationale de Mime before founding his Ecole Internationale de Mimodrame in Paris in 1978.
He also made several films including Un Jardin Public, and Barbarella, with Jane Fonda.
In 2001 he was chosen to be a United Nations goodwill ambassador for the older generation.]



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