2
Most read
M i ME Shhh… Borrowed from Google. Borrowed from Google.
Mime ! When someone uses mime as a theatrical  medium or as a performance, using mime or body  language to tell a story without speech.
The  Emerging Of Mime Mime date s back to  pre-historic times  when there were cavemen. As there was no verbal language, they communicated using mime. It is one of the oldest tools of self-expression. This soon became a form of entertainment used by the Greeks.
The Process and Development of Mime Mime is a development from Drama. It was recognised by the Ancient Greeks and took place in the theatre of Dionysus, Athens. Masked actors would perform outdoors in front of audiences of 10,000 or more in honour of Dionysus, the God of theatre.   Then when the Romans conquered Greece, they brought the mime to Italy. This then continued through the middle ages. It reached its height in the sixteenth century in the form of  Commedia dell’Arte. Street performers would wear masks with exaggerated expressions to draw attention to themselves and to complement their acrobatic skills.
There were still more processes in which mime and drama as a whole has gone through. After Commedia  Dell’ Arte was the Tudors (this includes Elizabethan and Shakespearean.) They began doing simple plays in the church but when more space was needed, they would spill out on to the streets. In order to signal that the plays were on, they would fly a flag and everyone would be aware that a play was going to take place. The Tudors loved to have lots of noise in their plays and would use things like fireworks and drums etc.   The final section is drama and mime today. Drama and mime has taken a whole new turn in the modern times. It has become a very popular source of entertainment and is a job area that many people want to get into. The mimes of today are very talented and use their bodies and expressions to make everything seem so real.
Factors that have changed drama and mime. I think that the use of  sound effects  was influenced by the Tudors   that we use today .  They were very creative when it came to them using  special effects  like using a pigs organs when someone was being stabbed so real blood would spill. Also in the Tudor times, people would pay extra money in order to get a better seat. This may have influenced the economy and how we pay extra for seats in a play or performance. The way that our theatres are today were probably influenced by the grand theatres that were used in Greece back in the day. A social factor that affected mime is the freedom of speech. Some powerful groups, like the government, do not allow criticism to be said against them so people would protest through mime. This way they wouldn’t have to literally say something.
Early Mimics There are many famous mimics that hit the stages a long time ago. Mimics such as Charlie Chaplin, Marcel Marceau and Robert Shields. Charlie Chaplin  was born into the performing field as his father was a vocalist and an actor while his mother was an actress and singer. You could say Chaplin was born to perform. He got his first shot to stardom in the film  ‘Sherlock Holmes.’  He played a small part but it opened opportunities and from there he went on to becoming a comedian in vaudeville . This was very different to mime. He soon found an interest in doing mime and became one of the worl ds most famous mime. Another famous mime from a long time ago was Marcel Marceau. Unlike Charlie Chaplin, his parents were not performers. His dad was a butcher and his mum a native alsation. Marcel Marceau developed his love for mime when he was five years old and was watching one of Charlie Chaplin’s ‘moving pictures.’ Borrowing his fathers paint, he drew a moustache and began to imitate Chaplin. After he decided to go into theatre. He became a worldwide attraction and his name is still known today.
Development of Mime in France By time it reached the mid-twentieth century, France was a mime hot-spot.  But before all that, mime started with Gasbard Deburau. He would devise his own scenes to mime. Later on in around 1923, Jacques Copeau founded his own Theatre. He would teach his students all aspects of mime.
Bibliography! http://www.members.tripod.com/~kiko_mime/history.html ‘ Tudors Theatre’ by Alan Childs http://www.charliechaplin.com/biography/articles/21-Overview-of-His-Life www.charliechaplin.com http://www.bookrags.com/biography/marcel-marceau/ http://www.mime.info/history-lust.html

More Related Content

PPTX
The mask for mime
PPTX
Mime presentation
PPTX
Mime presentation
PPT
Mime powerpointt
PPT
Mime presentation
PPT
Mime Presentation
PPT
Performance - 2.1 Developement of Mime (Mime PowerPoint)
PPT
Unit 2 - Mime Presentation
The mask for mime
Mime presentation
Mime presentation
Mime powerpointt
Mime presentation
Mime Presentation
Performance - 2.1 Developement of Mime (Mime PowerPoint)
Unit 2 - Mime Presentation

What's hot (20)

PPT
Unit 2 Performance - Mime presentation
PDF
C:\fakepath\mime presentation 2313
PPT
Mime
PPT
2.1 Mime presentation
PPT
2.1 Siddiquea- Mime Presentation
PPTX
Commedia Dell'Arte
PPT
What Does History Do For Theatre and what does Theatre do for History
PPTX
Commedia dell'Arte: Crash Course
PPTX
Comedy Research
PPT
Mime32
PPTX
ITALIAN THEATRE
PPT
Edward Gordon Craig Presentation
PDF
%22Cinema%22_Group Show_FK Portfolio
PDF
Programme for Taunton Thespians' production of A Servant of Two Masters
PDF
ITALIAN FUTURISM (1909-1944): ART+DRINK
PPT
post war theatre
PDF
Presentation Of Commedia Dell\'Arte Paintings 2009
PPSX
Courtauld Gallery, London
PPSX
National gallery Washington 1.0
DOC
Script
Unit 2 Performance - Mime presentation
C:\fakepath\mime presentation 2313
Mime
2.1 Mime presentation
2.1 Siddiquea- Mime Presentation
Commedia Dell'Arte
What Does History Do For Theatre and what does Theatre do for History
Commedia dell'Arte: Crash Course
Comedy Research
Mime32
ITALIAN THEATRE
Edward Gordon Craig Presentation
%22Cinema%22_Group Show_FK Portfolio
Programme for Taunton Thespians' production of A Servant of Two Masters
ITALIAN FUTURISM (1909-1944): ART+DRINK
post war theatre
Presentation Of Commedia Dell\'Arte Paintings 2009
Courtauld Gallery, London
National gallery Washington 1.0
Script
Ad

Viewers also liked (16)

PPT
Mime
PDF
Telemedicine in the Healthcare Delivery System
PPT
The big big drama quiz
PPTX
The mask for mime . acheicevements
PPTX
Zara violence-against_men
PDF
Telemedicine in India Design Research
PPT
The Big Big Drama Vocab Quiz
PPT
The big big drama quiz
PPTX
Pantomime
PPT
Principles Of Pantomime
PPTX
Introduction to Telemedicine
PPTX
Silent cinema(2)
PPTX
All about telemedicine
PPTX
Telemedicine
PPTX
Telemedicine: An opportunity in Healthcare in India
PPT
Telemedicine
Mime
Telemedicine in the Healthcare Delivery System
The big big drama quiz
The mask for mime . acheicevements
Zara violence-against_men
Telemedicine in India Design Research
The Big Big Drama Vocab Quiz
The big big drama quiz
Pantomime
Principles Of Pantomime
Introduction to Telemedicine
Silent cinema(2)
All about telemedicine
Telemedicine
Telemedicine: An opportunity in Healthcare in India
Telemedicine
Ad

Similar to Mime POWERPOINT (9)

PPT
Presentation What Does History Do For Theatre
PDF
Bit of History_ A Short History of Mime, the most oh so French of art forms.pdf
PDF
Who invented mime_ Are there any famous mime artists in India_.
PPTX
cinema, theater and music
PPTX
cinema, theater and music
PPTX
Historical periods team 5
PDF
Early Cinema and George Melies-By Subarna Ganguly
PPTX
George méliès
PPTX
Historical periods presentation team b
Presentation What Does History Do For Theatre
Bit of History_ A Short History of Mime, the most oh so French of art forms.pdf
Who invented mime_ Are there any famous mime artists in India_.
cinema, theater and music
cinema, theater and music
Historical periods team 5
Early Cinema and George Melies-By Subarna Ganguly
George méliès
Historical periods presentation team b

More from renee (20)

PPT
Q7 owerpoint reneee
DOC
Production schedule
DOC
Snapshots of Title Sequence
DOC
Research - Conventions of a film opening
DOC
Feedback
DOC
Project proposal form
DOC
WS8.1.1
DOC
WS8.4.3
DOC
WS8.4.1
DOC
Ws8.3.1
DOC
WS8.2.1
DOCX
8.1.5
DOCX
8.1.4
DOCX
8.1.3
DOCX
8.1.2
DOC
WS7.1.12
DOC
WS7.1.11
DOC
Ws7.1.10
DOC
WS4.1.2
DOC
Ws4.1.2 complete
Q7 owerpoint reneee
Production schedule
Snapshots of Title Sequence
Research - Conventions of a film opening
Feedback
Project proposal form
WS8.1.1
WS8.4.3
WS8.4.1
Ws8.3.1
WS8.2.1
8.1.5
8.1.4
8.1.3
8.1.2
WS7.1.12
WS7.1.11
Ws7.1.10
WS4.1.2
Ws4.1.2 complete

Mime POWERPOINT

  • 1. M i ME Shhh… Borrowed from Google. Borrowed from Google.
  • 2. Mime ! When someone uses mime as a theatrical medium or as a performance, using mime or body language to tell a story without speech.
  • 3. The Emerging Of Mime Mime date s back to pre-historic times when there were cavemen. As there was no verbal language, they communicated using mime. It is one of the oldest tools of self-expression. This soon became a form of entertainment used by the Greeks.
  • 4. The Process and Development of Mime Mime is a development from Drama. It was recognised by the Ancient Greeks and took place in the theatre of Dionysus, Athens. Masked actors would perform outdoors in front of audiences of 10,000 or more in honour of Dionysus, the God of theatre. Then when the Romans conquered Greece, they brought the mime to Italy. This then continued through the middle ages. It reached its height in the sixteenth century in the form of Commedia dell’Arte. Street performers would wear masks with exaggerated expressions to draw attention to themselves and to complement their acrobatic skills.
  • 5. There were still more processes in which mime and drama as a whole has gone through. After Commedia Dell’ Arte was the Tudors (this includes Elizabethan and Shakespearean.) They began doing simple plays in the church but when more space was needed, they would spill out on to the streets. In order to signal that the plays were on, they would fly a flag and everyone would be aware that a play was going to take place. The Tudors loved to have lots of noise in their plays and would use things like fireworks and drums etc. The final section is drama and mime today. Drama and mime has taken a whole new turn in the modern times. It has become a very popular source of entertainment and is a job area that many people want to get into. The mimes of today are very talented and use their bodies and expressions to make everything seem so real.
  • 6. Factors that have changed drama and mime. I think that the use of sound effects was influenced by the Tudors that we use today . They were very creative when it came to them using special effects like using a pigs organs when someone was being stabbed so real blood would spill. Also in the Tudor times, people would pay extra money in order to get a better seat. This may have influenced the economy and how we pay extra for seats in a play or performance. The way that our theatres are today were probably influenced by the grand theatres that were used in Greece back in the day. A social factor that affected mime is the freedom of speech. Some powerful groups, like the government, do not allow criticism to be said against them so people would protest through mime. This way they wouldn’t have to literally say something.
  • 7. Early Mimics There are many famous mimics that hit the stages a long time ago. Mimics such as Charlie Chaplin, Marcel Marceau and Robert Shields. Charlie Chaplin was born into the performing field as his father was a vocalist and an actor while his mother was an actress and singer. You could say Chaplin was born to perform. He got his first shot to stardom in the film ‘Sherlock Holmes.’ He played a small part but it opened opportunities and from there he went on to becoming a comedian in vaudeville . This was very different to mime. He soon found an interest in doing mime and became one of the worl ds most famous mime. Another famous mime from a long time ago was Marcel Marceau. Unlike Charlie Chaplin, his parents were not performers. His dad was a butcher and his mum a native alsation. Marcel Marceau developed his love for mime when he was five years old and was watching one of Charlie Chaplin’s ‘moving pictures.’ Borrowing his fathers paint, he drew a moustache and began to imitate Chaplin. After he decided to go into theatre. He became a worldwide attraction and his name is still known today.
  • 8. Development of Mime in France By time it reached the mid-twentieth century, France was a mime hot-spot. But before all that, mime started with Gasbard Deburau. He would devise his own scenes to mime. Later on in around 1923, Jacques Copeau founded his own Theatre. He would teach his students all aspects of mime.
  • 9. Bibliography! http://www.members.tripod.com/~kiko_mime/history.html ‘ Tudors Theatre’ by Alan Childs http://www.charliechaplin.com/biography/articles/21-Overview-of-His-Life www.charliechaplin.com http://www.bookrags.com/biography/marcel-marceau/ http://www.mime.info/history-lust.html