Funny Comedy - ET the Mime - The Car
BEST MIME IN THE WORLD!!!
Mime Artist in Dubai
Mime Artist, Clyde and Seamore take Pirate Island, Seaworld, Florida Part One in HD
Cool Mime! Tyson Eberly Mime Performance Part 1
Andrew Vinokurov as the Mime
Electric Cabaret Mime Artist - www.circusperformers.com
Mr Bean - Mime artist
JJ performs for World of Mime: Paris, France
Halloween: Mime Artist
The Afghan mime artist
Silent Storytelling: The Art of the Mime
Mime Artist Make Up
Cool Mime! Tyson Eberly Mime Performance Part 2
Plot
An elderly gent enjoys his morning stroll unaware that two separate serial killers have each taken a rather dangerous interest in him. Who will prevail, or will there even be blood? A silent, black and white comedy set in the enchanting city of Paris.
Plot
After being separated from his wife, Kamini, loner Manav spends time with his ailing father-in-law, and dramatically meets with sexy Caucasian Maya J. Mundhra and both are attracted to each other. They get intimate after a few meetings much to the chagrin of her horse-breeding wealthy husband who is already aware of their affair. Maya invites Manav to her husband's mansion and conspires with him to elope with her, to which he agrees. But before this, she asks him to be intimate on her husband's bed - and he agrees to this also. And it is this decision that will endanger his life as well as expose a dark secret from his past.
Keywords: car-accident
Plot
Narrated by Sydney Pollack, film critic Richard Schickel's dazzling two-hour plus documentary to one of the towering figures in film: Charles Chaplin. Hardcore Chaplin fans may not find much new material here, but more unfamiliar admirers will gain some valuable information about one of the most famous personalities of the 20th century. Schickel has constructed the documentary as a chronological survey of Chaplin's work, starting with his most significant shorts and covering all of his features. Schickel supports his narration with testimony from artists familiar with Chaplin's work and family members who offer personal insights into the comedian's life. The documentary plays down but doesn't ignore the controversies that swirled around Chaplin's private life. But the main focus is on the films. They include some of the best-loved movies of all time. Clips from "Kid Auto Races at Venice," the 1914 Keystone short in which Chaplin first used his Tramp costume, reveal a startlingly modern technique and sensibility, as if the filmmakers were predicting and mocking reality TV. Subsequent shorts show Chaplin refining his 'Little Tramp' character while absorbing the essentials of filmmaking. By the time he made "Easy Street," in 1917, Chaplin had perfected a combination of knockabout farce and Victorian sentiment that still proves irresistible. Chaplin's early features, including "The Kid," "The Gold Rush" and "City Lights," were such blockbuster hits that he could essentially ignore the coming of sound for almost a decade. Those making appearances on the program include Woody Allen, Richard Attenborough, Jeanine Basinger, Claire Bloom, Geraldine Chaplin. Sydney Chaplin, Johnny Depp, Robert Downey Jr., Milos Forman, Bill Irwin, Norman Lloyd, Marcel Marceau, David Raksin, David Robinson, Andrew Sarris, Martin Scorsese and Jeffrey Vance.
Keywords: actor, character-name-in-title, comedian, comedy-filmmaking, film-director, filmmaker, filmmaking, silent-filmmaking
Plot
Sigourney Weaver stars as Dian Fossey, in this true story about Fossey's study of gorillas, and her efforts to stop the decimation of the endangered apes.
Keywords: 1960s, africa, animal, animal-activist, animal-in-title, animal-protection, based-on-article, based-on-true-story, character-name-in-title, compassion
She left everything she knew and entered a world few have ever seen. To save a wonderous creature from the cruelty of men, she went further than anyone dared. Some say she went too far.
In a land of beauty, wonder and danger, she would follow a dream, fall in love and risk her life to save the mountain gorillas from extinction.
At the far ends of the earth she found a reason to live, and a cause to fight for.
They were beautiful
Dian Fossey: You like this ring? You want to keep the hand this ring is on? If I see or hear or smell you anywhere near my gorillas, you'll be writing with your other hand and I'll have a new ashtray.
Dian Fossey: Shit, shit... I fell in shit!
Sembagare: They think you are a witch.::Dian Fossey: They wouldn't be the first.
Dian Fossey: Get off my mountain!
Dr. Louis Leakey: Choose your man.::Dian Fossey: What?::Dr. Louis Leakey: Your top man. Your tracker.::Dian Fossey: You speak English? The priest?::Sembagare: Saint Christopher. Patron saint of travellers, and me too.::Dian Fossey: What's your name?::Sembagare: Sembagare::Dian Fossey: Sem-ba-ga-re::Sembagare: I am the finest tracker. This man is not as good as me. Him is a great liar. Me - I'm the best.::Dian Fossey: Okay, okay. Sembagare you're on.::Sembagare: Thank you.
Dian Fossey: You mean we go now?::Dr. Louis Leakey: Yes, to make it by sundown.::Dian Fossey: Dr Leakey, I just spent 35 hours on 4 different airplanes. I should at least take a shower.::Dr. Louis Leakey: No one will mind dear.::Dr. Louis Leakey: There. I've put something in there for you.::Dian Fossey: Thank you, that's very nice of you. You forgot the rest of my luggage.::Dr. Louis Leakey: No room. They'll be sent up next fortnight with the rest of the gear.::Dian Fossey: Now wait a minute! I quit my job, left my fiancé, to say nothing of my appendix and flew halfway around the world. Those cases contain my hairdryer, my makeup, my underwear and my brassieres. If they don't go, Dr Leakey, I don't go.
Dian Fossey: How big are these night nests?::Sembagare: I don't know.::Dian Fossey: You mean you've forgotten.::Sembagare: How can I forget? I never knew.::Dian Fossey: Night nests, Sembagare. George Schaller's book says we count the gorillas' night nests to get the census.::Sembagare: I don't know about gorillas.::Dian Fossey: Of course you do. You're a tracker.::Sembagare: Yes, of buffalo, antelope and elephant.::Dian Fossey: What? Hey! Hey! That's great. That's just great.::Dian Fossey: What the hell have you been doing for the last five hours?::Sembagare: I've been waiting for you to show me.
Dian Fossey: It's nice to see a married man who can sew.::Bob Campbell: How did you know I was married?::Dian Fossey: The night you arrived, you shook the rain off your parka outside the door so you wouldn't get the floor wet.::Bob Campbell: Does it matter?::Dian Fossey: Apparently not.
Dian Fossey: I need eight more Halloween masks - only red ones. Or ones with red hair.::Bob Campbell: I won't even ask why, but I'll try to get some for you in Nairobi.::Dian Fossey: What else will you do in Nairobi?::Bob Campbell: What do you mean?::Dian Fossey: Nothing. Never mind. It looks bad for flying.::Bob Campbell: It'll pass.::Dian Fossey: I don't think so.::Bob Campbell: Those puddle jumpers can fly in anything.::Dian Fossey: I know these storms. You shouldn't be flying. I'm right about this.::Bob Campbell: Yes, you are right. I will be seeing my wife.::Dian Fossey: I know.::Bob Campbell: I know. I love you.::Dian Fossey: What?::Dian Fossey: Oh, no! Oh, my God. No. God. No! No! Goddamn you. You bastards!
Bob Campbell: The tub's for me. A daily scalding might just make this climate bearable.
Plot
Sigourney Weaver stars as Dian Fossey, in this true story about Fossey's study of gorillas, and her efforts to stop the decimation of the endangered apes.
Keywords: 1960s, africa, animal, animal-activist, animal-in-title, animal-protection, based-on-article, based-on-true-story, character-name-in-title, compassion
She left everything she knew and entered a world few have ever seen. To save a wonderous creature from the cruelty of men, she went further than anyone dared. Some say she went too far.
In a land of beauty, wonder and danger, she would follow a dream, fall in love and risk her life to save the mountain gorillas from extinction.
At the far ends of the earth she found a reason to live, and a cause to fight for.
They were beautiful
Dian Fossey: You like this ring? You want to keep the hand this ring is on? If I see or hear or smell you anywhere near my gorillas, you'll be writing with your other hand and I'll have a new ashtray.
Dian Fossey: Shit, shit... I fell in shit!
Sembagare: They think you are a witch.::Dian Fossey: They wouldn't be the first.
Dian Fossey: Get off my mountain!
Dr. Louis Leakey: Choose your man.::Dian Fossey: What?::Dr. Louis Leakey: Your top man. Your tracker.::Dian Fossey: You speak English? The priest?::Sembagare: Saint Christopher. Patron saint of travellers, and me too.::Dian Fossey: What's your name?::Sembagare: Sembagare::Dian Fossey: Sem-ba-ga-re::Sembagare: I am the finest tracker. This man is not as good as me. Him is a great liar. Me - I'm the best.::Dian Fossey: Okay, okay. Sembagare you're on.::Sembagare: Thank you.
Dian Fossey: You mean we go now?::Dr. Louis Leakey: Yes, to make it by sundown.::Dian Fossey: Dr Leakey, I just spent 35 hours on 4 different airplanes. I should at least take a shower.::Dr. Louis Leakey: No one will mind dear.::Dr. Louis Leakey: There. I've put something in there for you.::Dian Fossey: Thank you, that's very nice of you. You forgot the rest of my luggage.::Dr. Louis Leakey: No room. They'll be sent up next fortnight with the rest of the gear.::Dian Fossey: Now wait a minute! I quit my job, left my fiancé, to say nothing of my appendix and flew halfway around the world. Those cases contain my hairdryer, my makeup, my underwear and my brassieres. If they don't go, Dr Leakey, I don't go.
Dian Fossey: How big are these night nests?::Sembagare: I don't know.::Dian Fossey: You mean you've forgotten.::Sembagare: How can I forget? I never knew.::Dian Fossey: Night nests, Sembagare. George Schaller's book says we count the gorillas' night nests to get the census.::Sembagare: I don't know about gorillas.::Dian Fossey: Of course you do. You're a tracker.::Sembagare: Yes, of buffalo, antelope and elephant.::Dian Fossey: What? Hey! Hey! That's great. That's just great.::Dian Fossey: What the hell have you been doing for the last five hours?::Sembagare: I've been waiting for you to show me.
Dian Fossey: It's nice to see a married man who can sew.::Bob Campbell: How did you know I was married?::Dian Fossey: The night you arrived, you shook the rain off your parka outside the door so you wouldn't get the floor wet.::Bob Campbell: Does it matter?::Dian Fossey: Apparently not.
Dian Fossey: I need eight more Halloween masks - only red ones. Or ones with red hair.::Bob Campbell: I won't even ask why, but I'll try to get some for you in Nairobi.::Dian Fossey: What else will you do in Nairobi?::Bob Campbell: What do you mean?::Dian Fossey: Nothing. Never mind. It looks bad for flying.::Bob Campbell: It'll pass.::Dian Fossey: I don't think so.::Bob Campbell: Those puddle jumpers can fly in anything.::Dian Fossey: I know these storms. You shouldn't be flying. I'm right about this.::Bob Campbell: Yes, you are right. I will be seeing my wife.::Dian Fossey: I know.::Bob Campbell: I know. I love you.::Dian Fossey: What?::Dian Fossey: Oh, no! Oh, my God. No. God. No! No! Goddamn you. You bastards!
Bob Campbell: The tub's for me. A daily scalding might just make this climate bearable.
Plot
Sigourney Weaver stars as Dian Fossey, in this true story about Fossey's study of gorillas, and her efforts to stop the decimation of the endangered apes.
Keywords: 1960s, africa, animal, animal-activist, animal-in-title, animal-protection, based-on-article, based-on-true-story, character-name-in-title, compassion
She left everything she knew and entered a world few have ever seen. To save a wonderous creature from the cruelty of men, she went further than anyone dared. Some say she went too far.
In a land of beauty, wonder and danger, she would follow a dream, fall in love and risk her life to save the mountain gorillas from extinction.
At the far ends of the earth she found a reason to live, and a cause to fight for.
They were beautiful
Dian Fossey: You like this ring? You want to keep the hand this ring is on? If I see or hear or smell you anywhere near my gorillas, you'll be writing with your other hand and I'll have a new ashtray.
Dian Fossey: Shit, shit... I fell in shit!
Sembagare: They think you are a witch.::Dian Fossey: They wouldn't be the first.
Dian Fossey: Get off my mountain!
Dr. Louis Leakey: Choose your man.::Dian Fossey: What?::Dr. Louis Leakey: Your top man. Your tracker.::Dian Fossey: You speak English? The priest?::Sembagare: Saint Christopher. Patron saint of travellers, and me too.::Dian Fossey: What's your name?::Sembagare: Sembagare::Dian Fossey: Sem-ba-ga-re::Sembagare: I am the finest tracker. This man is not as good as me. Him is a great liar. Me - I'm the best.::Dian Fossey: Okay, okay. Sembagare you're on.::Sembagare: Thank you.
Dian Fossey: You mean we go now?::Dr. Louis Leakey: Yes, to make it by sundown.::Dian Fossey: Dr Leakey, I just spent 35 hours on 4 different airplanes. I should at least take a shower.::Dr. Louis Leakey: No one will mind dear.::Dr. Louis Leakey: There. I've put something in there for you.::Dian Fossey: Thank you, that's very nice of you. You forgot the rest of my luggage.::Dr. Louis Leakey: No room. They'll be sent up next fortnight with the rest of the gear.::Dian Fossey: Now wait a minute! I quit my job, left my fiancé, to say nothing of my appendix and flew halfway around the world. Those cases contain my hairdryer, my makeup, my underwear and my brassieres. If they don't go, Dr Leakey, I don't go.
Dian Fossey: How big are these night nests?::Sembagare: I don't know.::Dian Fossey: You mean you've forgotten.::Sembagare: How can I forget? I never knew.::Dian Fossey: Night nests, Sembagare. George Schaller's book says we count the gorillas' night nests to get the census.::Sembagare: I don't know about gorillas.::Dian Fossey: Of course you do. You're a tracker.::Sembagare: Yes, of buffalo, antelope and elephant.::Dian Fossey: What? Hey! Hey! That's great. That's just great.::Dian Fossey: What the hell have you been doing for the last five hours?::Sembagare: I've been waiting for you to show me.
Dian Fossey: It's nice to see a married man who can sew.::Bob Campbell: How did you know I was married?::Dian Fossey: The night you arrived, you shook the rain off your parka outside the door so you wouldn't get the floor wet.::Bob Campbell: Does it matter?::Dian Fossey: Apparently not.
Dian Fossey: I need eight more Halloween masks - only red ones. Or ones with red hair.::Bob Campbell: I won't even ask why, but I'll try to get some for you in Nairobi.::Dian Fossey: What else will you do in Nairobi?::Bob Campbell: What do you mean?::Dian Fossey: Nothing. Never mind. It looks bad for flying.::Bob Campbell: It'll pass.::Dian Fossey: I don't think so.::Bob Campbell: Those puddle jumpers can fly in anything.::Dian Fossey: I know these storms. You shouldn't be flying. I'm right about this.::Bob Campbell: Yes, you are right. I will be seeing my wife.::Dian Fossey: I know.::Bob Campbell: I know. I love you.::Dian Fossey: What?::Dian Fossey: Oh, no! Oh, my God. No. God. No! No! Goddamn you. You bastards!
Bob Campbell: The tub's for me. A daily scalding might just make this climate bearable.
Plot
A young actress, thought to be easy and have no morals, gathers three former school chums to find out which is her mother. Much of the movie takes place in flashback and the identity of her mother is not found out till the last few minutes.
Keywords: based-on-novel, maternity-revealed, one-word-title
Which one of you bitches is my mother?
Lili: Incidentally... which one of you bitches is my mother?
Lili: They sent me to hell... I'll teach them what I learned there!
Pagan Tralone: First loves die hard.
Pagan Tralone: Tell him to get get stuffed!::Amoud: I don't understand, "Get stuffed."::Judy Hale: It means if his highness would like to dance with this charming young lady, he can come over and ask her himself
Pagan Tralone: How do we look?::Judy Hale: Terrific!::Pagan Tralone: Scrumptious!
Lili: I was born in Chateau D'or, Switzerland. I was born on November 17th, 1960, the doctor's name was Geneste. I was raised by Angelina and Felix D'Arsae until they were murdered. They always told me my real mother would come for me someday... She never did.
Aunt Hortense Boutin: No! No, the child was killed! It is dead!
Funny Comedy - ET the Mime - The Car
BEST MIME IN THE WORLD!!!
Mime Artist in Dubai
Mime Artist, Clyde and Seamore take Pirate Island, Seaworld, Florida Part One in HD
Cool Mime! Tyson Eberly Mime Performance Part 1
Andrew Vinokurov as the Mime
Electric Cabaret Mime Artist - www.circusperformers.com
Mr Bean - Mime artist
JJ performs for World of Mime: Paris, France
Halloween: Mime Artist
The Afghan mime artist
Silent Storytelling: The Art of the Mime
Mime Artist Make Up
Cool Mime! Tyson Eberly Mime Performance Part 2
Robin - The Mime Artist [Sub. Español]
Marcel Marceau
Fred Jones (MIME Artist)
Funny Street Artist: Major Mime Man
GTA 5 - Mime Artist - Easter Eggs and Secrets #8
Mystic Mime Artist Manila Stiltwalker Acrobat SM Mall of Asia Fireworks 2014 Philippines
Seaworld Florida mime Artist @ Clyde & Seymore Show
Tootsie [1982] -Dustin Hoffman pushing Mime artist
Sue Perkins declares her hatred of mime - Room 101: Series 3 Episode 8 - BBC One
A mime artist (from Greek "μίμος"—mimos, "imitator, actor") is someone who uses mime as a theatrical medium or as a performance art, involving miming, or the acting out a story through body motions, without use of speech. In earlier times, in English, such a performer was referred to as a mummer. Miming is to be distinguished from silent comedy, in which the artist is a seamless character in a film or sketch.
The performance of pantomime originates at its earliest in Ancient Greece; the name is taken from a single masked dancer called Pantomimus, although performances were not necessarily silent. In Medieval Europe, early forms of mime such as mummer plays and later dumbshows evolved. In early nineteenth century Paris, Jean-Gaspard Deburau solidified the many attributes that we have come to know in modern times—the silent figure in whiteface.
Jacques Copeau, strongly influenced by Commedia dell'arte and Japanese Noh theatre, used masks in the training of his actors. Étienne Decroux, a pupil of his, was highly influenced by this and started exploring and developing the possibilities of mime and developed corporeal mime into a highly sculptural form, taking it outside of the realms of naturalism. Jacques Lecoq contributed significantly to the development of mime and physical theatre with his training methods.
Mr. Bean is a British comedy television programme series of 14 half-hour episodes written by and starring Rowan Atkinson as the title character. Different episodes were also written by Robin Driscoll, Richard Curtis and one by Ben Elton. The pilot episode was broadcast on ITV on 1 January 1990, with the last television episode, "Goodnight Mr. Bean" broadcast on 31 October 1995. The final episode, "Hair by Mr. Bean of London", was a video exclusive released on 15 November 1995, but not broadcast in the UK until 2006.
Based on a character originally developed by Atkinson while he was studying for his master's degree at Oxford University, the series follows the exploits of Mr. Bean, described by Atkinson as "a child in a grown man's body", in solving various problems presented by everyday tasks and often causing disruption in the process. Bean rarely speaks, and the largely physical humour of the series is derived from his interactions with other people and his unusual solutions to situations. The series was influenced by physical performers such as Jacques Tati and comic actors from silent films.
Marcel Marceau (22 March 1923 – 22 September 2007) was an internationally acclaimed French actor and mime most famous for his persona as Bip the Clown.
He was born Marcel Mangel in Strasbourg, France to a Jewish family. His parents were Ann Werzberg and Charles Mangel, a kosher butcher. When Marcel was four years old, the family moved to Lille, but they later returned to Strasbourg. When France entered World War II, Marcel, 16, fled with his family to Limoges. In 1944 Marcel's father was captured and deported to the notorious Auschwitz concentration camp, where he was killed. Marcel's mother survived.
Marcel and his older brother, Alain, adopted the last name "Marceau" during the German occupation of France; the name was chosen as a reference to François Séverin Marceau-Desgraviers, a general of the French Revolution. The two brothers joined the French Resistance in Limoges, where they saved numerous children from the race laws and concentration camps, and, after the liberation of Paris, joined the French army. Owing to Marcel's excellent command of the English language, he worked as a liaison officer with General George Patton's army. Marcel started miming as a way of keeping children quiet as they were escaping to neutral Switzerland.
Susan Elizabeth Perkins (born 22 September 1969, East Dulwich, London) is an English comedian, broadcaster and conductor.
Perkins was educated at Croham Hurst School, an independent school for girls in Croydon in South London, at the same time as the BBC Breakfast News presenter Susanna Reid. She later studied English at New Hall at the University of Cambridge, graduating in 1990. While at Cambridge, she was a member of the Footlights, where she met Mel Giedroyc. She was Footlights president during the academic year 1990/91.
Perkins first came to notice with Mel Giedroyc as Mel and Sue. The duo were short-listed for the Daily Express Best Newcomers Award at the Edinburgh Festival in 1993. After a few years writing for French & Saunders (and occasionally appearing on their BBC series), they hosted a lunchtime show on Channel 4 called Light Lunch, and an early evening version, Late Lunch.
Perkins has been a presenter on Channel 4's RI:SE and appeared in Celebrity Big Brother during 2002 in aid of a number of charities. During the series she had some notable dancing moments with eventual winner Mark Owen of Take That. She has made numerous appearances on BBC TV shows Have I Got News for You, Mock the Week, QI, Room 101, Celebrity Weakest Link, Question Time and Newsnight; she has often joked that the BBC pay her a regular wage for "blabbering on random shows". She made notable appearances as a 'field reporter' for Armando Iannucci vehicle The Saturday Night Armistice.