Shawn Wen
A Twenty Minute Silence Followed by Applause
17,99 €
inkl. MwSt.
Versandfertig in über 4 Wochen
Shawn Wen
A Twenty Minute Silence Followed by Applause
- Broschiertes Buch
- Merkliste
- Auf die Merkliste
- Bewerten Bewerten
- Teilen
- Produkt teilen
- Produkterinnerung
- Produkterinnerung
Part biographic inquiry, part lyric portraiture, radio producer Shawn Wen reanimates world-renowned mime Marcel Marceau's silent art in vibrant language.
Andere Kunden interessierten sich auch für
- Sara ParetskyWriting in an Age of Silence19,99 €
- Josef PieperThe Silence of Goethe8,99 €
- Michel TremblayBirth of a Bookworm14,99 €
- Rebecca LoncraineThe Real Wizard of Oz: The Life and Times of L. Frank Baum15,99 €
- Sherrill GraceMaking Theatre: A Life of Sharon Pollock35,99 €
- James PattersonJames Patterson by James Patterson18,99 €
- James PattersonJames Patterson by James Patterson11,99 €
-
-
-
Part biographic inquiry, part lyric portraiture, radio producer Shawn Wen reanimates world-renowned mime Marcel Marceau's silent art in vibrant language.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Sarabande Books
- Seitenzahl: 136
- Altersempfehlung: 11 bis 12 Jahre
- Erscheinungstermin: 11. Juli 2017
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 195mm x 134mm x 17mm
- Gewicht: 185g
- ISBN-13: 9781941411483
- ISBN-10: 1941411487
- Artikelnr.: 45809078
- Verlag: Sarabande Books
- Seitenzahl: 136
- Altersempfehlung: 11 bis 12 Jahre
- Erscheinungstermin: 11. Juli 2017
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 195mm x 134mm x 17mm
- Gewicht: 185g
- ISBN-13: 9781941411483
- ISBN-10: 1941411487
- Artikelnr.: 45809078
Shawn Wen is a writer, radio producer, and multimedia artist. Her writing has appeared in ,n+1, The New Inquiry, The Seneca Review, The Iowa Review, The White Review, and the anthology City by City: Dispatches from the American Metropolis. Her radio work has broadcast on This American Life, Morning Edition, All Things Considered, and Marketplace, and her video work has screened at MoMA and elsewhere. She is the recipient of numerous fellowships, including the Ford Foundation Professional Journalism Training Fellowship and the Royce Fellowship.
Table of Contents
Why this black box?
Young Marceau
Mangel
Pedagogy
Bip is born
Scene 1 Bip the soldier
Genealogy
Scene 2 Bip, great star of the traveling circus
M. on speech
M. on Marceau
The empty stage is a universe!
Bip at a society party
Collections: Work-related reading
M. on America, 1955
Scene 4 Bip plays David and Goliath
M. on the connective tissues
M. on his own
Scene 5 Bip attempts suicide
M. on boundaries and borders
Scene 6 Bip, the Bullfighter
M. on man's modern problems
M. on Chaplin
Marceau's show returns in fragments?
Scene 7 Bip as skater and spectator
M. on Chaplin II
Collections: Reading for a well-rounded education
Scene 8
Scene 9
Scene 10
Time passes?
M. interacts with fans
M. on mastering one's feelings
Collections: items from Japan
Collections: knives
Collections: miscellaneous
Collections: icons
Pierre Verry
But remember?
M. on failure
M. on technology
Bip as sleek creature of the deep
Scene 11
Collections: masks
Collections: zoomorphe
M. on video
Scene 12
Camille on M.
Collections: ancient dolls
Collections: paintings
M. versus M.
Collections: Japanese dolls
Scene 13
An interview
"Marcel Marceau has no private life."
Scene 14
A twenty minute silence followed by applause
Other works
Clive Barnes on materialism
Scene 15
Seeing is a way?
M. writes about M.
Bip the stoic
Scene 16
Collections: clocks
You are ever the beholder?
M. on most mimes
Collections: performing dolls
Collections: sacred dolls
M. on the king of pop
"It was the winter of-"
M. on Theriensenstadt
From Marcel and Me...
Collections: the furniture
Collections: the boxes
Critics on aging
Scene 17 Bip hunting butterflies
Bip gets left behind
M. on aging
Pere Lachaise Cemetery
Collections: pleasure reading
Collections: silverware
Collections: Roman tableware from the 2nd century
After M.
M. on the truth
Scene 18
Why this black box?
Young Marceau
Mangel
Pedagogy
Bip is born
Scene 1 Bip the soldier
Genealogy
Scene 2 Bip, great star of the traveling circus
M. on speech
M. on Marceau
The empty stage is a universe!
Bip at a society party
Collections: Work-related reading
M. on America, 1955
Scene 4 Bip plays David and Goliath
M. on the connective tissues
M. on his own
Scene 5 Bip attempts suicide
M. on boundaries and borders
Scene 6 Bip, the Bullfighter
M. on man's modern problems
M. on Chaplin
Marceau's show returns in fragments?
Scene 7 Bip as skater and spectator
M. on Chaplin II
Collections: Reading for a well-rounded education
Scene 8
Scene 9
Scene 10
Time passes?
M. interacts with fans
M. on mastering one's feelings
Collections: items from Japan
Collections: knives
Collections: miscellaneous
Collections: icons
Pierre Verry
But remember?
M. on failure
M. on technology
Bip as sleek creature of the deep
Scene 11
Collections: masks
Collections: zoomorphe
M. on video
Scene 12
Camille on M.
Collections: ancient dolls
Collections: paintings
M. versus M.
Collections: Japanese dolls
Scene 13
An interview
"Marcel Marceau has no private life."
Scene 14
A twenty minute silence followed by applause
Other works
Clive Barnes on materialism
Scene 15
Seeing is a way?
M. writes about M.
Bip the stoic
Scene 16
Collections: clocks
You are ever the beholder?
M. on most mimes
Collections: performing dolls
Collections: sacred dolls
M. on the king of pop
"It was the winter of-"
M. on Theriensenstadt
From Marcel and Me...
Collections: the furniture
Collections: the boxes
Critics on aging
Scene 17 Bip hunting butterflies
Bip gets left behind
M. on aging
Pere Lachaise Cemetery
Collections: pleasure reading
Collections: silverware
Collections: Roman tableware from the 2nd century
After M.
M. on the truth
Scene 18
Table of Contents
Why this black box?
Young Marceau
Mangel
Pedagogy
Bip is born
Scene 1 Bip the soldier
Genealogy
Scene 2 Bip, great star of the traveling circus
M. on speech
M. on Marceau
The empty stage is a universe!
Bip at a society party
Collections: Work-related reading
M. on America, 1955
Scene 4 Bip plays David and Goliath
M. on the connective tissues
M. on his own
Scene 5 Bip attempts suicide
M. on boundaries and borders
Scene 6 Bip, the Bullfighter
M. on man's modern problems
M. on Chaplin
Marceau's show returns in fragments?
Scene 7 Bip as skater and spectator
M. on Chaplin II
Collections: Reading for a well-rounded education
Scene 8
Scene 9
Scene 10
Time passes?
M. interacts with fans
M. on mastering one's feelings
Collections: items from Japan
Collections: knives
Collections: miscellaneous
Collections: icons
Pierre Verry
But remember?
M. on failure
M. on technology
Bip as sleek creature of the deep
Scene 11
Collections: masks
Collections: zoomorphe
M. on video
Scene 12
Camille on M.
Collections: ancient dolls
Collections: paintings
M. versus M.
Collections: Japanese dolls
Scene 13
An interview
"Marcel Marceau has no private life."
Scene 14
A twenty minute silence followed by applause
Other works
Clive Barnes on materialism
Scene 15
Seeing is a way?
M. writes about M.
Bip the stoic
Scene 16
Collections: clocks
You are ever the beholder?
M. on most mimes
Collections: performing dolls
Collections: sacred dolls
M. on the king of pop
"It was the winter of-"
M. on Theriensenstadt
From Marcel and Me...
Collections: the furniture
Collections: the boxes
Critics on aging
Scene 17 Bip hunting butterflies
Bip gets left behind
M. on aging
Pere Lachaise Cemetery
Collections: pleasure reading
Collections: silverware
Collections: Roman tableware from the 2nd century
After M.
M. on the truth
Scene 18
Why this black box?
Young Marceau
Mangel
Pedagogy
Bip is born
Scene 1 Bip the soldier
Genealogy
Scene 2 Bip, great star of the traveling circus
M. on speech
M. on Marceau
The empty stage is a universe!
Bip at a society party
Collections: Work-related reading
M. on America, 1955
Scene 4 Bip plays David and Goliath
M. on the connective tissues
M. on his own
Scene 5 Bip attempts suicide
M. on boundaries and borders
Scene 6 Bip, the Bullfighter
M. on man's modern problems
M. on Chaplin
Marceau's show returns in fragments?
Scene 7 Bip as skater and spectator
M. on Chaplin II
Collections: Reading for a well-rounded education
Scene 8
Scene 9
Scene 10
Time passes?
M. interacts with fans
M. on mastering one's feelings
Collections: items from Japan
Collections: knives
Collections: miscellaneous
Collections: icons
Pierre Verry
But remember?
M. on failure
M. on technology
Bip as sleek creature of the deep
Scene 11
Collections: masks
Collections: zoomorphe
M. on video
Scene 12
Camille on M.
Collections: ancient dolls
Collections: paintings
M. versus M.
Collections: Japanese dolls
Scene 13
An interview
"Marcel Marceau has no private life."
Scene 14
A twenty minute silence followed by applause
Other works
Clive Barnes on materialism
Scene 15
Seeing is a way?
M. writes about M.
Bip the stoic
Scene 16
Collections: clocks
You are ever the beholder?
M. on most mimes
Collections: performing dolls
Collections: sacred dolls
M. on the king of pop
"It was the winter of-"
M. on Theriensenstadt
From Marcel and Me...
Collections: the furniture
Collections: the boxes
Critics on aging
Scene 17 Bip hunting butterflies
Bip gets left behind
M. on aging
Pere Lachaise Cemetery
Collections: pleasure reading
Collections: silverware
Collections: Roman tableware from the 2nd century
After M.
M. on the truth
Scene 18