Mime fans marvel at Marceau By RENEE SHILCUSKY M IME IS MOVEMENT and imagination. Marcel Marceau is mime. Audiences throughout the world are consistently thrilled and fascinated with the amazing art of Marcel Mar- ceau. He enchants audiences with his imaginative movements, managing to fill a bare stage with shapes and spaces, walls, objects, landscapes and a variety of interesting characters. Marceau is considered by many to be the mime of all mimes. Even the, rare, unenthusiastic critic marvels at his astonishing perception of the graphic details that make mime so overwhelm- ing to the imagination of people every- where. It is the way Marceau stimulates the imagination of his audi- ence that makes his art so perfect. Marceau is eloquent with his body. The silence in the theatre seems natural, for on stage Marceau's body communicates more succintly and elo- quently than words ever could. HE CONTROLS parts of his body - one eyebrow lifts up in suprise with an. amazing precision of energy and timing. Marceau's most effective movement is the explicit detail he gives to each of his characters. Marceau's partner, Pierre Vierry, en- ters with a placard bearing the name of the scene: "The Small Cafe." We see Marceau as a customer bleakly stirring his coffee; as the snobby waiter taking orders; as the cook cracking eggs to make an omelette; and finally as the disgruntled patron attempting to cut some overdone meat - all within the span of a few minutes. Marceau con- torts his face to create instantaneous characterizations. Each of the charac- ters has not only a job, but a separate and unique personality. In the first act of the performance, Marceau presents the basic variations of mime. We see the split-second detail in the classic scene "The Maskmaker." Marceau flicks the masks of comedy and tragedy on-and-off, then finally the mask of comedy sticks - Marceau struggles, but it won't come off. In all the scenes there is an under- standing of imaginary life - the move- ment of fish underwater or birds in the park - that is the perfect virtuosity of making the invisible visible. The bare stage comes alive with shapes and for- ms, and solids and liquids become real. His art of mime is effective enough to suggest weather, space and the passage of time. IN THE SECOND ACT, he presents the adventures of his classic character Bip. Dressed in gray and white, with a ragged top hat and a bright red flower perched on top, Bip is used not only to tell a story, but to show us an aspect of Marceau's personal philosophy. Throughout the Bip sequences, there is a recurrent theme. Bip is required to reach a goal, to perform a daring act. Marceau shows Bip putting himself to essential tests of success and failure: Trying to get a job, Bip plays the violin, a concertina, a harmonica and sings ai aria, all with no success. His face filled with sadness, Bip seems to represent the classic man. Marceau's marvelous sense of comic timing is more impres- sive than that of even the best actor, as he can create a flawless impression with just his body. It is humanistic comedy that Marcel Marceau creates. In Bip, the unfor- tunate aspects of man's life are com- bined with the irrational feelings of joy, and the irrepressable humor that keeps man going. As Bip goes whirling away from the bright spotlight into the dark- ness of the stage, rocking and tottering, we see a celebration of life. We see a simple celebration of imagination and movement that is the art of Marcel Marceau. Sbo whand comes back By KURT HARJU S O GUITAR wizard Eric Clapton has finally put out an album called Slowhand (RSO Records RS1-3030). His old Yardbird nickname may no longer be the inside joke it once was and, for some, may actually describe the sometimes lifeless technique of recent solo work. Still, it gives his followers hope that he might be getting back on the right track. While there isn't a smashing, knock- down masterpiece on this LP (as there weren't on any of his albums since Layla), a couple of very good tunes should greatly enhance his present message across quite well. It features some of the sharp, clear picking he was known for in the Cream days. I