The American Mime Theatre is the Performing Company and School of American Mime, an acting medium expressing itself through movement. it is neither a pantomime company nor a dance company. It performs its own original plays culled from its repertory, with new works continuously in development.
It was founded in 1952 by Paul J. Curtis (August 29, 1927– April 28, 2012).[1] Some of the notable performers in the company's past include Anita Morris,[2]Lily Tomlin (albeit for exactly three weeks),[3]James Noble and his wife Carolyn Coates,[4][5] as well as Marion Knox, Deda Kavanaugh, Charles Barney, Arthur Yorinks, Marc Maislen, Daniel Richter and Jean Barbour.[6]
Reviews
In 1984, The New York Times wrote: "As one of the few who toiled in the vineyards over the decades when mime was considered chiefly a European import, Mr. Curtis deserves credit where credit is due. The program that the American Mime Theater is offering... demonstrated an independent view of mime that owes little to conventions associated with the form ... it allows for a free-form approach that roams between the realistic and the stylized."[7]
^Schulman, Jennie (April 4, 1975). "Capsule Reviews: The American Mime Theatre". Back Stage. p. 48. ProQuest963154009. 'Dreams,' with Paul Curtis as the dreamer and Rick Wessler as his alter ego is probably the most vividly imaginative. [...] The skilled mimes in addition to Curtis and Wessler included Marion Knox, Deda Kavanaugh, Charles Barney, Arthur Yorinks, Marc Maislen, Daniel Richter and Jean Barbour.