Daniel Stein

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Daniel Stein (b. 1952) is an American modern performer of a type of physical theater known as corporeal mime.

Contents

[edit] Early years

Born in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, Stein came to acting and drama naturally but haphazardly. In an 8th grade social studies class on American History, given the assignment of doing a project on Roger Williams, the founder of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations, Stein wrote, directed and starred in a color 12-minute super 8 mm film on his subject. Filmed on the bluffs of Lake Michigan, his father served as cinematographer. Stein still retains the original print of the 1967 film.

In high school, Stein had his formal introduction to the dramatic arts, studying under the innovative and provocative drama director Dale Gutzman at Whitefish Bay High School, in suburban Milwaukee. Stein appeared in productions as diverse as Peer Gynt, Dracula, The Great Sebastians and Gutzman’s own original musical Flash Gordon. In a foreshadowing of things to come, Stein also starred in Gutzman’s original musical tragedy The Gods, a multimedia production based on the life of Jean-Gaspard Deburau, the famous and innovative French mime of the mid-19th century, who performed in pantomime blanche, so called because of the whiteface the artist wore.

Stein also began honing his dramatic reading talents, competing in high school forensic interpretive poetry reading contest.

[edit] Professional training and early career

Leaving high school after just three years, and without graduating, Stein entered the Professional Actors Training Program at Carnegie-Mellon University where he worked with Jewel Walker.

He then studied privately in Paris with Etienne Decroux, the progenitor of corporeal mime. Subsequently, he made his home in Paris for 20 years. Stein started his professional career as an actor with the Comédie-Française (French National Theatre) and then started touring his own solo performances, which have now toured in more than 25 countries.

[edit] Professional career

Stein has taught throughout the world at institutions such as the Juilliard School of Drama and The Institute of Dramatic Arts, Tokyo. He had his own school in Paris for 15 years.

He has received numerous grants from the National Endowment for the Arts and was named a Guggenheim Fellow in 1990. He was the School Director of the Dell'Arte International School of Physical Theatre in Blue Lake, California.

He has taught master classes throughout the world at institutions, such as Juilliard and The Institute of Dramatic Arts in Tokyo.

Stein has also created works for other mime artists, including a work entitled Still Going Forward Backward, which he conceived and directed.

Stein is currently Projects Director of The Dell'Arte International School, where he also teaches Visual Learning, Theory of Poetic Dynamics, and Pantomime.

[edit] Performance history

His first solo performance, Timepiece, which deals with the passage of time in the life of a man, and how conflict and power, and subsequently, joy and love emerge from time's progression, has been widely viewed as ushering an era of movement performance into corporeal mime. In Timepiece, the objects on stage are translated from their everyday uses into idealistic symbols. A chair, for example, is no longer just to sit on, but rather also an image of support and strength. This performance is visual music with a beginning, middle and end.

Barton Wimble of the New York Daily News wrote of Timepiece: "Perhaps a handful of times can a critic sit in a theatre and in the space of a mere hour see a performer change the entire course of an established art form, but that is precisely what happened when Daniel Stein opened the Dance Theatre Workshop's 'New Mime Series.'" Sylvie Drake of the Los Angeles Times hailed Timepiece as: "One of those rare revelatory experiences one waits for in the theatre."

[edit] Critical attitude

Stein has said this about "physical theater": "I think physical theater is much more visceral and audiences are affected much more viscerally than intellectually. The foundation of theater is a live, human experience, which is different from any other form of art that I know of. Painting, writing, music happen in a mostly interpretive way, which is to say that somebody sits down and writes something and then somebody else interprets it, often in front of a camera. Live theater, where real human beings are standing in front of real human beings, is about the fact that we have all set aside this hour; the sharing goes in both directions. The fact that it is a very physical, visceral form makes it a very different experience from almost anything else that we partake of in our lives. I don’t think we could do it the same way if we were doing literary-based theater."

[edit] Awards

Stein has received grants from the National Endowment for the Arts, the United States/Japan Commission, the Pew Charitable Trust and has been named a John Simon Guggenheim Fellow.

Books that mention Stein’s performances include Modern and Post Modern Mime by Thomas Leabhart (Modern Dramatists); From the Greek Mimes to Marcel Marceau and Beyond: Mimes, Actors, Pierrots and Clowns: A Chronicle of the Many Visages of Mime in the Theatre by Annette Bercut Lust (2002)(Scarecrow Press); and Le Theatre Du Geste by Jacques Lecoq (Bordas – Paris).

[edit] Sources