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Georges Wague

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Nationality
  
French

Name
  
Georges Wague


Role
  
Film actor

Spouse
  
Christiane Mandelys

Georges Wague wwwparisianartdiscoverycomimagegeorgegif

Full Name
  
Georges Marie Valentin Waag

Born
  
14 January 1874 (
1874-01-14
)
Paris, France

Occupation
  
Mime and silent film actor

Died
  
April 17, 1965, Menton, France

Movies
  
L'Enfant prodigue, Paris pendant la guerre

People also search for
  
Michel Carre, Christiane Mandelys, Henri Diamant-Berger

Georges Wague, born Georges Marie Valentin Waag, (14 January 1874 - 17 April 1965) was a French mime, teacher and silent film actor.

Contents

Birth and education

Georges Marie Valentin Waag was born in Paris on 14 January 1874. His parents were strict and devout. His mother died when he was nine, and he was placed in the school of the Brothers of the Christian doctrine on rue d'Assas in Paris. Here he helped with performances given by the association of young people from the parish of Saint-Sulpice, and began to recite poetry with this association. He qualified as an electrical engineer before entering the Conservatory of Dramatic Art of Paris as an auditor. At the Conservatory he attended the course given by Dupont Vernon.

Early career

In the early 1890s Wague participated in the soirées of La Plume, the literary magazine founded by Léon Deschamps, where he was noticed for his verse recitals. Xavier Privas proposed to sing songs while Georges Wague mimed them, creating a new artistic expression they called "cantomime". In the cantomimes, which began in 1893 at the Café Procope, Wague performed on stage with a singer and piano in the wings. Often the character was Pierrot. The established mime Félicia Mallet assisted Wague in developing his highly individual style during the early part of his career. Cantomimes included Noël de Pierrot (1894) and Le Testament de Pierrot (1895). Some were performed at Théâtre de la Bodinière in the Rue Saint-Lazare. Wague staged his first pantomime at the Théâtre Montparnasse in 1895, Le Voeu de Musette. Many others followed over the years.

To revive his career after his return from military service in 1898, Georges Wague began to participate in soirées of the "Veillées artistiques de Plaisance". Cantomimes included Pierrot Chante (1899) and Sommeil Blanc (1899). Sommeil blanc (White Sleep) was written for him by Xavier Privas, with music by Louis Huvey. Due to rivalry with other performers of cantomimes, Wague created a company with Christiane Mandelys (or Mendelys), who became his wife, to preserve his rights as inventor of the concept. With his troupe, he played La Roulotte (The Caravan) directed by Georges Chartron. He won success and began touring in France and abroad, leading to presentation of the last show at the Exposition Universelle (1900) where he played Pierrot parts such as unfaithful Pierrot and Christmas Pierrot.

Star

Georges Wague decided to move into white pantomime, where large gestures and movements are made, and the pantomime is dramatic. For this he changed his stage play: his mime consisted of gestures reduced to the simplest attitudes to express the full range of thought in constant movement. He did not use the conventional alphabet of mimes in this original form of expression.

Georges Wague taught pantomime, notably to the writer Colette, with whom he made a tour from 1906 to 1912 and caused a scandal with presentations of La Chair (Flesh) where Colette was largely naked. Wague performed in many stage pantomimes including Scaramouche, Barbe Bluette and L'homme aux poupées, and played silent roles in ballet and opera. Between 1907 and 1922 he also performed in more than forty films. He started his film career with the silent film L'Enfant prodigue (The Prodigal Son) by Michel Carré, where he played a Pierrot. His last film performance was in 1922 in Faust by Gérard Bourgeois. He continued to play a white-faced Pierrot at the Opéra-Comique during the 1920s. In 1925 he performed with the flamenco dancer Antonia Mercé y Luque, "La Argentina", in El amor brujo at the Théâtre Trianon-Lyrique.

From 1916 Wague taught at the Conservatoire national supérieur d'art dramatique. Wague taught mimes who went on the fame such as Christine Kerf, Caroline Otéro, Angèle Héraud and Charlotte Wiehé. He also taught actors and opera singers how to use their bodies to express their feelings. This skill was much neglected in opera, where often the singers were chosen for their voice rather than their appearance and had little acting ability. Wague collaborated with the mime and actor Jean-Louis Barrault when he played Jean-Gaspard Deburau in the 1943 film Children of Paradise, the basis for his 1946 mime piece Baptiste.

Georges Wague was awarded the Grande médaille de vermeil by the city of Paris in 1962. He died on 17 April 1965 at Menton in the Alpes-Maritimes, aged 91.

Views

Although Georges Wague began his career in Pierrot's costume, he ultimately dismissed the work of Jean-Gaspard Deburau ("Baptiste") as puerile and embryonic, averring that it was time for Pierrot's demise in order to make way for "characters less conventional, more human." Wague criticized the classical Italian mime tradition in a 1908 interview, contrasting it to the new form of mime emerging in France. He said,

The first school - that of the Italian tradition - has one great fault that kills the rest. That is, it has at its disposition a fairly limited number of restrained movements of which many are purely conventional - a sort of mute alphabet ... The public can't understand these without being initiated. ... The new school - the French one - is more sober and true. It endeavors to depict a feeling or state of mind solely through the general attitude of the body and the expressions that the extraordinary mobility of the face makes almost unlimited. All of these felt impressions find ample reflection - so to speak - in the facial features that they infinitely modify, change and transform ... All of the dramatic arts have changed, why not pantomime?

Wague saw the art of pantomime as capable of far greater range than spoken words, particularly in communicating feelings. He said, "With the blaze of a look, the cadence of a step, a torso rotation, a wrinkling of the features, a mime artist can characterize ulterior motives such as hatred, remorse, desire, enjoyment or disgust, which the most warmly described and dramatically well-stated phrases can only superficially provide."

Filmography

Actor
1923
Les mystères du ciel
1922
Faust as
Méphistophèles
1921
La tentation as
Emile Trabé
1921
Les trois masques as
Sebastiano
1919
Le fils de la nuit as
Docteur Ludger
1917
Le bonheur qui revient
1916
Christophe Colomb as
Christopher Columbus
1916
Paris pendant la guerre (Short)
1916
L'enfant prodigue as
Pierrot père
1916
Soupçon tragique (Short) as
Docteur Régnot
1914
Queen Margaret
1914
Les enfants d'Édouard (Short) as
Le duc de Gloucester
1913
L'homme qui assassina
1913
The Heir of the Lagarderes as
Monsieur de Peyrolles
1912
La fièvre de l'or
1912
La momie miraculeuse (Short)
1912
La résurrection de Nick Winter (Short)
1912
Tyrtée (Short)
1912
Le collier de la danseuse (Short) as
Le costumier
1912
L'attrait de Paris (Short)
1912
When the Leaves Fall (Short)
1911
André Chénier (Short)
1911
La dernière conquête de Don Juan (Short)
1911
La révolution française (Short)
1911
Le fils de la reine aveugle (Short)
1911
Le tyran de Syracuse (Short)
1911
Le collier de la reine (Short)
1911
An Episode Under Henry III (Short) as
Henri III
1911
Madame Tallien (Short)
1911
A Priestess of Carthage (Short)
1911
In the Days of Nero (Short)
1911
Satan's Rival (Short)
1911
An Unforgotten Kindness (Short)
1910
Au temps de la chouannerie (Short)
1910
L'apprenti (Short)
1910
La fin de Paganini (Short)
1910
Au temps des pharaons (Short)
1910
1812 (Short) as
Jean Gratien
1910
Le festin de Balthazar (Short)
1910
Le mauvais hôte (Short)
1909
L'amour s'amuse (Short)
1909
Fra Vincenti (Short)
1909
Laurels (Short)
1909
Les heures - Épisode 3: Midi, la vesprée, le crépuscule (Short)
1909
The Man with the Dolls (Short)
1909
The Blind Man of Jerusalem (Short)
1909
Les heures - Épisode 1: L'aube, l'aurore (Short)
1909
Les heures - Épisode 2: Le matin, le jour
1909
Les heures - Épisode 4: Le soir, la nuit
1908
Daniel dans la fosse aux lions (Short) as
Daniel the Prophet
1908
L'inconsciente Salomé (Short)
1908
Noël d'artistes (Short)
1908
The Legend of Prometheus (Short)
1908
Serment de fiancés (Short)
1908
La légende de la fileuse (Short)
1907
The Prodigal Son
Self
1951
Colette (Documentary short) as
Self

References

Georges Wague Wikipedia