Samuel Avital is a mime artist. He has also taught kinesthetic awareness[1] and Kabbalah.[2]

He was born in Sefrou, near Fez in the Atlas Mountains in Morocco.[3] He moved to a kibbutz in Israel when he was fourteen.[4][5] From 1958 he studied dance and drama at the Sorbonne in Paris, and also mime under Étienne Decroux, Marcel Marceau and Jean-Louis Barrault.[2]

He moved to the United States, and in 1971 started a school of mime, Le Centre du Silence, in Boulder, Colorado, where an annual international summer mime workshop was held.[5]

Books

Avital has published books including:[6]

  • Le Centre Du Silence Mime Work Book, Venice, California: Wisdom Garden Books, 1975[7] (translated into German as Mimenspiel: die Kunst der Körpersprache, 1985)
  • Mime and Beyond: The Silent Outcry, Prescott Valley, Arizona: Hohm Press, 1985
  • The Conception Mandala: Creative Techniques for Inviting a Child into Your Life (with Mark Olsen), Rochester, Vermont: Destiny Books, 1992

References

  1. Evenson, Jane (2001). "The ultimate object: Overcoming self-created obstacles through mime". Journal of Bodywork and Movement Therapies. 5 (2): 101–109. doi:10.1054/jbmt.2000.0220.
  2. 1 2 Brown, Larry (December 30, 1983). "Mime's Silent World Enhances Creativity, Increases Honesty". Rocky Mountain News. Denver, CO.
  3. Gallo, William (September 26, 1971). "Avital, Elfin Apostle of Silence". Rocky Mountain News. Denver, CO.
  4. Sklarew, Myra. "Space, Silence and Kabbala". The National Jewish Monthly (February 1976).
  5. 1 2 Nellhaus, Arlynn (November 20, 1985). "Boulder Mime Invites Audience Truly to Get Into the Act". The Denver Post.
  6. Results page: "Samuel Avital". WorldCat. Accessed June 2022.
  7. "The Mime Workbook". American Libraries. 9 (3): 178. 1978.
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