H
culture
H
HOYONEWS
HomeBusinessTechnologySportPolitics
Others
  • Food
  • Culture
  • Society
Contact
Home
Business
Technology
Sport
Politics

Food

Culture

Society

Contact
Facebook page
H
HOYONEWS

Company

business
technology
sport
politics
food
culture
society

© 2025 Hoyonews™. All Rights Reserved.
Facebook page

Philippe Gaulier obituary

1 day ago
A picture


In 1980 the École Philippe Gaulier opened its doors in Paris to help performers find and celebrate their “inner idiot”.The school quickly became the prime destination for clown training, attracting theatre students, actors and curious others from around the world.Philippe, who has died aged 82 following a lung infection, made the concept of le jeu – play – central to his teaching.For him, comedy was not about jokes but about danger: the moment when a performer risks failure or ridicule in pursuit of delight.His clowns were not sentimental innocents but mischievous creatures who loved the audience and longed to be loved in return.

He was equally celebrated for bouffon – a grotesque, satirical form in which performers mock power and hypocrisy.Bouffons are savage but playful critics of society, generating shocking laughter from the darkest material.There were also courses in melodrama, Shakespeare, Chekhov, neutral mask, tragedy and vaudeville.It would not occur to Philippe to claim credit for the success of alumni including Sacha Baron Cohen, Emma Thompson, Helena Bonham Carter, Simon McBurney, Kathryn Hunter, Roberto Benigni, David Schwimmer, Geoffrey Rush and members of the British comedy and alternative theatre boom of the 1990s and 2000s.“They were talented already,” he insisted.

“I only told them when they were lying.”At the mention of his name, a common response would be: “Oh, I’ve heard he’s really mean.” I never found this to be the case, though he was blunt for effect.It undoubtedly amused Philippe to hurl witty insults at the students, but they were useful for stripping away ego to arrive at a humility more conducive to clowning.Ex-students will proudly list the politically incorrect abuse they had endured.

In games such as “Balthazar a dit”, a version of Simon Says named after his eldest son, Philippe often relished catching mistakes so he could mete out “punishments”.Mild thumping and hair pulling were typical.Most students enjoyed it and understood its intended effect; some were appalled.In the summer of 1988 he gave a clown course at Ivy House in Golders Green, north London, and on it I felt my life change.Everything that I was scolded for at drama school, he seemed to like.

In 1991 Arts Council England invited him to relocate his school to London,Philippe, his wife – the Iranian actor Soussan Farrokhnia, whom he had married in 1987 – and two sons moved into a house in Hampstead,The Gauliers were hospitable; wine flowed and memorable evenings were spent there,At this time the school was based in Highbury, moving after three years to Kentish Town and then, in 1999, to a disused, mouse-infested church in Cricklewood,Philippe returned to France in 2002 when his marriage ended, and a new premises was hastily acquired in the northern Paris suburb of Montreuil.

Three years later the school moved to the southern suburb of Sceaux and flourished there until 2011 despite Philippe’s difficulties with the local authority: “The people working in the town hall would make you weep with despair.”He then moved it to Étampes, 45 minutes south of Paris.Philippe continued to teach until a few months ago, and it is still going strong under the guidance of Michiko Miyazaki Gaulie, his wife since 2005, and their teaching staff.Born in Nazi-occupied wartime Paris, Philippe was the son of Jacqueline Everling, from Spain, and André Gaulier, a GP.By his own account he was headstrong and was eventually expelled from his primary school for punching his gymnastics teacher, “for making us march around like soldiers”.

The school staff beat him repeatedly for his stubbornness, and, he claimed, for bearing the name Philippe, echoing that of the collaborationist leader of Vichy France, Marshal Philippe Pétain.The schoolboy said that this oppression gave him a love of pretending to be someone else.As a teenager he tried acting, but audiences laughed at him in serious roles.So he found his way to study with Jacques Lecoq at his Paris mime school.He was taught there by Pierre Byland, with whom he would later create the clown show Les Assiettes, where the pair of them broke 200 plates every night.

They played extensively at the Odéon Théâtre de l’Europe in Paris and on tour internationally.The show was joyously received everywhere except Belgium, where they played to silence.According to Philippe, many Belgians would gather at the stage door to ask: “Why did you break all those plates?”He taught clowning at Lecoq for some years before leaving to establish the school bearing his own name, with financial assistance from the paediatrician Françoise Dolto and the actor Madeleine Milhaud, wife of the composer Darius Milhaud.A prolific writer, Philippe rose at 4am each day to work at his desk until it was time to teach.His published works include Le Gégèneur (The Tormentor: My Thoughts on Theatre, 2007); Lettre Ou Pas Lettre (2008), reflections on teaching from a calligraphic point of departure; and Le Gauche et le Droit, a tale of a pair of identical twins, a doctor and a “madman” (also 2008).

His collection of plays Pièces pour Bouffons includes his best-known work, No Son of Mine,He is survived by Michiko, his sons, Balthazar and Samuel, grandchildren, Gladness and Soloman, and siblings Nicole, Martine, Michèlle and Frédéric; his sister Claudine predeceased him,Philippe Michel Gaulier, teacher of clowning, born 4 March 1943; died 9 February 2026
recentSee all
A picture

Trump’s new global tariffs kick in at 10%; Bank of England governor says March rate cut ‘open question’ – as it happened

Time to wrap up…Donald Trump’s new global tariffs have taken effect at 10%, even though he had threatened a higher rate of 15% over the weekend, providing “some relief” for British businesses, according to a lobby group.After the US president suffered a defeat at the hands of the supreme court on Friday, which struck down his sweeping “liberation day” tariffs imposed last year, he angrily reacted by announcing a 10% global tariff, which he raised to 15% on Saturday in a post on his social media platform Truth Social.The owner of Facebook has agreed to buy $60bn (£44.5bn) of artificial intelligence chips from the US semiconductor company Advanced Micro Devices despite fears over the vast sums being spent on the AI industry.Meta, which also owns Instagram and WhatsApp, has clinched the five-year deal in which it will also buy 10% of the chip company

about 6 hours ago
A picture

US datacenters face slew of problems amid grassroots protests against AI

Cancellations and delays of new US datacenters have increased as the artificial intelligence boom runs up against a slate of issues, including supply chain snags, energy shortages and tariff-induced restraints.Grassroots opposition from local communities has also derailed some plans, and some investors have grown wary of datacenters amid fears of an AI bubble.Dozens of plans for datacenters were killed or delayed in December or January, according to reports from the investment research firm MacroEdge and climate news outlet Heatmap. MacroEdge’s research identified 26 cancellations through January – up from one in October.The complex knot of issues raises questions about the US’s ability to quickly facilitate the datacenter boom

about 7 hours ago
A picture

Reddit fined £14.5m in UK over use of under-13s’ data

The UK information regulator has fined the social news service Reddit £14.5m for using the data of children under the age of 13 unlawfully and potentially exposing them to inappropriate and harmful content.The hefty punishment from the Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO) is the largest fine yet for a breach of children’s privacy and comes after the US-based company introduced age checks in July, including age verification to access mature content. Prior to this, the ICO said, there were “a large number of children under 13 on the platform and Reddit did not have a lawful basis for processing their personal information”.Reddit asks users to declare their age when opening an account but the ICO said relying on self-declaration presented risks to children as it was easy to bypass

about 6 hours ago
A picture

‘A feedback loop with no brake’: how an AI doomsday report shook US markets

US stock markets have been hit by a further wave of AI jitters, this time from yet another viral – and completely speculative – warning about the impact of the technology on the world’s largest economy.The latest foreboding is from Citrini Research, a little-known US firm that provides insights on “transformative ‘megatrends’”. Its post on Substack, which it called a “scenario, not a prediction”, rattled investors by portraying a near future in which autonomous AI systems – or agents – upend the entire US economy, from jobs to markets and mortgages.Citrini’s scenario begins now and ends in June 2028, with US unemployment cresting over 10% and an Occupy Silicon Valley movement setting up camp outside OpenAI and Anthropic’s offices. In the interim, a series of events triggered by the widespread use of AI agents guts software companies and ripples outwards, hitting private credit and mortgages, and leading to an unchecked downward spiral

about 6 hours ago
A picture

England edge past Pakistan: T20 Cricket World Cup Super 8s – as it happened

The pull goes to the fence for four and that completes a fine performance from England, their best of the tournament so far.Aha, here’s Simon Burnton’s match report……which means we’re done here. Thanks all for your company and comments; peace out.Brook, giving a second interview, says he was moved up the order because they wanted to make more of the powerplay and he goes after it. He’d been thinking about it for a while, not just for internationals but franchise cricket too, and when Baz said “Pakistan are your team,” he was up for it

about 4 hours ago
A picture

Harry Brook’s 50-ball century blazes England past Pakistan into T20 World Cup semi-finals

For all their faults and frailties, their fluffs and fumbles, England are also the first team to secure a place in the World Cup semi-finals, their spot secured by victory over Pakistan and by the sensational Harry Brook century that drove them towards it.After coming in just one ball into the innings and watching the rest of England’s top five falter, England’s captain transformed a crisis into what, for all that a couple of late wickets got the nerves jangling, became something approaching a cruise.Brook fell to the last ball of the 17th over, the first after he had completed his century off his 50th delivery. Several Pakistan players ran towards him to shake his hand as he left the field, and soon they were shaking hands again: having come to the crease, promoted for the first time to No 3, before England had even taken a nibble into their target of 165, Brook departed with them needing 10 off 18. Though Will Jacks and Jamie Overton both fell in the penultimate over to give Pakistan the faintest sniff of renewed hope, England got there with five remaining to win by two wickets

about 4 hours ago
trendingSee all
A picture

AstraZeneca boss Pascal Soriot’s pay rises to £17.7m

about 8 hours ago
A picture

Oil prices hit seven-month highs as tensions rise before US-Iran talks

about 12 hours ago
A picture

Meta agrees $60bn deal with chipmaker AMD despite AI bubble fears

about 8 hours ago
A picture

Police AI chief admits crime-fighting tech will have bias but vows to tackle it

about 15 hours ago
A picture

US hockey was bathed in a golden Olympic glow. Then Donald Trump and Kash Patel stepped in | Beau Dure

about 6 hours ago
A picture

‘I felt tears welling in my eyes’: our readers’ Winter Olympics highlights

about 7 hours ago