Who was Marcie Dawes?

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Marcie Dawes was a creative, determined woman in her early 30s, with a passion for performing arts, particularly mime. She had a graceful presence, standing at around 5'6", with slender but strong limbs, honed from years of practicing precise, controlled movements. Her most striking feature was her intense, expressive brown eyes, which she relied on heavily in her mime performances to communicate emotion without words.

Marcie had dark, wavy hair that she usually kept tied back while she worked, though on stage, she would often let it fall freely to add a touch of theatricality to her performance. Her pale skin gave her a somewhat ghostly appearance, especially under stage lights, which only added to the haunting beauty of her mime routines. She often wore minimal makeup—just enough to highlight her features—except when she was performing, when she'd apply white face paint and black eyeliner in classic mime style.

She had a quiet but intense personality, driven by her dedication to her craft. Marcie preferred solitude, especially when she was focused on her work, which was often. She had an air of mystery about her, a woman deeply connected to her art, almost as though she existed more in the stories she created than in the real world.

Her wardrobe outside of her mime persona was simple—comfortable clothes suitable for long hours of work, usually covered in grease stains and dust from the animatronic workshop. But when she performed, she wore a traditional mime outfit: black and white stripes, white gloves, and a beret, looking every bit the part of the classic mime artist she admired.

Despite her quiet demeanor, Marcie was deeply passionate and had a fiercely creative mind. She believed that mime could communicate in ways that words never could, and she poured that belief into her work with the animatronics, determined to bring something different and artistic to the loud, flashy world of Freddy Fazbear's Pizzeria. But that same dedication made her isolated and obsessive, especially toward the end, as the project consumed her.

Ultimately, Marcie Dawes was a dreamer who sought to breathe life into her art—but in doing so, she became trapped in a nightmare of her own creation.

Marcie the Mime: A Silent Story Fazbear FrightsWhere stories live. Discover now