“Anne Robinson ended up in double trouble when a show contestant turned out to be a mimic who impersonates her.”
“She possesses extraordinary talent as a mimic. She has the flexible face, the manageable voice, and the dramatic knack which fit a woman for character-parts and disguises on the stage.”
mimicry
The act or ability to simulate the appearance of someone or something else.
“It's also true that friends and colleagues in the workplace are sometimes very supportive of people with disabilities, but that fades in the face of mimicry and mockery.”
“The scornful mimicry of a supposedly distinctive accent may not be as bad-minded as Bernard jeering at the speech-patterns of others.”
“Take the oft-cited classic case of Batesian mimicry involving the dead-ringer resemblance between monarch and viceroy butterflies.”
“It makes a big difference whether the mimicker is seeking to escape from an enemy, or seeking to deceive its prey.”
“Eosinophilic granuloma could also be called the great mimicker of osseous lesions.”
“As the Truth, Jesus is contrasted with the distorted mimicker of truth, Satan, the father of lies, who, in the mimetic cycle, falsely accuses the one to be scapegoated.”
“They had a thousand odd stories and jokes about the events of the day, and burlesque descriptions and mimickings of the spectators who had been admiring them.”