Category Archives: Silent Film History

Mary Astor


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Prepared by Daniel B Miller

Mary Astor (born Lucile Vasconcellos Langhanke; May 3, 1906 – September 25, 1987) was an American actress.

She is best remembered for her role as Brigid O’Shaughnessy in The Maltese Falcon (1941).

Astor began her long motion picture career as a teenager in the silent movies of the early 1920s. She eventually changed to talkies. At first her voice was considered too masculine and she was off the screen for a year. She appeared in a play with friend Florence Eldridge, and the film offers came in, so she was able to resume her career in talking films.

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Four years later her career was nearly destroyed due to scandal. In 1936 Astor was later branded an adulterous wife by her ex-husband, in a custody fight over her daughter. Overcoming these stumbling blocks in her private life, Astor went on to greater success on screen, eventually winning an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress for her performance in The Great Lie  (1941).

Astor was a Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer contract player through most of the 1940s and continued to work in film, television and on stage until her retirement in 1964. Astor was the author of five novels.

Her autobiography was a bestseller, as was her later book, A Life on Film, which was about her career. Director Lindsay Anderson wrote of her in 1990 that “when two or three who love the cinema are gathered together, the name of Mary Astor always comes up, and everybody agrees that she was an actress of special attraction, whose qualities of depth and reality always seemed to illuminate the parts she played”.

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Early life

Astor was born in Quincy, Illinois, the only child of Otto Ludwig Langhanke (October 2, 1871 – February 3, 1943) and Helen Marie de Vasconcellos (April 19, 1881 – January 18, 1947).

Both of her parents were teachers. Her father, a German man from Berlin, emigrated to the United States in 1891 and became a naturalized U.S. citizen; her American mother was born in Jacksonville, Illinois, and had Irish and Portuguese roots. They married on August 3, 1904 in Lyons, Kansas.

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Otto Ludwig Langhanke, Mary Astor’s father

Astor’s father taught German at Quincy High School until the U.S. entered World War I. Later on, he took up light farming. Astor’s mother, who had always wanted to be an actress, taught drama and elocution. Astor was home-schooled in academics and was taught to play the piano by her father, who insisted she practice daily. Her piano talents came in handy when she played piano in her films The Great Lie and Meet Me in St. Louis.

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In 1919, Astor sent a photograph of herself to a beauty contest in Motion Picture Magazine, becoming a semifinalist. When Astor was 15, the family moved to Chicago, Illinois, with her father teaching German in public schools. Astor took drama lessons and appeared in various amateur stage productions. The following year, she sent another photograph to Motion Picture Magazine, this time becoming a finalist and then runner-up in the national contest. Her father then moved the family to New York City, in order for his daughter to act in motion pictures. He managed her affairs from September 1920 to June 1930.

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Manhattan photographer, Charles Albin, saw her photograph and asked the young girl with haunting eyes and long auburn hair, whose nickname was “Rusty”, to pose for him. The Albin photographs were seen by Harry Durant of Famous Players-Lasky and Astor was signed to a six-month contract with Paramount Pictures. Her name was changed to “Mary Astor” during a conference between Paramount Pictures chief Jesse Lasky, film producer Walter Wanger, and gossip columnist Louella Parsons.

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Silent movie career

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A 1924 publicity photo of Astor from Stars of the Photoplay

Astor’s first screen test was directed by Lillian Gish, who was so impressed with her recitation of Shakespeare that she shot a thousand feet of her.

She made her debut at age 14 in the 1921 film Sentimental Tommy, but her small part in a dream sequence wound up on the cutting room floor.

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Sentimental Tommy (1921)  Dir: John S Robertson

Paramount let her contract lapse. She then appeared in some movie shorts with sequences based on famous paintings. She received critical recognition for the 1921 two-reeler The Beggar Maid. Her first feature-length movie was John Smith (1922), followed that same year by The Man Who Played God. In 1923, she and her parents moved to Hollywood.

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The Beggar Maid (1921)  Dir: Herbert Blache

After appearing in several larger roles at various studios, she was again signed by Paramount, this time to a one-year contract at $500 a week.

After she appeared in several more movies, John Barrymore saw her photograph in a magazine and wanted her cast in his upcoming movie. On loan-out to Warner Bros., she starred with him in Beau Brummel (1924).

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Beau Brummel (1924) Dir: Harry Beaumont 

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Mary Astor and John Barrymore in Beau Brummel (1924) 

The older actor wooed the young actress, but their relationship was severely constrained by Astor’s parents’ unwillingness to let the couple spend time alone together; Mary was only seventeen and legally underage.

It was only after Barrymore convinced the Langhankes that his acting lessons required privacy that the couple managed to be alone at all. Their secret engagement ended largely because of the Langhankes’ interference and Astor’s inability to escape their heavy-handed authority, and because Barrymore became involved with Astor’s fellow WAMPAS Baby Star Dolores Costello, whom he later married.

In 1925, Astor’s parents bought a Moorish style mansion with 1 acre (4,000 m2) of land known as “Moorcrest” in the hills above Hollywood. The Langhankes not only lived lavishly off of Astor’s earnings, but kept her a virtual prisoner inside Moorcrest.

Moorcrest is notable not only for its ornate style, but its place as the most lavish residence associated with the Krotona Colony, a utopian society founded by the Theosophical Society in 1912.

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Moorcrest Estate

The 6,432-square-foot gated estate was designed by philosophical architect Marie Russak Hotchener and built in 1921, combining Moorish, Gothic and Art Nouveau architectural influences to striking effect

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Built by Marie Russak Hotchener, a Theosophist who had no formal architectural training, the house combines Moorish and Mission Revival styles and contains such Arts and Crafts features as art-glass windows (whose red lotus design Astor called “unfortunate”), and Batchelder tiles.

Moorcrest, which has since undergone a multimillion-dollar renovation, remains standing. Before the Langhankes bought it, it was rented by Charlie Chaplin, whose tenure is memorialized by an art glass window featuring the Little Tramp.

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Astor’s parents were not Theosophists, though the family was friendly with both Marie Hotchener and her husband Harry, prominent TS members.

Marie Hotchener negotiated Astor’s right to a $5 a week allowance (at a time when she was making $2,500 a week) and the right to go to work unchaperoned by her mother.

The following year when she was 19, Astor, fed up with her father’s constant physical and psychological abuse as well as his control of her money, climbed from her second floor bedroom window and escaped to a hotel in Hollywood, as recounted in her memoirs.

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Marie Rusak Hotchener (born Mary Ellen Barnard)

Hotchener facilitated her return by persuading Otto Langhanke to give Astor a savings account with $500 and the freedom to come and go as she pleased.

Nevertheless, she did not gain control of her salary until she was 26 years old, at which point her parents sued her for financial support. Astor settled the case by agreeing to pay her parents $100 a month. Otto Langhanke put Moorcrest up for auction in the early 1930s, hoping to realize more than the $80,000 he had been offered for it; it sold for $25,000.

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Don Juan (1926)  Dir: Alan Crosland  

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Mary Astor in Don Juan (1926)

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Mary Astor and John Barrymore in Don Juan (1926)

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Cast and crew of Don Juan (1926)

Astor continued to appear in movies at various studios. When her Paramount contract ended in 1925, she was signed at Warner Bros.

Among her assignments was another role with John Barrymore, this time in Don Juan (1926).

She was named one of the WAMPAS Baby Stars in 1926, along with Mary BrianDolores CostelloJoan CrawfordDolores del RíoJanet Gaynor, and Fay Wray.

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WAMPAS Baby Stars of 1926

On loan to Fox Film Corporation, Astor starred in Dressed To Kill (1928), which received good reviews.

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Dressed to Kill  (1928)

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Edmund Lowe and Mary Astor in Dressed to Kill (1928)

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Ben Bard in Dressed t o Kill (1928)

That same year, she starred in the sophisticated comedy Dry Martini at Fox. She later said that, while working on the latter, she “absorbed and assumed something of the atmosphere and emotional climate of the picture.”

She said it offered “a new and exciting point of view; with its specious doctrine of self-indulgence, it rushed into the vacuum of my moral sense and captivated me completely.”

When her Warner Bros. contract ended, she signed a contract with Fox for $3,750 a week. In 1928, she married director Kenneth Hawks at her family home, Moorcrest.

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Dry Martini (1928)  Dir: Harry D’Arrast  

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Mary Astor and Albert Conti in Dry Martini (1928)

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Mary Astor and Matt Moore in Dry Martini (1928)

He gave her a Packard automobile as a wedding present and the couple moved into a home high up on Appian Way, a small hilltop street in Laurel Canyon above the Sunset Strip. Their address was 8803 Appian Way.

Other celebrities who lived at different times on this short street include Errol Flynn and his French wife Lili Damita (8946 Appian Way); Ida Lupino (8761); fashion designer Jean Louis [Berthault] (8761); Ginger Rogers(8782); German composer Rudolf Friml (8782); Gypsy Rose Lee (8815 Appian Way); Carole King (8815); Courteney Cox (8815).

As the film industry made the transition to talkies, Fox gave her a sound test, which she failed because the studio found her voice to be too deep. Though this was probably due to early sound equipment and the inexperience of technicians, the studio released her from her contract and she found herself out of work for eight months in 1929.

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Mary Astor and Kenneth Hawks on their Wedding Day

New beginnings

Astor took voice training and singing lessons in her time off, but no roles were offered. Her acting career was then given a boost by her friend, Florence Eldridge (wife of Fredric March), in whom she confided.

Eldridge, who was to star in the stage play Among the Married at the Majestic Theatre in Downtown Los Angeles, recommended Astor for the second female lead. The play was a success and her voice was deemed suitable, being described as low and vibrant.

She was happy to work again, but her happiness soon ended. On January 2, 1930, while filming sequences for the Fox movie Such Men Are Dangerous, Kenneth Hawks was killed in a mid-air plane crash over the Pacific.

Astor had just finished a matinee performance at the Majestic when Florence Eldridge gave her the news. She was rushed from the theatre to Eldridge’s apartment; a replacement, Doris Lloyd, stepped in for the next show. Astor remained with Eldridge at her apartment for some time, then soon returned to work.

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Newspaper article on Kenneth Hawks’ death

Shortly after her husband’s death, she debuted in her first “talkie”, Ladies Love Brutes (1930) at Paramount, which co-starred friend Fredric March. 

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Ladies Love Brutes  Dir: Rowland W Lee  (1930)  

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George Bancroft and Mary Astor in Ladies Love Brutes (1930)

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Editorial use only. No book cover usage. Mandatory Credit: Photo by Paramount/Kobal/Shutterstock (5858852a) Fredric March, Mary Astor Ladies Love Brutes – 1930 Director: Rowland V. Lee Paramount USA Film Portrait

Mary Astor and Fredric March in Ladies Love Brutes (1930)

While her career picked up, her private life remained difficult. After working on several more movies, she suffered delayed shock over her husband’s death and had a nervous breakdown.

During the months of her illness, she was attended to by Dr. Franklyn Thorpe, whom she married on June 29, 1931.

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Mary Astor and Dr Franklyn Thorpe

That year, she starred as Nancy Gibson in Smart Woman, playing a woman determined to retrieve her husband from a gold-digging flirtation.

The clever dialogue, played against the trappings of a lavish mansion, involves another man who is obviously in love with Astor’s character.

This wealthy lord, at the behest of Gibson, attracts the attention of the gold-digger during lazy days at the manor. The husband, initially set upon divorcing Nancy and marrying the intruder “Peggy Preston”, is dismayed to find Peggy attracted to the newcomer because of his extraordinary wealth. All done in a civil, but cunning, manner.

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Smart Woman  Dir: Gregory La Cava  (1931)  

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Mary Astor and Johnny Halliday in Smart Woman (1931)

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Mary Astor in Smart Woman (1931) 

In May 1932, the Thorpes purchased a yacht and sailed to Hawaii. Astor was expecting a baby in August, but gave birth in June in Honolulu. The child, a daughter, was named Marylyn Hauoli Thorpe: her first name combined her parents’ names and her middle name is Hawaiian. When they returned to Southern California,

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Mary Astor with her baby Marylin Hauoli Thorpe in 1932

Astor freelanced and gained the pivotal role of Barbara Willis in MGM‘s Red Dust (1932) with Clark Gable and Jean Harlow.

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Red Dust  Dir: Victor Fleming  (1932)  

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Clark Gable and Mary Astor in Red Dust (1932)

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Jean Harlow and Mary Astor in Red Dust (1932)

In late 1932, Astor signed a featured player contract with Warner Bros. Meanwhile, besides spending lavishly, her parents invested in the stock market, which often turned out unprofitable.

While they remained in Moorcrest, Astor dubbed it a “white elephant”, and she refused to maintain the house. She had to turn to the Motion Picture Relief Fund in 1933 to pay her bills. In 1933, she appeared as the female lead, Hilda Lake, niece of the murder victims, in The Kennel Murder Case, co-starring with William Powell as detective Philo Vance.

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The Kennel Murder Case  Dir: Michael Curtiz  (1933)

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Mary Astor and William Powell in The Kennel Murder Case (1933)

Film critic William K. Everson pronounced it a “masterpiece” in the August 1984 issue of Films in Review.

Unhappy with her marriage, she took a break from movie-making in 1933 and went to New York alone. While there, enjoying a whirlwind social life, she met the playwright George Kaufman and they had an affair, which she documented in her diary.

George_S._Kaufman              George S Kauffman

scandals120409_1936_560  Mary Astor Diary

Scandals

A legal battle drew press attention to Astor in 1936. Dr. Franklyn Thorpe divorced Astor in April 1935, and a custody battle resulted over their four-year-old daughter, Marylyn.

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Los Angeles Examiner 14/07/1936

Thorpe threatened to use Astor’s diary in the proceedings, which told of her affairs with many celebrities, including George S. Kaufman. The diary was never formally offered as evidence during the trial, but Thorpe and his lawyers constantly referred to it, and its notoriety grew. Astor admitted that the diary existed and that she had documented her affair with Kaufman, but maintained that many of the parts that had been referred to were forgeries, following the theft of the diary from her desk.

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The diary was deemed inadmissible as a mutilated document, and the trial judge, Goodwin J. Knight, ordered it sealed and impounded. In 1952, by court order, Astor’s diary was removed from the bank vault where it had been sequestered for 16 years and destroyed.

Astor had just begun work as Edith Cortwright, opposite Walter Huston in the title role of Dodsworth as news of the diary became public. Producer Samuel Goldwyn was urged to fire her, as her contract included a morality clause, but Goldwyn refused and the movie was a hit.

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Dodsworth  (1936)  Dir: William Wyler  

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DODSWORTH, Walter Huston, Mary Astor, 1936

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Dodsworth (1936) Directed by William Wyler Shown from left: Walter Huston, Mary Astor

Mary Astor and Walter Huston in Dodsworth (1936)

Mid-career

Ultimately, the scandals caused no harm to Astor’s career, which was actually revitalized because of the custody fight and the wide publicity it generated; Dodsworth (1936), with Walter Huston, was released to rave reviews, and the public’s acceptance assured the studios that she remained a viable commercial property.

In 1937, she returned to the stage in well-received productions of Noël Coward‘s Tonight at 8:30The Astonished Heart, and Still Life. She also began performing regularly on radio.

Some of her best movies were yet to come, including The Prisoner of Zenda (1937), John Ford‘s The Hurricane (1937), Midnight (1939) and Brigham Young (1940).

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The Prisoner of Zenda (1937)  Dir: John Cromwell  

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Mary Astor in The Prisoner of Zenda (1937)

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Mary Astor and Raymond Massey n The Prisoner of Zenda (1937)

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Mary Astor and Ronald Colman in The Prisoner of Zenda (1937)

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The Hurricane (1937)  Dir: John Ford – Poster

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C Aubrey Smith and Mary Astor in The Hurricane (1937)

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Raymond Massay and Mary Astor in The Hurricane (1937)

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Brigham Young: Frontiersman (1940)  Dir: Henry Hathaway 

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Mary Astor in Brigham Young: Frontiersman (1940) 

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Midnight (1939)  Dir: Mitchell Leisen

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Mary Astor and John Barrymore in Midnight (1939)

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Claudette Colbert, Francis Lederer, Mary Astor and John Barrymore in Midnight (1939)

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Francis Lederer and Mary Astor in Midnight (1939)

In John Huston‘s The Maltese Falcon (1941), Astor played scheming temptress Brigid O’Shaughnessy. The film also starred Humphrey Bogart and featured Peter Lorre and Sydney Greenstreet. This was to become her most memorable role.

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The Maltese Falcon (1941)  Dir: John Huston

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Humphrey Bogart and Mary Astor in The Maltese Falcon (1941) 

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John Huston, Peter Lorre, Mary Astor and Humphrey Bogart – publicity shot for The Maltese Falcon (1941) 

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Mary Astor and Humphrey Bogart in The Maltese Falcon (1941) 

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Mary Astor and Humphrey Bogart in The Maltese Falcon (1941) 

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Medium shot of Mary Astor as Bridgid O’Shaughnessy/Miss. Wonderly/Miss. LaBlanc and Humphrey Bogart as Sam Spade, who wears hat/fedora.

Mary Astor and Humphrey Bogart in The Maltese Falcon (1941) 

Another noteworthy performance was her Oscar-winning role as Sandra Kovak, the selfish, self-centered concert pianist, who willingly gives up her child, in The Great Lie (1941). George Brent played her intermittent love interest, but the film’s star was Bette Davis.

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The Great Lie (1941)  Dir: Edmund Goulding

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Bette Davis and Mary Astor in  The Great Lie (1941)  

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Mary Astor in The Great Lie (1941)  

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Bette Davis and Mary Astor in  The Great Lie (1941)  

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Mary Astor in The Great Lie (1941)

Davis wanted Astor cast in the role after watching her screen test and seeing her play Tchaikovsky‘s Piano Concerto No. 1. She then recruited Astor to collaborate on rewriting the script, which Davis felt was mediocre and needed work to make it more interesting. Astor further followed Davis’s advice and sported a brazenly bobbed hairdo for the role.

The soundtrack of the movie in the scenes where she plays the concerto, with violent hand movements on the piano keyboard, was dubbed by pianist Max Rabinovitch. Davis deliberately stepped back to allow Astor to shine in her key scenes. As a result of her performance, Astor won the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress, thanking Bette Davis and Tchaikovsky in her acceptance speech. Astor and Davis became good friends.

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Bette Davis and Mary Astor in  The Great Lie (1941)  

Astor was not propelled into the upper echelon of movie stars by these successes, however.

She always declined offers of starring in her own right. Not wanting the responsibility of top billing and having to “carry the picture,” she preferred the security of being a featured player.

In 1942, she reunited with Humphrey Bogart and Sydney Greenstreet in John Huston‘s Across the Pacific.

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Across the Pacific (1942)  Dir: John Huston

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Humphrey Bogart and Mary Astor in Across the Pacific (1942)  

Though usually cast in dramatic or melodramatic roles, Astor showed a flair for comedy as The Princess Centimillia in the Preston Sturges film, The Palm Beach Story (1942) for Paramount.

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The Palm Beach Story (1942)  Dir: Preston Sturges 

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Mary Astor in The Palm Beach Story (1942)  

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Mary Astor and Joel McCrea in The Palm Beach Story (1942)  

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Mary Astor, Claudette Colbert and Rudy Vallee in The Palm Beach Story (1942)  

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Joel McCrea, Mary Astor, Claudette Colbert an Rudy Vallee in The Palm Beach Story (1942)   

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Joel McCrea, Mary Astor, Claudette Colbert an Rudy Vallee in The Palm Beach Story (1942)   

In February 1943, Astor’s father, Otto Langhanke, died in Cedars of Lebanon Hospital as a result of a heart attack complicated by influenza. His wife and daughter were at his bedside.

That same year, Astor signed a seven-year contract with MGM, a regrettable mistake.

She was kept busy playing what she considered mediocre roles she called “Mothers for Metro.”

After Meet Me in St. Louis (1944), the studio allowed her to debut on Broadway in Many Happy Returns (1945). The play was a failure, but Astor received good reviews. On loan-out to 20th Century Fox, she played a wealthy widow in Claudia and David (1946).

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Meet Me in St Louis (1944)  Dir: Vincente Minelli

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Tom Drake, Mary Astor and Leon Ames in Meet Me in St Louis (1944)  

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Mary Astor and Margaret O’Brien in Meet Me in St Louis (1944)  

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Lucille Bremer, Mary Astor and Judy Garland in Meet Me in St Louis (1944) 

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Mary Astor on the set of Meet Me in St Louis (1944)  

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Claudia and David (1946)  Dir: Walter Lang

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Mary Astor in Claudia and David (1946)  

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Mary Astor and Dorothy McGuire in Claudia and David (1946)  

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Mary Astor and Robert Taylor in Claudia and David (1946)  

She was also loaned to Paramount to play Fritzi Haller in Desert Fury (1947) playing the tough owner of a saloon and casino in a small mining town.

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Desert Fury (1947)  Dir: Lewis Allen

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Lisabeth Scott and Mary Astor in Desert Fury (1947) 

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Burt Lancaster, Lisbeth Scott, John Hodiak and Mary Astor in Desert Fury (1947)  

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Lisbeth Scott, John Hodiak and Mary Astor in Desert Fury (1947)  

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Mary Astor in Desert Fury (1947)  

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Burt Lancaster, Mary Astor and Lisbeth Scott in Desert Fury (1947)  

Before Helen Langhanke died of a heart ailment in January 1947, Astor said she sat in the hospital room with her mother, who was delirious and did not know her, and listened quietly as Helen told her all about terrible, selfish Lucile.

After her death, Astor said she spent countless hours copying her mother’s diary so she could read it and was surprised to learn how much she was hated. Back at MGM, Astor continued being cast in undistinguished, colorless mother roles. One exception was when she played a prostitute in the film noir Act of Violence (1948).

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Act of Violence (1948)  Dir: Fred Zinnemann

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Van Heflin and Mary Astor in Act of Violence (1948) 

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Act of Violence (1948)  Lobby Card

Act of Violence  - 1948
Editorial use only. No book cover usage. Mandatory Credit: Photo by Moviestore/Shutterstock (2389494a) ACT OF VIOLENCE (1948) Mary Astor, Van Heflin Act of Violence – 1948
Act Of Violence - 1948
Editorial use only. No book cover usage. Mandatory Credit: Photo by Mgm/Kobal/Shutterstock (5876856a) Mary Astor, Van Heflin Act Of Violence – 1948 Director: Fred Zinnemann MGM USA Scene Still Acte de violence

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Mary Astor and Berry Kroeger in Act of Violence (1948) 

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Act of Violence (1948)  Dir: Fred Zinnemann

The last straw came when she was cast as Marmee March in Little Women (1949).

She later described her disappointment with her cast members and the shoot in her memoir My Story: An Autobiography: “The girls all giggled and chattered and made a game of every scene. Taylor was engaged, and in love, and talking on the telephone most of the time (which is fine normally, but not when the production clock is ticking away the company’s money). June Allyson chewed gum constantly and irritatingly, and Maggie O’Brien looked at me as though she were planning something very unpleasant.”

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Little Women (1949)  Dir: Mervyn LeRoy

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Mary Astor in Little Women (1949)  

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Margaret O’Brien, Janet Leigh, Mary Astor, June Alyson and Elisabeth Taylor in Little Women (1949)  

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June Alyson and Mary Astor in Little Women (1949) 

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June Alyson and Mary Astor in Little Women (1949) 

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Margaret O’Brien, Janet Leigh, Mary Astor, June Alyson and Elisabeth Taylor in Little Women (1949)  

Astor found no redemption in playing what she considered another humdrum mother and grew despondent. The studio wanted to renew her contract, promising better roles, but she declined the offer.

Middle years

At the same time, Astor’s drinking was growing troublesome. She admitted to alcoholism as far back as the 1930s, but it had never interfered with her work schedule or performance. She hit bottom in 1949 and went into a sanitarium for alcoholics.

In 1951, she made a frantic call to her doctor and said that she had taken too many sleeping pills. She was taken to a hospital and the police reported that she had attempted suicide, this being her third overdose in two years, and the story made headline news. She maintained it had been an accident.

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Mary Astor and Sandra Dee in Stranger in My Arms (1959)

That same year, she joined Alcoholics Anonymous and converted to Roman Catholicism. She credited her recovery to a priest, Peter Ciklic, also a practicing psychologist, who encouraged her to write about her experiences as part of therapy. She also separated from her fourth husband, Thomas Wheelock (a stockbroker she married on Christmas Day 1945), but did not actually divorce him until 1955.

In 1952, she was cast in the leading role of the stage play The Time of the Cuckoo, which was later made into the movie Summertime (1955), and subsequently toured with it. After the tour, Astor lived in New York for four years and worked in the theater and on television.

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Her TV debut was in The Missing Years (1954) for Kraft Television Theatre. She acted frequently in TV during the ensuing years and appeared on many big shows of the time, including The United States Steel HourAlfred Hitchcock PresentsRawhideDr. KildareBurke’s Law, and Ben Casey.

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Mary Astor and Doro Merande in Alfred Hitchcock Presents – Episode: Mrs Herman and Mrs Fenimore (1958)

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Mary Astor in Alfred Hitchcock Presents – Episode: Mrs Herman and Mrs Fenimore (1958)

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Mary Astor and Franchot Tone in Alfred Hitchcock Presents – Episode: The Impossible Dream (1959)

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Mary Astor in Dr Kildare “Operation Lazarus” (Season 1 Episode 33)

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Mary Astor in Rawhide – Episode: Incident Near the Promised Land (1961)

In 1954, she appeared in the episode “Fearful Hour” of the Gary Merrill NBC series Justice in the role of a desperately poor and aging film star who attempts suicide to avoid exposure as a thief. She also played an ex-film star on the Boris Karloff-hosted Thriller, in an episode titled “Rose’s Last Summer.”

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Mary Astor signed still from Thriler – Episode: Rose’s Last Summer (1960)

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Mary Astor in Thriler – Episode: Rose’s Last Summer (1960)

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Mary Astor signed still from Thriler – Episode: Rose’s Last Summer (1960)

She starred on Broadway again in The Starcross Story (1954), another failure and returned to Southern California in 1956. She then went on a successful theatre tour of Don Juan in Hell directed by Agnes Moorehead and co-starring Ricardo Montalban.

Astor’s memoirMy Story: An Autobiography, was published in 1959, becoming a sensation in its day and a bestseller. It was the result of Father Ciklic urging her to write. Though she spoke of her troubled personal life, her parents, her marriages, the scandals, her battle with alcoholism, and other areas of her life, she did not mention the movie industry or her career in detail.

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Mary Astor autobiography – My Story: An Autobiography (1959)

In 1971, a second book was published, A Life on Film, where she discussed her career. It too became a bestseller. Astor also tried her hand at fiction, writing the novels The Incredible Charley Carewe (1960), The Image of Kate (1962), which was published in 1964 in a German translation as Jahre und TageThe O’Conners (1964), Goodbye, Darling, be Happy (1965), and A Place Called Saturday (1968).

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Mary Astor – My Life on Film (1971)

She appeared in several movies during this time, including A Stranger in My Arms (1959). She made a comeback in Return to Peyton Place (1961) playing Roberta Carter, the domineering mother who insists the “shocking” novel written by Allison Mackenzie should be banned from the school library, and received good reviews for her performance. According to film scholar Gavin Lambert, Astor invented memorable bits of business in her last scene of that film, where Roberta’s vindictive motives are exposed.

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Mary Astor in Return to Peyton Place (1961)

Final years and death

After a trip around the world in 1964, Astor was lured away from her Malibu, California home, where she was gardening and working on her third novel, to make what she decided would be her final film.

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Hush, Hush Sweet Charlotte (1964)

She was offered the small role as a key figure, Jewel Mayhew, in the murder mystery Hush… Hush, Sweet Charlotte, starring her friend Bette Davis. She filmed her final scene with Cecil Kellaway at Oak Alley Plantation in southern Louisiana. In A Life on Film, she described her character as “a little old lady, waiting to die.” Astor decided it would serve as her swan song in the movie business. After 109 movies in a career spanning 45 years, she turned in her Screen Actors Guild card and retired.

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Olivia De Havilland, Mary Astor and William Walker in  Hush, Hush Sweet Charlotte (1964)

Astor later moved to Fountain Valley, California, where she lived near her son, Tono del Campo (from her third marriage to Mexican film editor Manuel del Campo), and his family, until 1971.

That same year, suffering from a chronic heart condition, she moved to a small cottage on the grounds of the Motion Picture & Television Country House, the industry’s retirement facility in Woodland Hills, California, where she had a private table when she chose to eat in the resident dining room.

She appeared in the television documentary series Hollywood: A Celebration of the American Silent Film (1980), produced by Kevin Brownlow, in which she discussed her roles during the silent film period. After years of retirement she had been urged to appear in Brownlow’s documentary by a former sister-in-law Bessie Love who also appeared in the series.

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Astor died on September 25, 1987, at age 81, of respiratory failure due to pulmonary emphysema while in the hospital at the Motion Picture House complex.

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Grave of Mary Astor at Holy Cross Cemetery

She is interred in Holy Cross Cemetery in Culver City, California. Astor has a star for motion pictures on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6701 Hollywood Boulevard.

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She has been quoted as saying, “There are five stages in the life of an actor: who’s Mary Astor? Get me Mary Astor. Get me a Mary Astor type. Get me a young Mary Astor. Who’s Mary Astor?” Several other actors, among them Jack Elam and Ricardo Montalban, have been quoted as saying this.

Radio appearances

Year Program Episode/source
1941 Gulf Screen Guild Theatre No Time for Comedy[17]

Bibliography

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References

  1. Jump up to:a b Thomas, Bob (September 26, 1987). “‘Maltese Falcon’ star Astor dies at 81”. Kansas, Salina. The Salina Journal. p. 8. Retrieved February 20, 2016 – via Newspapers.com. open access publication – free to read
  2. Jump up to:a b c d “Mary Astor Not Actress by Accident; Career Planned”. Montana, Butte. The Montana Standard. August 24, 1936. p. 5. Retrieved February 20, 2016 – via Newspapers.com. open access publication – free to read
  3. Jump up^ Lindsay Anderson “Mary Astor”, Sight and Sound, Autumn 1990, reprinted in Paul Ryan (ed) Never Apologise: The Collected Writings, 2004, London: Plexus, pp. 431–36, 431
  4. Jump up^ Distinguished Americans & Canadians of Portuguese Descent
  5. Jump up^ [1]
  6. Jump up to:a b c “Mary Astor Dies at 81 – A ‘Maltese Falcon’ Star”. Los Angeles Times. (September 26, 1987) Accessed on August 14, 2007.
  7. Jump up^ Mary Astor, 81, Is Dead; Star of ‘Maltese Falcon’
  8. Jump up to:a b Mary Astor Profile
  9. Jump up^ Trivia – Mary Astor scandal
  10. Jump up^ Mary Astor, “A Life on Film”, Dell Publishing 1967, New York pp. 125–127
  11. Jump up^ Sorel, Edward (September 14, 2016). “Inside the Trial of Actress Mary Astor, Old Hollywood’s Juiciest Sex ScandalVanity Fair, September 2016, retrieved December 6, 2016.
  12. Jump up^ Justice. The Classic TV Archive. Retrieved February 8, 2011.
  13. Jump up^ Brownlow, Kevin; Gill, David (1980). Hollywood: A Celebration of the American Silent Film. (video). Thames Video Production.
  14. Jump up^ Mary Astor at Find a Grave
  15. Jump up^ “Walk of Fame Stars, Mary Astor”walkoffame.com. Hollywood Chamber of Commerce. Archived from the original on April 3, 2016. Retrieved December 1,2016.
  16. Jump up^ Astor, Mary. A Life on FilmDell Publishing Company, 1969
  17. Jump up^ “Abel, Walter”radioGOLDINdex. Retrieved 26 May 2015.
  18. Jump up^ “Woody Allen Reviews a Graphic Tale of a Scandalous Starlet” by Woody AllenThe New York Times, December 22, 2016

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External links

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Powder and Smoke (1924) and its forgotten stars


Powder and Smoke (1924)

Dir: James Parrott

Cast: Charley Chase, Blanche Mehaffey, Jack Gavin, Eddie Baker, Leo Willis, Chet Brandenburg, Lyle Tayo

Prepared by Daniel B Miller

Powder and Smoke (1924) is a Charley Chase one reeler produced by Hal Roach for the popular Jimmy Jump series.

Charley Chase made 104 films for Hal Roach, many of which were directed and written by his brother James Parrott.

In addition to its highly entertaining content, this film is a true archive gem, full of long forgotten personalities, events, facts and trivia from the golden era of silent cinema.

In this delightful little comedy, Chase was joined by the usual suspects of many Hal Roach Studio comedies. Those were fronted by Blanche Mehaffey who played the daughter and his love interest, followed by Jack Gavin as the Sheriff, Eddie Baker in the role of the Real Estate Agent, and with Leo Willis as the Bandit Chief.

Mehaffey and Gavin are hardly remembered by the filmgoers of today, but their lives and careers are certainly of interest.

Blanche Mehaffey

In her early years, Blanche Mehaffey was considered a huge potential, and began her career as a dancer with the Ziegfeld Foillies,

Mehaffey’s presence was described as “truly mesmerising” by many theater lovers of the day who watched her on stage. Those dedicated fans enchanted her boss Florenz Ziegfeld with so many endless compliments, that in return she began describing Mehaffey as “the girl with the most beautiful eyes in the whole world”.

Such great publicity opened the whole world of possibilities for the young performer.

Blanche Mehaffey

In no time she spearheaded the Baby Stars of 1924, where she was joined by Clara Bow, Dorothy Mackaill and Hazel Keneer.

Her film debut was in Hal Roach Studios one reeler Fully Insured (1923) directed by George Jeske and featuring two other silent comedy heavyweights, Snub Pollard and James Finlayson.

The success of this film had led to her pairing with Charley Chase and later Glenn Tyron. With Chase she made a selection of films in addition to Power and Smoke. Those included April Fool (1924), Just a Minute (1924), At First Sight (1924), One of the Family (1924) and Position Wanted (1924).

Blanche Mehaffey in The Samaritan (1931)

Her films with Tyron included Meet the Missus (1924), The Wages of Tin (1925), Tell it to the Policeman (1925), and The Haunted Honeymoon (1925).

Her comedy talent flourished when playing the love interest for those two leading men. Her biggest success of this period was in Malcolm St. Clair’s comedy A Woman of the World (1925), where she joined Paula Negri and Charles Emmet Mack.

Her persona in Powder and Smoke gave a contemporary touch to the female characters of 1920s westerns, also paving the way to prominent parts in a number of bigger productions.

Some of those films performed badly at the box office, and in 1927 she decided to use the name of Joan Alden to detach from those pictures. In 1928 she married a sound engineer and producer Ralph M Like hoping to rescue her career.

Unlike many other silent films stars, she prepared for the transition to sound in advance. She took a decision to depart from the industry for a full year, in order to study languages and enhance her voice techniques.

It is likely that being absent at the height of her silent film career, coupled with some box office failures affected her relationships with the leading producers and directors.

Blanche Mehaffey

She returned to silver screen two years later, with her first sound feature, again a western called The Sunrise Trail (1931), where she joined Bob Steele and Jack Rube Clifford.

Her presence in westerns continued, mainly in B productions, that supported other major features. Those never brought back the early successes of her silent comedies.

Similar to other actors of the silent and early sound periods, she drifted into obscurity. Her last film was made in 1938 and she died in 1968.

Jack Gavin

Another person of interest in Powder and Smoke was the film director and actor Jack Gavin (born John Francis Henry Gavin) who played the Sheriff.

Gavin came to Hollywood from Australia.

He was one of the early filmmakers of the 1910s, and a true pioneer of Australian cinema. Gavin’s versatility, coupled with the multitude of talents and highly developed entrepreneurial skills, enabled his early rise to prominence.

Jack Gavin in His Convict Bride (1918)

He is remembered for making films in Australia about bushrangers such as Thunderbolt (1910), Moonlite (1910), Ben Hall and His Gang (1911) and Frank Gardiner, the King of the Road (1911).

He was known by the nickname “Jack” and worked in collaboration with his wife Agnes who wrote many of his films. Most of those have not survived.

Everyones Magazine remarked in 1920: “although Gavin was prolific his later surviving work shows that his entrepreneurial talent outweighed any he might have had as director.”

He displayed a variety of talents and was never afraid to take up any role offered, if it guaranteed success or career enhancement. His life was eventful and highly productive but also full of difficult challenges.

Jack Gavin in Thunderbolt (1910)

He was accredited with Australia’s first animated short, an advertising film which featured a koala taking cough syrup.

Gavin was born in Sydney and described himself as busy since his early childhood, claiming that he worked for the circus company already at age ten.

He moved to the country and worked as cattle drover, being involved in a record cattle drive from Camooweal to Adelaide. He served for a time in the Sydney Lancers as the captain of a squadron. During his service he became interested in acting and received an offer to join the touring company of Bland Holt.

He stayed with them for a number of seasons, then travelled to the USA where he worked with Barnum and Bailey’s Circus, and Buffalo Bill’s Wild West Show. He married Agnes in 1898.

Gavin returned to Australia and organised his own Wild West Show which was successful at the Melbourne Cyclorama, although plagued by a number of legal troubles. Gavin eventually had a company of 150 before moving into filmmaking. In 1908 he started managing theatres which he did for the next few years, displaying versatility with entrepreneurial knowledge and skill.

His debut feature film was about Thunderbolt in 1910, produced by H A Forsyth, and its success launched his career.

Jack Gavin filming Moonlite (1910)

He followed this up with Moonlite  in the same year. He directed and starred in both films which was well noted. By February 1911 The Newsletter: an Australian Paper for Australian People described:”more film has been used over Jack Gavin than over any other Australian biograph actor.” They described him as “the beauteous bushranger”.

Overall success of Gavin’s bushranging films was attributed to two main factors: the quality of horsemanship in them, and the fact they were normally shot on the actual locations where the events occurred.

General Gossip: The Referee stated in 1911 that “The pictures already turned out by Mr. Gavin demonstrates that in biographic art Australian producers are in no way behind their European and American brothers. Clearness in detail and execution, with the cleverly-constructed stories by Agnes Gavin enable Mr. Gavin to offer attractive films.”

Gavin’s films were also often accompanied by popular lecturer Charles Woods, whose tales would delight the audiences country wide.

Jack Gavin in He Forgot to Remember (1926)

His first two movies were made for H.A. Forsyth at Southern Cross Motion Pictures but he and Forsyth had a falling out and Gavin went his separate way, publicly announcing the fact in January 1911.

In July 1911 he set up his own company, the Gavin Photo Play Company, based out of Waverley.

He was involved in the formation of the Australian Photo-Play Company, but then established his own production company in October 1911. When bushranging films were banned in Australia in 1912, he turned to dramatising other true characters, such as Edith Cavell and Charles Fryatt.

In 1912 Gavin was arrested for owing money to a business associate though he was later released.

In January 1917 he took out a lease on a studio at North Sydney and announced plans for make four feature films over a year, starting with The Murder of Captain Fryatt. He also started up a film school and spoke of offers from America.

As making movies in Australia became increasingly difficult for him, Gavin moved to Hollywood, where he lived for eight years.

Jack Gavin in Looking for Sally (1925)

He told reporters from The Film Trade: Maitland Weekly Mercury NSW in 1927, that he appeared in over 300 films. Claimed he was a good friend of Lon Chaney, Rudolph Valentino and Lon Chaney.

In Hollywood he also worked with harold Lloyd and Snub Pollard.

Gavin always stated that he was particularly pleased with his public efforts to popularise the drinking of tea in Hollywood.

Jack Gavin in Official Officers (1925)

He returned to Australia in February 1922 to make several outback films, including a serial based on notorious criminal Ned Kelly. He also set up a new company in Brisbane, but faced serious censorship problems and could not raise enough capital for what was to be his major project.

Disappointed, he went back to Hollywood in May 1923, where he faced further challenges with casting and overall working conditions, then returned to Australia in 1925.

As a great supporter of the domestic production and the Australian cinema overall, he gave evidence at the 1928 Royal Commission on the Moving Picture Industry in Australia.

He passionately argued for a regular and easily verifiable quota for Australian films.

Agnes Gavin ( formerly Wangnheim, Kurtz ) in The Assigned Servant (1911) directed by her husband Jack Gavin

His contemporaries described Gavin as “a big man with a generous and naive personality… more enthusiasm and stubborn persistence than talent.”

Towards the end of his life he lived in a flat in Neutral Bay and suffered from rheumatism.

He died in 1938 survived by his wife Agnes and their daughters.

His personality, highly cinematic presence in so many one and two reelers as well as versatility, drive us to futher research and strongly stimulate further learning about his contemporaries from the 1920s.

Eddie Baker

Eddie Baker, who played the Real Estate Agent, is another actor and director from the golden age of silent cinema. He made more than 300 films.

Eddie Baker

Baker played supporting roles in many silent comedies with Gale Henry, Snub Pollard, Jobyna Ralston, James Parrott, Stan Laurel, Katherine Grant, Charlie Chase, Harry Langdon, Bobby Vernon, Bill Dooley and Jimmie Adams. He was also one of the original Keystone Cops.

Sadly he is only remembered for his presence in Laurel and Hardy films, and for his uncredited role as a boxing referee in Charles Chaplin’s City Lights (1931).

Eddie Baker in Get Busy (1924)

He represented those early cinema actors who subscribed to the Hollywood assembly line of mass production, men and women who would embrace any opportunity offered.

Baker would play any given role from cafe owner, laundry worker, german agent, stable hand, cop, prospector, boss, to detective, train official and plantation owner.

His talent for slapstick and situational comedy thrived when in some of the films he joined the biggest stars of that period.

With Stan Laurel he excelled in Oranges and Lemons (1923), A Man About Town (1923), Short Orders (1923) Gas and Air (1923) and Smithy (1924). With Charley Chase in addition to Powder and Smoke he was in Hard Knocks (1924), and Publicity Pays (1924). With Harry Langdon he was in Sea Squawk (1925), Tied for Life (1933), Knight Duty (1933) and Tired Feet (1933).

Eddie Baker in A Man About Town (1923)

With the onset of sound in pictures, he was demoted to minor, episodic roles for which he was rarely credited. Baker died in 1968 from emphysema.

Leo Willis

Leo Willis was also a veteran of early silent years, whose career began in films of Thomas Ince with William S Hart.

Leo Willis

Similar to Edie Baker he played tough characters on either side of the law and a selection of comic villains in films with Chase, Harold Lloyd and Laurel and Hardy.

He was a Hal Roach Studios regular and is best remembered for The Bulls Eye (1917), The Rent Collector (1921), Timber Queen ,(1922), Wild Bill Hickok (1923), Isn’t Life Terrible (1925), and The Kid Brother (1927).

Leo Willis in Sittin’Pretty (1924)

Similar to Baker, in sound pictures he was given insignificant parts and worked as an extra. He died in 1952.

Charles Chaplin


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Charles Chaplin

Prepared by Daniel B Miller

Sir Charles Spencer ChaplinKBE (16 April 1889 – 25 December 1977) was an English comic actor, filmmaker, and composer who rose to fame in the era of silent film. Chaplin became a worldwide icon through his screen persona “the Tramp” and is considered one of the most important figures in the history of the film industry.  

His career spanned more than 75 years, from childhood in the Victorian era until a year before his death in 1977, and encompassed both adulation and controversy.

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The Tramp – Charles Chaplin

Chaplin’s childhood in London was one of poverty and hardship. As his father was absent and his mother struggled financially, he was sent to a workhouse twice before the age of nine.

When he was 14, his mother was committed to a mental asylum. Chaplin began performing at an early age, touring music halls and later working as a stage actor and comedian. At 19, he was signed to the prestigious Fred Karno company, which took him to America. Chaplin was scouted for the film industry and began appearing in 1914 for Keystone Studios.

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Charles Chaplin and Stan Jefferson Laurel with Fred Karno Company c.1913

He soon developed the Tramp persona and formed a large fan base. Chaplin directed his own films from an early stage and continued to hone his craft as he moved to the EssanayMutual, and First National corporations. By 1918, he was one of the best-known figures in the world.

In 1919, Chaplin co-founded the distribution company United Artists, which gave him complete control over his films. His first feature-length was The Kid (1921), followed by A Woman of Paris (1923), The Gold Rush (1925), and The Circus(1928).

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The Kid (Charles Chaplin, 1921) Poster

He refused to move to sound films in the 1930s, instead producing City Lights (1931) and Modern Times (1936) without dialogue. Chaplin became increasingly political, and his next film, The Great Dictator (1940), satirised Adolf Hitler.

The 1940s were a decade marked with controversy for Chaplin, and his popularity declined rapidly. He was accused of communist sympathies, while his involvement in a paternity suit and marriages to much younger women caused scandal.

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The Great Dictator (Charles Chaplin, 1940) Poster

An FBI investigation was opened, and Chaplin was forced to leave the United States and settle in Switzerland. He abandoned the Tramp in his later films, which include Monsieur Verdoux (1947), Limelight (1952), A King in New York(1957), and A Countess from Hong Kong (1967).

Chaplin wrote, directed, produced, edited, starred in, and composed the music for most of his films. He was a perfectionist, and his financial independence enabled him to spend years on the development and production of a picture.

His films are characterised by slapstick combined with pathos, typified in the Tramp’s struggles against adversity. Many contain social and political themes, as well as autobiographical elements. In 1972, as part of a renewed appreciation for his work, Chaplin received an Honorary Academy Award for “the incalculable effect he has had in making motion pictures the art form of this century”.

He continues to be held in high regard, with The Gold RushCity LightsModern Times, and The Great Dictator often ranked on industry lists of the greatest films of all time.

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Charlie Chaplin receives an Honorary Academy Award (1972)

Biography

1889–1913: Early years

Background and childhood hardship

Charles Spencer Chaplin was born on 16 April 1889 to Hannah Chaplin (born Hannah Harriet Pedlingham Hill) and Charles Chaplin Sr.

There is no official record of his birth, although Chaplin believed he was born at East StreetWalworth, in South London. His mother and father had married four years previously, at which time Charles Sr. became the legal carer of Hannah’s illegitimate son, Sydney John Hill.

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Charles Chaplin Sr

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Hannah Chaplin

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Sidney Chaplin

At the time of his birth, Chaplin’s parents were both music hall entertainers. Hannah, the daughter of a shoemaker, had a brief and unsuccessful career under the stage name Lily Harley, while Charles Sr., a butcher’s son,  was a popular singer.

Although they never divorced, Chaplin’s parents were estranged by around 1891. The following year, Hannah gave birth to a third son – George Wheeler Dryden – fathered by the music hall entertainer Leo Dryden. The child was taken by Dryden at six months old, and did not re-enter Chaplin’s life for 30 years.

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George Wheeler Dryden

 

Chaplin’s childhood was fraught with poverty and hardship, making his eventual trajectory “the most dramatic of all the rags to riches stories ever told” according to his authorised biographer David Robinson.

Chaplin’s early years were spent with his mother and brother Sydney in the London district of Kennington; Hannah had no means of income, other than occasional nursing and dressmaking, and Chaplin Sr. provided no financial support.

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Young Charles Chaplin c 1901

As the situation deteriorated, Chaplin was sent to Lambeth Workhouse when he was seven years old. The council housed him at the Central London District School for paupers, which Chaplin remembered as “a forlorn existence”.

He was briefly reunited with his mother 18 months later, before Hannah was forced to readmit her family to the workhouse in July 1898. The boys were promptly sent to Norwood Schools, another institution for destitute children.

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Young Charlie as Billy, the page boy, in Sherlock Holmes, 1903

“I was hardly aware of a crisis because we lived in a continual crisis; and, being a boy, I dismissed our troubles with gracious forgetfulness.”

– Chaplin on his childhood

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Lambeth Workhouse – The Cinema Museum is located there today

In September 1898, Hannah was committed to Cane Hill mental asylum – she had developed a psychosis seemingly brought on by an infection of syphilis and malnutrition. For the two months she was there, Chaplin and his brother Sydney were sent to live with their father, whom the young boys scarcely knew.

Charles Sr. was by then a severe alcoholic, and life there was bad enough to provoke a visit from the National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children. Chaplin’s father died two years later, at 38 years old, from cirrhosis of the liver.

Hannah entered a period of remission but, in May 1903, became ill again. Chaplin, then 14, had the task of taking his mother to the infirmary, from where she was sent back to Cane Hill.

He lived alone for several days, searching for food and occasionally sleeping rough, until Sydney – who had enrolled in the Navy two years earlier – returned. Hannah was released from the asylum eight months later, but in March 1905, her illness returned, this time permanently. “There was nothing we could do but accept poor mother’s fate”, Chaplin later wrote, and she remained in care until her death in 1928.

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Cane Hill Hospital

Young performer

Between his time in the poor schools and his mother
succumbing to mental illness, Chaplin began to perform on stage. He later recalled making his first amateur appearance at the age of five years, when he took over from Hannah one night in Aldershot.
 
This was an isolated occurrence, but by the time he was nine Chaplin had, with his mother’s encouragement, grown interested in performing.
 
He later wrote: “[she] imbued me with the feeling that I had some sort of talent”. Through his father’s connections, Chaplin became a member of the Eight Lancashire Ladsclog-dancing troupe, with whom he toured English music halls throughout 1899 and 1900. Chaplin worked hard, and the act was popular with audiences, but he was not satisfied with dancing and wished to form a comedy act.
 
 
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Charlie Chaplin performed with The Eight Yorkshire Lads
 
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The Eight Lancashire Lads pictured in 1899 and featuring a young Charlie Chaplin
 

In the years Chaplin was touring with the Eight Lancashire Lads, his mother ensured that he still attended school but, by age 13, he had abandoned education. He supported himself with a range of jobs, while nursing his ambition to become an actor.

At 14, shortly after his mother’s relapse, he registered with a theatrical agency in London’s West End. The manager sensed potential in Chaplin, who was promptly given his first role as a newsboy in Harry Arthur Saintsbury‘s Jim, a Romance of Cockayne. It opened in July 1903, but the show was unsuccessful and closed after two weeks. Chaplin’s comic performance, however, was singled out for praise in many of the reviews.

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Charles Chaplin as Sammy in Jim A Romance of Cockayne c 1903

Saintsbury secured a role for Chaplin in Charles Frohman‘s production of Sherlock Holmes, where he played Billy the pageboy in three nationwide tours. His performance was so well received that he was called to London to play the role alongside William Gillette, the original Holmes.

“It was like tidings from heaven”, Chaplin recalled. At 16 years old, Chaplin starred in the play’s West End production at the Duke of York’s Theatre from October to December 1905. He completed one final tour of Sherlock Holmes in early 1906, before leaving the play after more than two-and-a-half years.

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Charlie Chaplin 1903. Sherlock Holmes poster

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Young Charlie as Billy, the page boy, in Sherlock Holmes, 1903

Stage comedy and vaudeville

Chaplin soon found work with a new company, and went on tour with his brother – who was also pursuing an acting career – in a comedy sketch called Repairs.

In May 1906, Chaplin joined the juvenile act Casey’s Circus, where he developed popular burlesque pieces and was soon the star of the show. By the time the act finished touring in July 1907, the 18-year-old had become an accomplished comedic performer. He struggled to find more work, however, and a brief attempt at a solo act was a failure.

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Image of the vaudeville troupe Casey’s Court Circus, with a young Charlie Chaplin

Meanwhile, Sydney Chaplin had joined Fred Karno‘s prestigious comedy company in 1906 and, by 1908, he was one of their key performers.
 
In February, he managed to secure a two-week trial for his younger brother. Karno was initially wary, and considered Chaplin a “pale, puny, sullen-looking youngster” who “looked much too shy to do any good in the theatre.”
 
However, the teenager made an impact on his first night at the London Coliseum and he was quickly signed to a contract. Chaplin began by playing a series of minor parts, eventually progressing to starring roles in 1909.
 
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Poster for Fred Karno’s Comedy Company with Charles Chaplin
 
In April 1910, he was given the lead in a new sketch, Jimmy the Fearless. It was a big success, and Chaplin received considerable press attention.
 

Karno selected his new star to join the section of the company, one that also included Stan Laurel, that toured North America’s vaudeville circuit.

The young comedian headed the show and impressed reviewers, being described as “one of the best pantomime artists ever seen here”.

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Fred Karno Comedy Company Poster – The London Coliseum

His most successful role was a drunk called the “Inebriate Swell”, which drew him significant recognition. The tour lasted 21 months, and the troupe returned to England in June 1912.

Chaplin recalled that he “had a disquieting feeling of sinking back into a depressing commonplaceness” and was, therefore, delighted when a new tour began in October.

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Fred Karno’s A Night In A London Club with Charles Chaplin

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Charles Chaplin with Fred Karno’s Comedy Company

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Charles Chaplin with Fred Karno’s Comedy Company

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Fred Karno, Jr., Chaplin, Arthur Dando, Albert Austin, and Stan Laurel

1914–1917: Entering films

Keystone

Six months into the second American tour, Chaplin was invited to join the New York Motion Picture Company. A representative who had seen his performances thought he could replace Fred Mace, a star of their Keystone Studios who intended to leave.

Chaplin thought the Keystone comedies “a crude mélange of rough and rumble”, but liked the idea of working in films and rationalised: “Besides, it would mean a new life.”

He met with the company and signed a $150-per-week ($3,714 in 2017 dollars) contract in September 1913.

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Chaplin’s first on-screen appearance in Making A Living (Henry Lehrman, 1914)
 

Chaplin arrived in Los Angeles, home of the Keystone studio, in early December 1913. His boss was Mack Sennett, who initially expressed concern that the 24-year-old looked too young.

He was not used in a picture until late January, during which time Chaplin attempted to learn the processes of filmmaking. The one-reeler Making a Living marked his film acting debut and was released on 2 February 1914. Chaplin strongly disliked the picture, but one review picked him out as “a comedian of the first water”. For his second appearance in front of the camera, Chaplin selected the costume with which he became identified. He described the process in his autobiography:

“I wanted everything to be a contradiction: the pants baggy, the coat tight, the hat small and the shoes large … I added a small moustache, which, I reasoned, would add age without hiding my expression. I had no idea of the character. But the moment I was dressed, the clothes and the makeup made me feel the person he was. I began to know him, and by the time I walked on stage he was fully born.”

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Charles Chaplin and Mabel Normand in Mabel’s Strange Predicament (Mabel Normand, 1914)

The film was Mabel’s Strange Predicament, but “the Tramp” character, as it became known, debuted to audiences in Kid Auto Races at Venice – shot later than Mabel’s Strange Predicament but released two days earlier.

Chaplin adopted the character as his screen persona and attempted to make suggestions for the films he appeared in. These ideas were dismissed by his directors. During the filming of his eleventh picture, Mabel at the Wheel, he clashed with director Mabel Normand and was almost released from his contract.

Sennett kept him on, however, when he received orders from exhibitors for more Chaplin films. Sennett also allowed Chaplin to direct his next film himself after Chaplin promised to pay $1,500 ($37,141 in 2017 dollars) if the film was unsuccessful.

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Charles Chaplin in Kid Auto Races at Venice (Henry Lehrman, 1914) The Tramp’s first screen appearance

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Charles Chaplin in Mabel at the Wheel (Mabel Normand and Mack Sennett, 1914)

Caught in the Rain, issued 4 May 1914, was Chaplin’s directorial debut and was highly successful.

Thereafter he directed almost every short film in which he appeared for Keystone, at the rate of approximately one per week, a period which he later remembered as the most exciting time of his career. Chaplin’s films introduced a slower form of comedy than the typical Keystone farce, and he developed a large fan base.

In November 1914, he had a supporting role in the first feature length comedy film, Tillie’s Punctured Romance, directed by Sennett and starring Marie Dressler, which was a commercial success and increased his popularity.  When Chaplin’s contract came up for renewal at the end of the year, he asked for $1,000 a week ($24,761 in 2017 dollars) – an amount Sennett refused as too large.

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Charles Chaplin in Caught in the Rain (Charles Chaplin, 1914) – Chaplin’s Directorial Debut

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Charles Chaplin and Marie Dressler in Tillie’s Punctured Romance (Mack Sennett, Charles Bennett, 1914) – Chaplin’s First Feature Film

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Poster for Tillie’s Punctured Romance (Mack Sennett, Charles Bennett, 1914) – Chaplin’s First Feature Film

Essanay

 

The Essanay Film Manufacturing Company of Chicago sent Chaplin an offer of $1,250 a week with a signing bonus of $10,000.

He joined the studio in late December 1914, where he began forming a stock company of regular players, including Leo WhiteBud Jamison, Paddy McGuire and Billy Armstrong. He soon recruited a leading lady – Edna Purviance, whom Chaplin met in a cafe and hired on account of her beauty.

She went on to appear in 35 films with Chaplin over eight years;  the pair also formed a romantic relationship that lasted into 1917.

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Edna Purviance

Chaplin asserted a high level of control over his pictures and started to put more time and care into each film.

There was a month-long interval between the release of his second production, A Night Out, and his third, The Champion. The final seven of Chaplin’s 14 Essanay films were all produced at this slower pace.

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Charles Chaplin in A Night Out (Charles Chaplin, 1915)

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Poster for The Champion (Charles Chaplin, 1915)

Chaplin also began to alter his screen persona, which had attracted some criticism at Keystone for its “mean, crude, and brutish” nature. The character became more gentle and romantic; The Tramp (April 1915) was considered a particular turning point in his development.

The use of pathos was developed further with The Bank, in which Chaplin created a sad ending. Robinson notes that this was an innovation in comedy films, and marked the time when serious critics began to appreciate Chaplin’s work. At Essanay, writes film scholar Simon Louvish, Chaplin “found the themes and the settings that would define the Tramp’s world.”

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Charles Chaplin and Edna Purviance in The Tramp (Charles Chaplin, 1915)

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Charles Chaplin in The Bank (Charles Chaplin, 1915)

During 1915, Chaplin became a cultural phenomenon. Shops were stocked with Chaplin merchandise, he was featured in cartoons and comic strips, and several songs were written about him. In July, a journalist for Motion Picture Magazine wrote that “Chaplinitis” had spread across America.

As his fame grew worldwide, he became the film industry’s first international star. When the Essanay contract ended in December 1915, Chaplin – fully aware of his popularity – requested a $150,000 signing bonus from his next studio. He received several offers, including UniversalFox, and Vitagraph, the best of which came from the Mutual Film Corporation at $10,000 a week.

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Charles Chaplin on the cover of Motion Pictures Magazine

Mutual

A contract was negotiated with Mutual that amounted to $670,000 a year, which Robinson says made Chaplin – at 26 years old – one of the highest paid people in the world.

The high salary shocked the public and was widely reported in the press. John R. Freuler, the studio president, explained: “We can afford to pay Mr. Chaplin this large sum annually because the public wants Chaplin and will pay for him.”

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Albert Austin and Charles Chaplin in The Adventurer (Charles Chaplin, 1917)

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Eric Campbell and Charles Chaplin in The Adventurer (Charles Chaplin, 1917)

Mutual gave Chaplin his own Los Angeles studio to work in, which opened in March 1916. He added two key members to his stock company, Albert Austin and Eric Campbell, and produced a series of elaborate two-reelers: The FloorwalkerThe FiremanThe VagabondOne A.M., and The Count. For The Pawnshop, he recruited the actor Henry Bergman, who was to work with Chaplin for 30 years.

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Charles Chaplin and Eric Campbell in The Floorwalker (Charles Chaplin, 1916)

Behind the Screen and The Rink completed Chaplin’s releases for 1916. The Mutual contract stipulated that he release a two-reel film every four weeks, which he had managed to achieve. With the new year, however, Chaplin began to demand more time. He made only four more films for Mutual over the first ten months of 1917: Easy StreetThe CureThe Immigrant, and The Adventurer.

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Charles Chaplin in Easy Street (1917)

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Charles Chaplin in The Cure (1917)

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Charles Chaplin in The Immigrant (1917)

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Charles Chaplin in The Adventurer (1917)

With their careful construction, these films are considered by Chaplin scholars to be among his finest work. Later in life, Chaplin referred to his Mutual years as the happiest period of his career. However, Chaplin also felt that those films became increasingly formulaic over the period of the contract and he was increasingly dissatisfied with the working conditions encouraging that. 

Chaplin was attacked in the British media for not fighting in the First World War. He defended himself, revealing that he would fight for Britain if called and had registered for the American draft, but he was not summoned by either country.

Despite this criticism Chaplin was a favourite with the troops, and his popularity continued to grow worldwide. Harper’s Weekly reported that the name of Charlie Chaplin was “a part of the common language of almost every country”, and that the Tramp image was “universally familiar”.

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Charles Chaplin in Shoulder Arms (1918)

In 1917, professional Chaplin imitators were so widespread that he took legal action,  and it was reported that nine out of ten men who attended costume parties dressed as the Tramp. The same year, a study by the Boston Society for Psychical Research concluded that Chaplin was “an American obsession”.

The actress Minnie Maddern Fiske wrote that “a constantly increasing body of cultured, artistic people are beginning to regard the young English buffoon, Charles Chaplin, as an extraordinary artist, as well as a comic genius”.

1918–1922: First National

 

Mutual were patient with Chaplin’s decreased rate of output, and the contract ended amicably. With his aforementioned concern about the declining quality of his films because of contract scheduling stipulations, Chaplin’s primary concern in finding a new distributor was independence; Sydney Chaplin, then his business manager, told the press, “Charlie [must] be allowed all the time he needs and all the money for producing [films] the way he wants … It is quality, not quantity, we are after.”

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Sidney and Charles Chaplin

In June 1917, Chaplin signed to complete eight films for First National Exhibitors’ Circuit in return for $1 million. He chose to build his own studio, situated on five acres of land off Sunset Boulevard, with production facilities of the highest order. It was completed in January 1918,  and Chaplin was given freedom over the making of his pictures.

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Chaplin built this English cottage-style studio in three months beginning in November 1917

A Dog’s Life, released April 1918, was the first film under the new contract. In it, Chaplin demonstrated his increasing concern with story construction and his treatment of the Tramp as “a sort of Pierrot“. The film was described by Louis Delluc as “cinema’s first total work of art”.

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Charles Chaplin in A Dog’s Life (1918)

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A Dog’s Life (1918) – Chaplin with Edna Purviance

Chaplin then embarked on the Third Liberty Bond campaign, touring the United States for one month to raise money for the Allies of the First World War.

He also produced a short propaganda film, donated to the government for fund-raising, called The Bond.

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The Bond (1918) – Chaplin with Edna Purviance

Chaplin’s next release was war-based, placing the Tramp in the trenches for Shoulder Arms. Associates warned him against making a comedy about the war but, as he later recalled: “Dangerous or not, the idea excited me.”

He spent four months filming the 45-minute-long picture, which was released in October 1918 with great success.

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Charles Chaplin in Shoulder Arms (1918)

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Charles Chaplin on the set of Shoulder Arms (1918)

United Artists, Mildred Harris, and The Kid

After the release of Shoulder Arms, Chaplin requested more money from First National, which was refused.

Frustrated with their lack of concern for quality, and worried about rumours of a possible merger between the company and Famous Players-Lasky, Chaplin joined forces with Douglas FairbanksMary Pickford, and D. W. Griffith to form a new distribution company – United Artists, established in January 1919.

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Chaplin, Pickford, Fairbanks and Griffith – the signing ceremony

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The arrangement was revolutionary in the film industry, as it enabled the four partners – all creative artists – to personally fund their pictures and have complete control. Chaplin was eager to start with the new company and offered to buy out his contract with First National. They refused and insisted that he complete the final six films owed.

Before the creation of United Artists, Chaplin married for the first time. The 16-year-old actress Mildred Harris had revealed that she was pregnant with his child, and in September 1918, he married her quietly in Los Angeles to avoid controversy.

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Mildred Harris

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Charles Chaplin with Mildred Harris

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Sidney Chaplin with Mildred Harris 1929

Soon after, the pregnancy was found to be false. Chaplin was unhappy with the union and, feeling that marriage stunted his creativity, struggled over the production of his film Sunnyside. Harris was by then legitimately pregnant, and on 7 July 1919, gave birth to a son. Norman Spencer Chaplin was born malformed and died three days later. The marriage ended in April 1920, with Chaplin explaining in his autobiography that they were “irreconcilably mismated”.

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Sunnyside (1919) Poster

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Charles Chaplin in Sunnyside (1919)

Losing the child, plus his own childhood experiences, are thought to have influenced Chaplin’s film, which turned the Tramp into the caretaker of a young boy.

For this new venture, Chaplin also wished to do more than comedy and, according to Louvish, “make his mark on a changed world.” Filming on The Kid began in August 1919, with four-year-old Jackie Coogan his co-star.

It was developing into a long project, so to placate First National, he halted production and quickly filmed A Day’s Pleasure. The Kid was in production for nine months until May 1920 and, at 68 minutes, it was Chaplin’s longest picture to date. Dealing with issues of poverty and parent–child separation, The Kid was one of the earliest films to combine comedy and drama. It was released in January 1921 with instant success, and, by 1924, had been screened in over 50 countries.

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The Kid (1921) Posters

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Charles Chaplin and Jackie Coogan in The Kid (1921)

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Charles Chaplin and Jackie Coogan on the set of The Kid (1921)

Chaplin spent five months on his next film, the two-reeler The Idle Class. Following its September 1921 release, he chose to return to England for the first time in almost a decade. He then worked to fulfil his First National contract, releasing Pay Day in February 1922. The Pilgrim – his final short film – was delayed by distribution disagreements with the studio, and released a year later.

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The Idle Class, poster, Charlie Chaplin (twice), 1921. (Photo by LMPC via Getty Images)

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The Idle Class (1921) Poster

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Charles Chaplin and Edna Purviance in The Idle Class (1921)

1923–1938: Silent features

A Woman of Paris and The Gold Rush

Having fulfilled his First National contract, Chaplin was free to make his first picture as an independent producer. In November 1922, he began filming A Woman of Paris, a romantic drama about ill-fated lovers.

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A Woman of Paris (1923) Posters

Chaplin intended it to be a star-making vehicle for Edna Purviance,  and did not appear in the picture himself other than in a brief, uncredited cameo.

He wished the film to have a realistic feel and directed his cast to give restrained performances. In real life, he explained, “men and women try to hide their emotions rather than seek to express them”.

A Woman of Paris premiered in September 1923 and was acclaimed for its innovative, subtle approach. The public, however, seemed to have little interest in a Chaplin film without Chaplin, and it was a box office disappointment. The filmmaker was hurt by this failure – he had long wanted to produce a dramatic film and was proud of the result – and soon withdrew A Woman of Paris from circulation.

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A Woman of Paris (1923) magazine promotion

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Edna Purviance, Carl Miller and Adolphe Menjou in A Woman of Paris (1923)

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Edna Purviance and Adolphe Menjou in A Woman of Paris (1923)

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Charles Chaplin directing A Woman of Paris (1923)

Chaplin returned to comedy for his next project. Setting his standards high, he told himself “This next film must be an epic! The Greatest!” Inspired by a photograph of the 1898 Klondike Gold Rush, and later the story of the Donner Party of 1846–47, he made what Geoffrey Macnab calls “an epic comedy out of grim subject matter.”

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The Gold Rush (1925) Poster

In The Gold Rush, the Tramp is a lonely prospector fighting adversity and looking for love. With Georgia Hale as his new leading lady, Chaplin began filming the picture in February 1924. Its elaborate production, costing almost $1 million, included location shooting in the Truckee mountains with 600 extras, extravagant sets, and special effects. The last scene was shot May 1925 after 15 months of filming.

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Charles Chaplin and Georgia Hale in The Gold Rush (1925)

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Tom Murray, Charles Chaplin and Mack Swain in The Gold Rush (1925)

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Charles Chaplin in The Gold Rush (1925)

Chaplin felt The Gold Rush was the best film he had made. It opened in August 1925 and became one of the highest-grossing films of the silent era with a U.S. box-office of $5 million.

 The comedy contains some of Chaplin’s most famous sequences, such as the Tramp eating his shoe and the “Dance of the Rolls”. Macnab has called it “the quintessential Chaplin film”.  Chaplin stated at its release, “This is the picture that I want to be remembered by”.

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Charles Chaplin directing The Gold Rush (1925)

Lita Grey and The Circus

 

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Lita Grey, whose bitter divorce from Chaplin caused a scandal

While making The Gold Rush, Chaplin married for the second time. Mirroring the circumstances of his first union, Lita Grey was a teenage actress, originally set to star in the film, whose surprise announcement of pregnancy forced Chaplin into marriage. She was 16 and he was 35, meaning Chaplin could have been charged with statutory rape under California law.

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(Original Caption) Charlie Chaplin is shown with his wife Lita Grey and writer Elinor Glynn.

He therefore arranged a discreet marriage in Mexico on 25 November 1924. Their first son, Charles Spencer Chaplin, Jr., was born on 5 May 1925, followed by Sydney Earl Chaplin on 30 March 1926.

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Charles Spencer Chaplin Jr., Lita Grey and Charles Chaplin

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(Original Caption) Family Separated From Charlie Chaplin. A very recent picture of Mrs. Lita Grey Chaplin, wife of Charles Spence Chaplin, with her two children, Sidney Earl (left) and Charles Spencer Jr., (right), taken at the home of her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. William Curry at Beverly Hills, California, where she fled after her separation from the movie comedian. Mrs. Chaplin’s lawyers are preparing a divorce suit against the actor; and Charles Chaplin will in turn bring suit for divorce against his wife.
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(Original Caption) To Visit Illustrious Dad. Children of Charles Chaplin, world famed comic, are seen here with their mother, Lita Grey Chaplin, aboard the liner ILe De France, as they sail from New York, October 26th, for a visit with their father in Europe. Charles, Jr., is on left, with Sydney.
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(Original Caption) Lita Grey Leaves Charlie Chaplin’s Home! Photo shows Lita Grey, with children, her mother and grandfather at latters home. Great is the wagging of tongues in Hollywood over the fact that Miss Lita grey, wife of the famous comedian –Charlie Chaplin, has left the beautiful Beverly Hills home to go to her mothers, — taking with her the two children. This new photo shows Mrs. Chaplin holding Sidney Earle, Mr. W. E. Curry, her grandfather, Mrs. Spicer, Charlie’s mother-in-law, holding Master Charles Spencer Chaplin.

It was an unhappy marriage, and Chaplin spent long hours at the studio to avoid seeing his wife.

In November 1926, Grey took the children and left the family home.  A bitter divorce followed, in which Grey’s application – accusing Chaplin of infidelity, abuse, and of harbouring “perverted sexual desires” – was leaked to the press. Chaplin was reported to be in a state of nervous breakdown, as the story became headline news and groups formed across America calling for his films to be banned.

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Smartly garbed in a black coat trimmed with white ermine, and wearing a black and silver toque, Mrs. Lita Chaplin took the stand in Superior Court in Los Angeles, Calif. the other day, and testified that her total household expenses for April amounted to approximately $3,300, and said this amount was necessary to keep her and their two children in the fashion in which they were accustomed to live. Judge Walter Guerin on the bench.

Eager to end the case without further scandal, Chaplin’s lawyers agreed to a cash settlement of $600,000 – the largest awarded by American courts at that time. His fan base was strong enough to survive the incident, and it was soon forgotten, but Chaplin was deeply affected by it.

Before the divorce suit was filed, Chaplin had begun work on a new film, The Circus. He built a story around the idea of walking a tightrope while besieged by monkeys, and turned the Tramp into the accidental star of a circus. 

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The Circus (1928) Poster

Filming was suspended for 10 months while he dealt with the divorce scandal, and it was generally a trouble-ridden production. Finally completed in October 1927, The Circus was released in January 1928 to a positive reception.  At the 1st Academy Awards, Chaplin was given a special trophy “For versatility and genius in acting, writing, directing and producing The Circus“.

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Merna Kennedy and Charles Chaplin in The Circus (1928)

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Charles Chaplin in The Circus (1928)

Despite its success, he permanently associated the film with the stress of its production; Chaplin omitted The Circus from his autobiography, and struggled to work on it when he recorded the score in his later years.

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Henry Bergman and Charles Chaplin in The Circus (1928)

City Lights

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“I was determined to continue making silent films … I was a pantomimist and in that medium I was unique and, without false modesty, a master.”

—Chaplin explaining his defiance against sound in the 1930s

By the time The Circus was released, Hollywood had witnessed the introduction of sound films.

Chaplin was cynical about this new medium and the technical shortcomings it presented, believing that “talkies” lacked the artistry of silent films. He was also hesitant to change the formula that had brought him such success, and feared that giving the Tramp a voice would limit his international appeal.

He, therefore, rejected the new Hollywood craze and began work on a new silent film. Chaplin was nonetheless anxious about this decision and remained so throughout the film’s production.

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City Lights (1931) Poster – Regarded as one of Chaplin’s finest works

When filming began at the end of 1928, Chaplin had been working on the story for almost a year. City Lights followed the Tramp’s love for a blind flower girl (played by Virginia Cherrill) and his efforts to raise money for her sight-saving operation.

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Charles Chaplin and Virginia Cherrill in City Lights (1931)

It was a challenging production that lasted 21 months, with Chaplin later confessing that he “had worked himself into a neurotic state of wanting perfection”.  One advantage Chaplin found in sound technology was the opportunity to record a musical score for the film, which he composed himself.

Chaplin finished editing City Lights in December 1930, by which time silent films were an anachronism.  A preview before an unsuspecting public audience was not a success, but a showing for the press produced positive reviews.

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Charles Chaplin and Harry Myers in City Lights (1931)

One journalist wrote, “Nobody in the world but Charlie Chaplin could have done it. He is the only person that has that peculiar something called ‘audience appeal’ in sufficient quality to defy the popular penchant for movies that talk.”  Given its general release in January 1931, City Lights proved to be a popular and financial success – eventually grossing over $3 million.

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Charles Chaplin in City Lights (1931)

The British Film Institute cites it as Chaplin’s finest accomplishment, and the critic James Agee hails the closing scene as “the greatest piece of acting and the highest moment in movies”.  City Lights became Chaplin’s personal favourite of his films and remained so throughout his life.

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Charles Chaplin and Virginia Cherrill in City Lights (1931)

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Charles Chaplin and Winston Churchill on the set of City Lights (1931)

Travels, Paulette Goddard, and Modern Times

City Lights had been a success, but Chaplin was unsure if he could make another picture without dialogue.

He remained convinced that sound would not work in his films, but was also “obsessed by a depressing fear of being old-fashioned.” In this state of uncertainty, early in 1931, the comedian decided to take a holiday and ended up travelling for 16 months.

He spent months travelling Western Europe, including extended stays in France and Switzerland, and spontaneously decided to visit Japan. The day after he arrived in Japan, Prime Minister Inukai Tsuyoshi was assassinated by ultra-nationalists in the May 15 Incident. The group’s original plan had been to provoke a war with the United States by assassinating Chaplin at a welcome reception organised by the prime minister, but the plan had been foiled due to delayed public announcement of the event’s date.

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Charles Chaplin in Japan 1931

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15th May Incident

In his autobiography, Chaplin recalled that on his return to Los Angeles, “I was confused and without plan, restless and conscious of an extreme loneliness”. He briefly considered retiring and moving to China.

 Chaplin’s loneliness was relieved when he met 21-year-old actress Paulette Goddard in July 1932, and the pair began a relationship. He was not ready to commit to a film, however, and focused on writing a serial about his travels (published in Woman’s Home Companion).

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Cover of Woman’s Home Companion magazine, September 1933. Cover shows a picture of Charlie Chaplin accompanied by a splendid Indian bearer carrying a bag of golf clubs, to illustrate the article entirled A Comedian Sees The World. (Photo by Sarah Fabian-Baddiel/Heritage Images/Getty Images)

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Woman’s Home Companion (1933)

The trip had been a stimulating experience for Chaplin, including meetings with several prominent thinkers, and he became increasingly interested in world affairs. The state of labour in America troubled him, and he feared that capitalism and machinery in the workplace would increase unemployment levels. It was these concerns that stimulated Chaplin to develop his new film.

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Paulette Goddard

Modern Times was announced by Chaplin as “a satire on certain phases of our industrial life.”

Featuring the Tramp and Goddard as they endure the Great Depression, it took ten and a half months to film.  Chaplin intended to use spoken dialogue but changed his mind during rehearsals.

Like its predecessor, Modern Times employed sound effects but almost no speaking. Chaplin’s performance of a gibberish song did, however, give the Tramp a voice for the only time on film. After recording the music, Chaplin released Modern Times in February 1936.

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 Modern Times (1936) Poster

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Modern Times (1936) Poster

It was his first feature in 15 years to adopt political references and social realism, a factor that attracted considerable press coverage despite Chaplin’s attempts to downplay the issue.  The film earned less at the box-office than his previous features and received mixed reviews, as some viewers disliked the politicising.

Today, Modern Times is seen by the British Film Institute as one of Chaplin’s “great features,” while David Robinson says it shows the filmmaker at “his unrivalled peak as a creator of visual comedy.”

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Modern Times (1936) Directed by Charles Chaplin Shown: Charles Chaplin (as A factory worker)

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Charles Chaplin with Paulette Goddard in Modern Times (1936)

Following the release of Modern Times, Chaplin left with Goddard for a trip to the Far East. The couple had refused to comment on the nature of their relationship, and it was not known whether they were married or not.

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Chaplin/Goddard relationship was veiled in secrecy throughout their time together

Some time later, Chaplin revealed that they married in Canton during this trip. By 1938, the couple had drifted apart, as both focused heavily on their work, although Goddard was again his leading lady in his next feature film, The Great Dictator.

She eventually divorced Chaplin in Mexico in 1942, citing incompatibility and separation for more than a year.

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Charles Chaplin and Paulette Goddard

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Chaplin and Goddard divorce

1939–1952: Controversies and fading popularity

 

The 1940s saw Chaplin face a series of controversies, both in his work and in his personal life, which changed his fortunes and severely affected his popularity in the United States. The first of these was his growing boldness in expressing his political beliefs. Deeply disturbed by the surge of militaristic nationalism in 1930s world politics, Chaplin found that he could not keep these issues out of his work.

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The Great Dictator (1940) poster

Parallels between himself and Adolf Hitler had been widely noted: the pair were born four days apart, both had risen from poverty to world prominence, and Hitler wore the same toothbrush moustache as Chaplin. It was this physical resemblance that supplied the plot for Chaplin’s next film, The Great Dictator, which directly satirised Hitler and attacked fascism.

Chaplin spent two years developing the script, and began filming in September 1939 – six days after Britain declared war on Germany.  He had submitted to using spoken dialogue, partly out of acceptance that he had no other choice, but also because he recognised it as a better method for delivering a political message.

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Charles Chaplin in The Great Dictator (1940)

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Paulette Goddard and Charles Chaplin in The Great Dictator (1940)

Making a comedy about Hitler was seen as highly controversial, but Chaplin’s financial independence allowed him to take the risk. “I was determined to go ahead,” he later wrote, “for Hitler must be laughed at.” Chaplin replaced the Tramp (while wearing similar attire) with “A Jewish Barber”, a reference to the Nazi party’s belief that he was Jewish.

In a dual performance, he also played the dictator “Adenoid Hynkel”, who parodied Hitler.

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Charles Chaplin, Jack Oakie and Paulette Goddard in The Great Dictator (1940)

The Great Dictator spent a year in production and was released in October 1940.. The film generated a vast amount of publicity, with a critic for The New York Times calling it “the most eagerly awaited picture of the year”, and it was one of the biggest money-makers of the era.

The ending was unpopular, however, and generated controversy. Chaplin concluded the film with a five-minute speech in which he abandoned his barber character, looked directly into the camera, and pleaded against war and fascism.

Charles J. Maland has identified this overt preaching as triggering a decline in Chaplin’s popularity, and writes, “Henceforth, no movie fan would ever be able to separate the dimension of politics from [his] star image”. The Great Dictator received five Academy Award nominations, including Best PictureBest Original Screenplay and Best Actor.

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Charles Chaplin, Jack Oakie and Paulette Goddard in The Great Dictator (1940)

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Charles Chaplin and Paulette Goddard on the set of The Great Dictator (1940)

Legal troubles and Oona O’Neill

In the mid-1940s, Chaplin was involved in a series of trials that occupied most of his time and significantly affected his public image. 

The troubles stemmed from his affair with an aspirant actress named Joan Barry, with whom he was involved intermittently between June 1941 and the autumn of 1942. Barry, who displayed obsessive behaviour and was twice arrested after they separated, reappeared the following year and announced that she was pregnant with Chaplin’s child. As Chaplin denied the claim, Barry filed a paternity suit against him.

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Charles Chaplin and Joan Barry in Court

The director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), J. Edgar Hoover, who had long been suspicious of Chaplin’s political leanings, used the opportunity to generate negative publicity about him. As part of a smear campaign to damage Chaplin’s image, the FBI named him in four indictments related to the Barry case. Most serious of these was an alleged violation of the Mann Act, which prohibits the transportation of women across state boundaries for sexual purposes..

The historian Otto Friedrich has called this an “absurd prosecution” of an “ancient statute”, yet if Chaplin was found guilty, he faced 23 years in jail. Three charges lacked sufficient evidence to proceed to court, but the Mann Act trial began in March 1944. Chaplin was acquitted two weeks later. The case was frequently headline news, with Newsweek calling it the “biggest public relations scandal since the Fatty Arbuckle murder trial in 1921.”

 
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Charles Chaplin in Court
 
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Joan Barry with Carol Ann

Barry’s child, Carol Ann, was born in October 1944, and the paternity suit went to court in February 1945. After two arduous trials, in which the prosecuting lawyer accused him of “moral turpitude“, Chaplin was declared to be the father.

Evidence from blood tests which indicated otherwise were not admissible, and the judge ordered Chaplin to pay child support until Carol Ann turned 21. Media coverage of the paternity suit was influenced by the FBI, as information was fed to the prominent gossip columnist Hedda Hopper, and Chaplin was portrayed in an overwhelmingly critical light.

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Media coverage of Barry vs Chaplin Court Case

The controversy surrounding Chaplin increased when, two weeks after the paternity suit was filed, it was announced that he had married his newest protégée, 18-year-old Oona O’Neill – daughter of the American playwright Eugene O’Neill.

Chaplin, then 54, had been introduced to her by a film agent seven months earlier. In his autobiography, Chaplin described meeting O’Neill as “the happiest event of my life”, and claimed to have found “perfect love”. Chaplin’s son, Charles Jr., reported that Oona “worshipped” his father.

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(Original Caption) New York, NY: Oona O’Neill (Mrs. Charles Chaplin) when she was 16 years old and a student in New York, waiting for a bus at Madison Avenue. Photograph.

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Oona O’Neill

The couple remained married until Chaplin’s death, and had eight children over 18 years: Geraldine Leigh (b. July 1944), Michael John (b. March 1946), Josephine Hannah (b. March 1949), Victoria (b. May 1951), Eugene Anthony (b. August 1953), Jane Cecil (b. May 1957), Annette Emily (b. December 1959), and Christopher James (b. July 1962).

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Charles Chaplin, Oona O’Neill and their children

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Charles Chaplin and Oona O’Neill

Monsieur Verdoux and communist accusations

 

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Monsieur Verdoux (1947) Poster
 

Chaplin claimed that the Barry trials had “crippled [his] creativeness”, and it was some time before he began working again. In April 1946, he finally began filming a project that had been in development since 1942.

Monsieur Verdoux was a black comedy, the story of a French bank clerk, Verdoux (Chaplin), who loses his job and begins marrying and murdering wealthy widows to support his family. Chaplin’s inspiration for the project came from Orson Welles, who wanted him to star in a film about the French serial killer Henri Désiré Landru. Chaplin decided that the concept would “make a wonderful comedy”, and paid Welles $5,000 for the idea.

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Charles Chaplin in Monsieur Verdoux (1947)

Chaplin again vocalised his political views in Monsieur Verdoux, criticising capitalism and arguing that the world encourages mass killing through wars and weapons of mass destruction.

Because of this, the film met with controversy when it was released in April 1947; Chaplin was booed at the premiere, and there were calls for a boycott. Monsieur Verdoux was the first Chaplin release that failed both critically and commercially in the United States. It was more successful abroad, and Chaplin’s screenplay was nominated at the Academy Awards. He was proud of the film, writing in his autobiography, “Monsieur Verdoux is the cleverest and most brilliant film I have yet made.”

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Charles Chaplin and Martha Raye in Monsieur Verdoux (1947)

The negative reaction to Monsieur Verdoux was largely the result of changes in Chaplin’s public image. Along with damage of the Joan Barry scandal, he was publicly accused of being a communist.

His political activity had heightened during World War II, when he campaigned for the opening of a Second Front to help the Soviet Union and supported various Soviet–American friendship groups.

He was also friendly with several suspected communists, and attended functions given by Soviet diplomats in Los Angeles. In the political climate of 1940s America, such activities meant Chaplin was considered, as Larcher writes, “dangerously progressive and amoral.” The FBI wanted him out of the country, and launched an official investigation in early 1947.

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The House Committee on Un-American Activities (HCUA), popularly dubbed the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC), and from 1969 onwards known as the House Committee on Internal Security, was an investigative committee of the United States House of Representatives.

Chaplin denied being a communist, instead calling himself a “peacemonger”, but felt the government’s effort to suppress the ideology was an unacceptable infringement of civil liberties.

Unwilling to be quiet about the issue, he openly protested against the trials of Communist Party members and the activities of the House Un-American Activities Committee . Chaplin received a subpoena to appear before HUAC but was not called to testify.  As his activities were widely reported in the press, and Cold War fears grew, questions were raised over his failure to take American citizenship .

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John E Rankin at HUAC hearing

Calls were made for him to be deported; in one extreme and widely published example, Representative John E. Rankin, who helped establish HUAC, told Congress in June 1947: “[Chaplin’s] very life in Hollywood is detrimental to the moral fabric of America. [If he is deported] … his loathsome pictures can be kept from before the eyes of the American youth. He should be deported and gotten rid of at once.”

Limelight and banning from the United States

 

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Limelight (1952) Poster
 

Limelight (1952) was a serious and autobiographical film for Chaplin: his character, Calvero, is an ex music hallstar (described in this image as a “Tramp Comedian”) forced to deal with his loss of popularity.

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Buster Keaton and Charles Chaplin in Limelight (1952)

Although Chaplin remained politically active in the years following the failure of Monsieur Verdoux,  his next film, about a forgotten vaudeville comedian and a young ballerina in Edwardian London, was devoid of political themes. Limelight was heavily autobiographical, alluding not only to Chaplin’s childhood and the lives of his parents, but also to his loss of popularity in the United States. The cast included various members of his family, including his five oldest children and his half-brother, Wheeler Dryden. 

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Claire Bloom and Charles Chaplin in Limelight (1952)

Filming began in November 1951, by which time Chaplin had spent three years working on the story. He aimed for a more serious tone than any of his previous films, regularly using the word “melancholy” when explaining his plans to his co-star Claire Bloom.

Limelight featured a cameo appearance from Buster Keaton, whom Chaplin cast as his stage partner in a pantomime scene. This marked the only time the comedians worked together.

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Charles Chaplin and Buster Keaton in Limelight (1952)

Chaplin decided to hold the world premiere of Limelight in London, since it was the setting of the film. As he left Los Angeles, he expressed a premonition that he would not be returning. At New York, he boarded the RMS Queen Elizabeth with his family on 18 September 1952.

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The next day, attorney general James P. McGranery revoked Chaplin’s re-entry permit and stated that he would have to submit to an interview concerning his political views and moral behaviour in order to re-enter the US.  Although McGranery told the press that he had “a pretty good case against Chaplin”, Maland has concluded, on the basis of the FBI files that were released in the 1980s, that the US government had no real evidence to prevent Chaplin’s re-entry.

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Reuters news on Chaplin and the immigration hearing order

It is likely that he would have gained entry if he had applied for it. However, when Chaplin received a cablegram informing him of the news, he privately decided to cut his ties with the United States:

Whether I re-entered that unhappy country or not was of little consequence to me. I would like to have told them that the sooner I was rid of that hate-beleaguered atmosphere the better, that I was fed up of America’s insults and moral pomposity…

Because all of his property remained in America, Chaplin refrained from saying anything negative about the incident to the press.

The scandal attracted vast attention, but Chaplin and his film were warmly received in Europe. In America, the hostility towards him continued, and, although it received some positive reviews, Limelight was subjected to a wide-scale boycott.

Reflecting on this, Maland writes that Chaplin’s fall, from an “unprecedented” level of popularity, “may be the most dramatic in the history of stardom in America”.

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1953–1977: European years

Move to Switzerland and A King in New York

“I have been the object of lies and propaganda by powerful reactionary groups who, by their influence and by the aid of America’s yellow press, have created an unhealthy atmosphere in which liberal-minded individuals can be singled out and persecuted. Under these conditions I find it virtually impossible to continue my motion-picture work, and I have therefore given up my residence in the United States.”
 

— Chaplin’s press release regarding his decision not to seek re-entry to the US

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Manoir de Ban, Chaplin’s home in Corsier-sur-Vevey, Switzerland

Chaplin did not attempt to return to the United States after his re-entry permit was revoked, and instead sent his wife to settle his affairs.

The couple decided to settle in Switzerland and, in January 1953, the family moved into their permanent home: Manoir de Ban, a 14-hectare (35-acre) estate overlooking Lake Geneva in Corsier-sur-Vevey.

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Manoir de Ban, Chaplin’s home in Corsier-sur-Vevey, Switzerland

Chaplin put his Beverly Hills house and studio up for sale in March, and surrendered his re-entry permit in April. The next year, his wife renounced her US citizenship and became a British citizen. Chaplin severed the last of his professional ties with the United States in 1955, when he sold the remainder of his stock in United Artists, which had been in financial difficulty since the early 1940s.

Chaplin remained a controversial figure throughout the 1950s, especially after he was awarded the International Peace Prize by the communist-led World Peace Council, and after his meetings with Zhou Enlai and Nikita Khrushchev.

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Jun. 05, 1954 – Charlie Chaplin Receives  The ”World Peace Council” Prize

He began developing his first European film, A King in New York, in 1954.  Casting himself as an exiled king who seeks asylum in the United States, Chaplin included several of his recent experiences in the screenplay.

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A King in New York (1957)  Poster

His son, Michael, was cast as a boy whose parents are targeted by the FBI, while Chaplin’s character faces accusations of communism. The political satire parodied HUAC and attacked elements of 1950s culture – including consumerism, plastic surgery, and wide-screen cinema. In a review, the playwright John Osborne called it Chaplin’s “most bitter” and “most openly personal” film.

Chaplin founded a new production company, Attica, and used Shepperton Studios for the shooting.  Filming in England proved a difficult experience, as he was used to his own Hollywood studio and familiar crew, and no longer had limitless production time. According to Robinson, this had an effect on the quality of the film. A King in New York was released in September 1957, and received mixed reviews.

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A King in New York (1957)  Dutch Poster

Chaplin banned American journalists from its Paris première and decided not to release the film in the United States. This severely limited its revenue, although it achieved moderate commercial success in Europe.  A King in New York was not shown in America until 1973.

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A King In New York (1957)

Final works and renewed appreciation

In the last two decades of his career, Chaplin concentrated on re-editing and scoring his old films for re-release, along with securing their ownership and distribution rights.

In an interview he granted in 1959, the year of his 70th birthday, Chaplin stated that there was still “room for the Little Man in the atomic age”. The first of these re-releases was The Chaplin Revue (1959), which included new versions of A Dog’s LifeShoulder Arms, and The Pilgrim.

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Chaplin Revue (1959)  Poster

In America, the political atmosphere began to change and attention was once again directed to Chaplin’s films instead of his views. In July 1962, The New York Times published an editorial stating that “we do not believe the Republic would be in danger if yesterday’s unforgotten little tramp were allowed to amble down the gangplank of a steamer or plane in an American port”.

The same month, Chaplin was invested with the honorary degree of Doctor of Letters by the universities of Oxford and Durham. In November 1963, the Plaza Theater in New York started a year-long series of Chaplin’s films, including Monsieur Verdoux and Limelight, which gained excellent reviews from American critics.

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Jun. 06, 1962 – Charlie Chaplin Receives Honorary Degree – at Oxford

September 1964 saw the release of Chaplin’s memoirs, My Autobiography, which he had been working on since 1957. The 500-page book, which focused on his early years and personal life, became a worldwide best-seller, despite criticism over the lack of information on his film career.

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My Autobiography by Charles Chaplin – 1st Edition (1964)

Shortly after the publication of his memoirs, Chaplin began work on A Countess from Hong Kong (1967), a romantic comedy based on a script he had written for Paulette Goddard in the 1930s.

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A Countess From Hong Kong (1967)  Poster

Set on an ocean liner, it starred Marlon Brando as an American ambassador and Sophia Loren as a stowaway found in his cabin. The film differed from Chaplin’s earlier productions in several aspects. It was his first to use Technicolor and the widescreen format, while he concentrated on directing and appeared on-screen only in a cameo role as a seasick steward. He also signed a deal with Universal Pictures and appointed his assistant, Jerome Epstein, as the producer.

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Marlon Brando and Sophia Loren in A Countess From Hong Kong (1967)

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Sophia Loren in A Countess From Hong Kong (1967)

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Marlon Brando and Sophia Loren in A Countess From Hong Kong (1967)

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Charles Chaplin and Sophia Loren in A Countess From Hong Kong (1967)

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Marlon Brando and Sophia Loren in A Countess From Hong Kong (1967)

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Marlon Brando and Sophia Loren in A Countess From Hong Kong (1967)

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Charles Chaplin, Marlon Brando and Sophia Loren in A Countess From Hong Kong (1967)

Chaplin was paid $600,000 director’s fee as well as a percentage of the gross receipts. A Countess from Hong Kong premiered in January 1967, to unfavourable reviews, and was a box-office failure. Chaplin was deeply hurt by the negative reaction to the film, which turned out to be his last.

Chaplin suffered a series of minor strokes in the late 1960s, which marked the beginning of a slow decline in his health. Despite the setbacks, he was soon writing a new film script, The Freak, a story of a winged girl found in South America, which he intended as a starring vehicle for his daughter, Victoria.

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The Freak, Charles Chaplin’s script, unfinished project

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The Freak – rehearsals

His fragile health prevented the project from being realised. In the early 1970s, Chaplin concentrated on re-releasing his old films, including The Kid and The Circus. In 1971, he was made a Commander of the National Order of the Legion of Honour at the Cannes Film Festival. The following year, he was honoured with a special award by the Venice Film Festival.

Charlie Chaplin Receiving a Medal
04 Nov 1952, Paris, France — Original caption: Gets Medal. Paris, France: Actor Charlie Chaplin receives the Legion of Honor Medal during a meeting of the National Authors’ Society. Andre Marie, French minister of education, makes the presentation. Chaplin’s wife, Oona, looks on at left. — Image by © Bettmann/CORBIS

Venice Film Festival Honors Charles Chaplin in 1972

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Chaplin (right) receiving his Honorary Academy Award from Jack Lemmon in 1972. It was the first time he had been to the United States in 20 years.

In 1972, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences offered Chaplin an Honorary Award, which Robinson sees as a sign that America “wanted to make amends”. Chaplin was initially hesitant about accepting but decided to return to the US for the first time in 20 years.

The visit attracted a large amount of press coverage and, at the Academy Awards gala, he was given a twelve-minute standing ovation, the longest in the Academy’s history. Visibly emotional, Chaplin accepted his award for “the incalculable effect he has had in making motion pictures the art form of this century”.

Although Chaplin still had plans for future film projects, by the mid-1970s he was very frail. He experienced several further strokes, which made it difficult for him to communicate, and he had to use a wheelchair.

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His final projects were compiling a pictorial autobiography, My Life in Pictures (1974) and scoring A Woman of Paris for re-release in 1976. He also appeared in a documentary about his life, The Gentleman Tramp (1975), directed by Richard Patterson.] In the 1975 New Year Honours, Chaplin was awarded a knighthood by Queen Elizabeth II, though he was too weak to kneel and received the honour in his wheelchair.

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The Queen meets Charlie Chaplin at the opening of the British academy of film and television arts. 11th March 1976. 

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Princess Anne jokes with Sir Charles Chaplin after presenting him with an award, London, 1976

Death

 

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Chaplin’s grave in Corsier-sur-Vevey, Switzerland

By October 1977, Chaplin’s health had declined to the point that he needed constant care. In the early morning of 25 December 1977, Chaplin died at home after suffering a stroke in his sleep.

He was 88 years old.

The funeral, on 27 December, was a small and private Anglican ceremony, according to his wishes. Chaplin was interred in the Corsier-sur-Vevey cemetery.  Among the film industry’s tributes, director René Clair wrote, “He was a monument of the cinema, of all countries and all times … the most beautiful gift the cinema made to us.” 

Actor Bob Hope declared, “We were lucky to have lived in his time.”

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Charles Chaplin’s funeral 27th December 1977

On 1 March 1978, Chaplin’s coffin was dug up and stolen from its grave by two unemployed immigrants, Roman Wardas, from Poland, and Gantcho Ganev, from Bulgaria. The body was held for ransom in an attempt to extort money from Oona Chaplin.

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Newspaper coverage 3rd March 1978 – Daily News

The pair were caught in a large police operation in May, and Chaplin’s coffin was found buried in a field in the nearby village of Noville. It was re-interred in the Corsier cemetery surrounded by reinforced concrete.

Filmmaking

Influences

Chaplin believed his first influence to be his mother, who entertained him as a child by sitting at the window and mimicking passers-by: “it was through watching her that I learned not only how to express emotions with my hands and face, but also how to observe and study people.”

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Charles Chaplin and his mother Hannah

Chaplin’s early years in music hall allowed him to see stage comedians at work; he also attended the Christmas pantomimes at Drury Lane, where he studied the art of clowning through performers like Dan Leno.

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Dan Leno

Chaplin’s years with the Fred Karno company had a formative effect on him as an actor and filmmaker. Simon Louvish writes that the company was his “training ground”, and it was here that Chaplin learned to vary the pace of his comedy.

The concept of mixing pathos with slapstick was learnt from Karno,  who also used elements of absurdity that became familiar in Chaplin’s gags.

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Fred Karno (Born Fredrick John Westcott)

From the film industry, Chaplin drew upon the work of the French comedian Max Linder, whose films he greatly admired. In developing the Tramp costume and persona, he was likely inspired by the American vaudeville scene, where tramp characters were common.

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Max Linder

Method

Chaplin never spoke more than cursorily about his filmmaking methods, claiming such a thing would be tantamount to a magician spoiling his own illusion.

Little was known about his working process throughout his lifetime, but research from film historians – particularly the findings of Kevin Brownlow and David Gill that were presented in the three-part documentary Unknown Chaplin (1983) – has since revealed his unique working method.

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Until he began making spoken dialogue films with The Great Dictator, Chaplin never shot from a completed script. Many of his early films began with only a vague premise – for example “Charlie enters a health spa” or “Charlie works in a pawn shop.”

He then had sets constructed and worked with his stock company to improvise gags and “business” using them, almost always working the ideas out on film.  As ideas were accepted and discarded, a narrative structure would emerge, frequently requiring Chaplin to reshoot an already-completed scene that might have otherwise contradicted the story.

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Charles Chaplin on the set of How to Make Movies

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Charles Chaplin behind the camera

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Charles chaplin on the set of City Lights

From A Woman of Paris onward Chaplin began the filming process with a prepared plot, but Robinson writes that every film up to Modern Times “went through many metamorphoses and permutations before the story took its final form.”

Producing films in this manner meant Chaplin took longer to complete his pictures than almost any other filmmaker at the time. If he was out of ideas, he often took a break from the shoot, which could last for days, while keeping the studio ready for when inspiration returned.  Delaying the process further was Chaplin’s rigorous perfectionism.

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Limelight – Shooting Diary

According to his friend Ivor Montagu, “nothing but perfection would be right” for the filmmaker. Because he personally funded his films, Chaplin was at liberty to strive for this goal and shoot as many takes as he wished. The number was often excessive, for instance 53 takes for every finished take in The Kid. ] For The Immigrant, a 20 minute-short, Chaplin shot 40,000 feet of film – enough for a feature-length.

“No other filmmaker ever so completely dominated every aspect of the work, did every job. If he could have done so, Chaplin would have played every role and (as his son Sydney humorously but perceptively observed) sewn every costume.”
 

Chaplin biographer David Robinson

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Chaplin Biography – David Robinson

Describing his working method as “sheer perseverance to the point of madness”,  Chaplin would be completely consumed by the production of a picture.  Robinson writes that even in Chaplin’s later years, his work continued “to take precedence over everything and everyone else.”  The combination of story improvisation and relentless perfectionism – which resulted in days of effort and thousands of feet of film being wasted, all at enormous expense – often proved taxing for Chaplin who, in frustration, would lash out at his actors and crew.

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Monsieur Verdoux – Chaplin’s Script

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Monsieur Verdoux – Chaplin’s Notes

Chaplin exercised complete control over his pictures, to the extent that he would act out the other roles for his cast, expecting them to imitate him exactly.  He personally edited all of his films, trawling through the large amounts of footage to create the exact picture he wanted.  

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Andrew Sarris articles on Charles Chaplin

As a result of his complete independence, he was identified by the film historian Andrew Sarris as one of the first auteur filmmakers.

Chaplin did receive help, notably from his long-time cinematographer Roland Totheroh, brother Sydney Chaplin, and various assistant directors such as Harry Crocker and Charles Reisner.

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Charles Chaplin and Roland Totheroh

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Charles and Sydney Chaplin

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Charles Chaplin, Lady Levinsdale and Harry Crocker on the set of The Circus

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Charles Chaplin and Charles Reisner on the set of The Kid

Style and themes

 
 

While Chaplin’s comedic style is broadly defined as slapstick, it is considered restrained and intelligent, with the film historian Philip Kemp describing his work as a mix of “deft, balletic physical comedy and thoughtful, situation-based gags”.

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Chaplin diverged from conventional slapstick by slowing the pace and exhausting each scene of its comic potential, with more focus on developing the viewer’s relationship to the characters. Unlike conventional slapstick comedies,

Robinson states that the comic moments in Chaplin’s films centre on the Tramp’s attitude to the things happening to him: the humour does not come from the Tramp bumping into a tree, but from his lifting his hat to the tree in apology.

Dan Kamin writes that Chaplin’s “quirky mannerisms” and “serious demeanour in the midst of slapstick action” are other key aspects of his comedy,  while the surreal transformation of objects and the employment of in-camera trickery are also common features.

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Charles Chaplin and Edna Purviance in The Immigrant (1917)

Chaplin’s silent films typically follow the Tramp’s efforts to survive in a hostile world. The character lives in poverty and is frequently treated badly, but remains kind and upbeat; defying his social position, he strives to be seen as a gentleman.

As Chaplin said in 1925, “The whole point of the Little Fellow is that no matter how down on his ass he is, no matter how well the jackals succeed in tearing him apart, he’s still a man of dignity.” The Tramp defies authority figures  and “gives as good as he gets”, leading Robinson and Louvish to see him as a representative for the underprivileged – an “everyman turned heroic saviour”.

Hansmeyer notes that several of Chaplin’s films end with “the homeless and lonely Tramp [walking] optimistically … into the sunset … to continue his journey”.

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Charles Chaplin and Paulette Goddard in Modern Times (1936)
 
 
“It is paradoxical that tragedy stimulates the spirit of ridicule … ridicule, I suppose, is an attitude of defiance; we must laugh in the face of our helplessness against the forces of nature – or go insane.”
 

—Chaplin explaining why his comedies often make fun of tragic circumstances

The infusion of pathos is a well-known aspect of Chaplin’s work, and Larcher notes his reputation for “[inducing] laughter and tears”. Sentimentality in his films comes from a variety of sources, with Louvish pinpointing “personal failure, society’s strictures, economic disaster, and the elements.”

Chaplin sometimes drew on tragic events when creating his films, as in the case of The Gold Rush (1925), which was inspired by the fate of the Donner Party.  Constance B. Kuriyama has identified serious underlying themes in the early comedies, such as greed (The Gold Rush) and loss (The Kid). Chaplin also touched on controversial issues: immigration (The Immigrant, 1917); illegitimacy (The Kid, 1921); and drug use (Easy Street, 1917).  He often explored these topics ironically, making comedy out of suffering.

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Charles Chaplin in Easy Street (1917)

Social commentary was a feature of Chaplin’s films from early in his career, as he portrayed the underdog in a sympathetic light and highlighted the difficulties of the poor man. Later, as he developed a keen interest in economics and felt obliged to publicise his views,

Chaplin began incorporating overtly political messages into his films. Modern Times (1936) depicted factory workers in dismal conditions, The Great Dictator (1940) parodied Adolf Hitler and Benito Mussolini and ended in a speech against nationalism, Monsieur Verdoux(1947) criticised war and capitalism, and A King in New York (1957) attacked McCarthyism.

 

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Charles Chaplin and Jack Oakie in The Great Dictator (1940)

Several of Chaplin’s films incorporate autobiographical elements, and the psychologist Sigmund Freud believed that Chaplin “always plays only himself as he was in his dismal youth”.  The Kid is thought to reflect Chaplin’s childhood trauma of being sent into an orphanage, the main characters in Limelight (1952) contain elements from the lives of his parents, and A King in New York references Chaplin’s experiences of being shunned by the United States.

Many of his sets, especially in street scenes, bear a strong similarity to Kennington, where he grew up. Stephen M. Weissman has argued that Chaplin’s problematic relationship with his mentally ill mother was often reflected in his female characters and the Tramp’s desire to save them.

 

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Charles Chaplin and Virginia Cherrill in City Lights (1931)

Regarding the structure of Chaplin’s films, the scholar Gerald Mast sees them as consisting of sketches tied together by the same theme and setting, rather than having a tightly unified storyline.

Visually, his films are simple and economic,with scenes portrayed as if set on a stage. His approach to filming was described by the art director Eugène Lourié: “Chaplin did not think in ‘artistic’ images when he was shooting. He believed that action is the main thing. The camera is there to photograph the actors”. In his autobiography, Chaplin wrote, “Simplicity is best … pompous effects slow up action, are boring and unpleasant … The camera should not intrude.”

This approach has prompted criticism, since the 1940s, for being “old fashioned”, while the film scholar Donald McCaffrey sees it as an indication that Chaplin never completely understood film as a medium.  Kamin, however, comments that Chaplin’s comedic talent would not be enough to remain funny on screen if he did not have an “ability to conceive and direct scenes specifically for the film medium”.

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Charles Chaplin and Jackie Coogan on the set of The Kid (1921)

Composing

 

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Charlie with Gus Arnheim (at the piano) and Abe Lyman

Chaplin developed a passion for music as a child and taught himself to play the piano, violin, and cello. He considered the musical accompaniment of a film to be important, and from A Woman of Paris onwards he took an increasing interest in this area. 

With the advent of sound technology, Chaplin began using a synchronised orchestral soundtrack – composed by himself – for City Lights(1931). He thereafter composed the scores for all of his films, and from the late 1950s to his death, he scored all of his silent features and some of his short films.

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Chaplin and Meredith Wilson rehearsing with musicians for The Great Dictator (1940)

As Chaplin was not a trained musician, he could not read sheet music and needed the help of professional composers, such as David RaksinRaymond Rasch and Eric James, when creating his scores.

Musical directors were employed to oversee the recording process, such as Alfred Newman for City Lights. Although some critics have claimed that credit for his film music should be given to the composers who worked with him, Raksin – who worked with Chaplin on Modern Times – stressed Chaplin’s creative position and active participation in the composing process.

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Happier times on the MODERN TIMES soundstage: Charles Dunworth, inventor of the system of visual cues for synchronization; conductor Alfred Newman; Chaplin; arranger and co-orchestrator David Raksin; recording engineer Paul Neal; and co-orchestrator Edward Powell. Photo by Max Autrey, c. November 1935.

This process, which could take months, would start with Chaplin describing to the composer(s) exactly what he wanted and singing or playing tunes he had improvised on the piano. These tunes were then developed further in a close collaboration among the composer(s) and Chaplin. According to film historian Jeffrey Vance, “although he relied upon associates to arrange varied and complex instrumentation, the musical imperative is his, and not a note in a Chaplin musical score was placed there without his assent.”

Chaplin’s compositions produced three popular songs. “Smile“, composed originally for Modern Times (1936) and later set to lyrics by John Turner and Geoffrey Parsons, was a hit for Nat King Cole in 1954.

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Chaplin composed the music, while John Turner and Geoffrey Parsons added the lyrics and title in 1954

For Limelight, Chaplin composed “Terry’s Theme”, which was popularised by Jimmy Young as “Eternally” (1952). Finally, “This Is My Song“, performed by Petula Clark for A Countess from Hong Kong (1967), reached number one on the UK and other European charts. Chaplin also received his only competitive Oscar for his composition work, as the Limelight theme won an Academy Award for Best Original Score in 1973 following the film’s re-release.

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Exhibitor’s Campaign Book for Limelight (1952)

 

Legacy

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Chaplin as the Tramp in 1915, cinema’s “most universal icon”

 

In 1998, the film critic Andrew Sarris called Chaplin “arguably the single most important artist produced by the cinema, certainly its most extraordinary performer and probably still its most universal icon”.

He is described by the British Film Institute as “a towering figure in world culture”,  and was included in Time magazine’s list of the “100 Most Important People of the 20th Century” for the “laughter [he brought] to millions” and because he “more or less invented global recognizability and helped turn an industry into an art”.

The image of the Tramp has become a part of cultural history;  according to Simon Louvish, the character is recognisable to people who have never seen a Chaplin film, and in places where his films are never shown. The critic Leonard Maltin has written of the “unique” and “indelible” nature of the Tramp, and argued that no other comedian matched his “worldwide impact”.

Praising the character, Richard Schickel suggests that Chaplin’s films with the Tramp contain the most “eloquent, richly comedic expressions of the human spirit” in movie history. Memorabilia connected to the character still fetches large sums in auctions: in 2006 a bowler hat and a bamboo cane that were part of the Tramp’s costume were bought for $140,000 in a Los Angeles auction.

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Chaplin memorabilia

As a filmmaker, Chaplin is considered a pioneer and one of the most influential figures of the early twentieth century.

He is often credited as one of the medium’s first artists. Film director and critic Mark Cousins has written that Chaplin “changed not only the imagery of cinema, but also its sociology and grammar” and claims that Chaplin was as important to the development of comedy as a genre as D.W. Griffith was to drama.

He was the first to popularise feature-length comedy and to slow down the pace of action, adding pathos and subtlety to it. Although his work is mostly classified as slapstick, Chaplin’s drama A Woman of Paris (1923) was a major influence on Ernst Lubitsch‘s film The Marriage Circle (1924) and thus played a part in the development of “sophisticated comedy”.

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Charles Chaplin signing a poster for Woman of Paris (1923

According to David Robinson, Chaplin’s innovations were “rapidly assimilated to become part of the common practice of film craft.” Filmmakers who cited Chaplin as an influence include Federico Fellini (who called Chaplin “a sort of Adam, from whom we are all descended”),

Jacques Tati (“Without him I would never have made a film”), René Clair (“He inspired practically every filmmaker”),  Michael Powell, Billy Wilder, Vittorio De Sica, and Richard Attenborough.  Russian filmmaker Andrei Tarkovsky praised Chaplin as “the only person to have gone down into cinematic history without any shadow of a doubt. The films he left behind can never grow old.”

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Orson Welles and Charles Chaplin

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10 Nov 1964, Stockholm, Sweden — The Movie-Makers. Stockholm, Sweden: World famous comedian Charlie Chaplin (right) and Swedish film director Ingmar Bergman, two of the great names in the history of motion pictures enjoy a long conversation about movies and other subjects in Chaplin’s room at the Stockholm Grand Hotel. Chaplin was in the Swedish capital in connection with the publication of his autobiography in Scandinavia. — Image by © Bettmann/CORBIS

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Charles Chaplin and Walt Disney

Chaplin also strongly influenced the work of later comedians. Marcel Marceau said he was inspired to become a mime artist after watching Chaplin, while the actor Raj Kapoor based his screen persona on the Tramp. Mark Cousins has also detected Chaplin’s comedic style in the French character Monsieur Hulot and the Italian character Totò.  

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Felix the Cat and Charles Chaplin in Felix in Hollywood (1923)

In other fields, Chaplin helped inspire the cartoon characters Felix the Cat and Mickey Mouse, and was an influence on the Dada art movement. As one of the founding members of United Artists, Chaplin also had a role in the development of the film industry. Gerald Mast has written that although UA never became a major company like MGM or Paramount Pictures, the idea that directors could produce their own films was “years ahead of its time”.

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Charles Chaplin, Mickey Mouse and  Douglas Fairbanks – Cinema Poster

In the 21st century, several of Chaplin’s films are still regarded as classics and among the greatest ever made. The 2012 Sight & Sound poll, which compiles “top ten” ballots from film critics and directors to determine each group’s most acclaimed films, saw City Lights rank among the critics’ top 50, Modern Times inside the top 100, and The Great Dictator and The Gold Rush placed in the top 250.

The top 100 films as voted on by directors included Modern Times at number 22, City Lights at number 30, and The Gold Rush at number 91.  Every one of Chaplin’s features received a vote. In 2007, the American Film Institute named City Lights the 11th greatest American film of all time, while The Gold Rush and Modern Times again ranked in the top 100. Books about Chaplin continue to be published regularly, and he is a popular subject for media scholars and film archivists. Many of Chaplin’s film have had a DVD and Blu-Ray release.

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Charles Chaplin Collection – Blu Ray Box Set

Commemoration and tributes

Chaplin’s final home, Manoir de Ban in Corsier-sur-Vevey, Switzerland, has been converted into a museum named “Chaplin’s World“. It opened on 17 April 2016 after 15 years of development, and is described by Reuters as “an interactive museum showcasing the life and works of Charlie Chaplin”.

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Chaplin’s World, Museum, Manoir de Ban in Corsier-sur-Vevey, Switzerland

On the 128th anniversary of his birth, a record-setting 662 people dressed as the Tramp in an event organised by the museum. Previously, the Museum of the Moving Image in London held a permanent display on Chaplin, and hosted a dedicated exhibition to his life and career in 1988. The London Film Museum hosted an exhibition called Charlie Chaplin – The Great Londoner, from 2010 until 2013.

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Charles Chaplin at MOMI London

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Charlie Chaplin – The Great Londoner – London Film Museum 

In London, a statue of Chaplin as the Tramp, sculpted by John Doubleday and unveiled in 1981, is located in Leicester Square. The city also includes a road named after him in central London, “Charlie Chaplin Walk”, which is the location of the BFI IMAX.

There are nine blue plaques memorialising Chaplin in London, Hampshire, and Yorkshire. The Swiss town of Vevey named a park in his honour in 1980 and erected a statue there in 1982. In 2011, two large murals depicting Chaplin on two 14-storey buildings were also unveiled in Vevey. Chaplin has also been honoured by the Irish town of Waterville, where he spent several summers with his family in the 1960s. A statue was erected in 1998; since 2011, the town has been host to the annual Charlie Chaplin Comedy Film Festival, which was founded to celebrate Chaplin’s legacy and to showcase new comic talent.

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Charles Chaplin Walk – BFI Imax Waterloo,, London

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Chaplin statue in Waterville, Ireland

In other tributes, a minor planet3623 Chaplin – discovered by Soviet astronomer Lyudmila Karachkina in 1981 – is named after Chaplin. Throughout the 1980s, the Tramp image was used by IBM to advertise their personal computers. Chaplin’s 100th birthday anniversary in 1989 was marked with several events around the world, and on 15 April 2011, a day before his 122nd birthday, Google celebrated him with a special Google Doodle video on its global and other country-wide homepages. Many countries, spanning six continents, have honoured Chaplin with a postal stamp.

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Charles Chaplin on stamps from around the world

Chaplin’s legacy is managed on behalf of his children by the Chaplin office, located in Paris. The office represents Association Chaplin, founded by some of his children “to protect the name, image and moral rights” to his body of work, Roy Export SAS, which owns the copyright to most of his films made after 1918, and Bubbles Incorporated S.A., which owns the copyrights to his image and name.

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Charlie Chaplin : Chaplin Project / Cineteca di Bologna

Their central archive is held at the archives of Montreux, Switzerland and scanned versions of its contents, including 83,630 images, 118 scripts, 976 manuscripts, 7,756 letters, and thousands of other documents, are available for research purposes at the Chaplin Research Centre at the Cineteca di Bologna.

The photographic archive, which includes approximately 10,000 photographs from Chaplin’s life and career, is kept at the Musée de l’Elysée in LausanneSwitzerland. The British Film Institute has also established the Charles Chaplin Research Foundation, and the first international Charles Chaplin Conference was held in London in July 2005.

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Musée de l’Elysée in LausanneSwitzerland

 

 

Statues of Chaplin around the world, located at (left to right)

1. Trenčianske TepliceSlovakia;

2. ChełmżaPoland;

3. WatervilleIreland;

4. LondonUnited Kingdom;

5. Hyderabad, India;

6. AlassioItaly;

7. BarcelonaSpain;

8. VeveySwitzerland

Characterisations

Chaplin is the subject of a biographical filmChaplin (1992) directed by Richard Attenborough, and starring Robert Downey Jr. in the title role. 

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Chaplin (1992)  Dir: Richard Attenborough Cinema Poster

He is also a character in the period drama film The Cat’s Meow (2001), played by Eddie Izzard, and in the made-for-television movie The Scarlett O’Hara War (1980), played by Clive Revill. A television series about Chaplin’s childhood, Young Charlie Chaplin, ran on PBS in 1989, and was nominated for an Emmy Award for Outstanding Children’s Program.

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Young Charlie Chaplin (1989)  Dir: Baz Taylor Poster

Chaplin’s life has also been the subject of several stage productions. Two musicals, Little Tramp and Chaplin, were produced in the early 1990s. In 2006, Thomas Meehan and Christopher Curtis created another musical, Limelight: The Story of Charlie Chaplin, which was first performed at the La Jolla Playhouse in San Diego in 2010. It was adapted for Broadway two years later, re-titled Chaplin – A Musical. Chaplin was portrayed by Robert McClure in both productions. In 2013, two plays about Chaplin premiered in FinlandChaplin at the Svenska Teatern, and Kulkuri (The Tramp) at the Tampere Workers’ Theatre.

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Limelight: The Story of Charlie Chaplin, which was first performed at the La Jolla Playhouse in San Diego in 2010

Chaplin has also been characterised in literary fiction. He is the protagonist of Robert Coover‘s short story “Charlie in the House of Rue” (1980; reprinted in Coover’s 1987 collection A Night at the Movies), and of Glen David Gold‘s Sunnyside (2009), a historical novel set in the First World War period. 

A day in Chaplin’s life in 1909 is dramatised in the chapter entitled “Modern Times” in Alan Moore‘s Jerusalem (2016), a novel set in the author’s home town of Northampton, England.

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Alan Moore‘s Jerusalem (2016)

Awards and recognition

 

Chaplin’s star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, is located at 6755 Hollywood Boulevard. Although the project started in 1958, Chaplin only received his star in 1970 because of his political views.

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Chaplin’s star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame

Chaplin received many awards and honours, especially later in life. In the 1975 New Year Honours, he was appointed a Knight Commander of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire (KBE).

He was also awarded honorary Doctor of Letters degrees by the University of Oxford and the University of Durham in 1962. In 1965, he and Ingmar Bergman were joint winners of the Erasmus Prize and, in 1971, he was appointed a Commander of the National Order of the Legion of Honour by the French government.

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Charles Chaplin receiving his honorary Doctor of Letters degrees by the University of Oxford

From the film industry, Chaplin received a special Golden Lion at the Venice Film Festival in 1972, and a Lifetime Achievement Award from the Lincoln Center Film Society the same year. The latter has since been presented annually to filmmakers as The Chaplin Award. Chaplin was given a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 1972, having been previously excluded because of his political beliefs.

 

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Charles Chaplin receiving his Lifetime Achievement Award from the Lincoln Center Film Society 

Chaplin received three Academy Awards: an Honorary Award for “versatility and genius in acting, writing, directing, and producing The Circus” in 1929, a second Honorary Award for “the incalculable effect he has had in making motion pictures the art form of this century” in 1972, and a Best Score award in 1973 for Limelight (shared with Ray Rasch and Larry Russell). 

He was further nominated in the Best ActorBest Original Screenplay, and Best Picture (as producer) categories for The Great Dictator, and received another Best Original Screenplay nomination for Monsieur Verdoux. In 1976, Chaplin was made a Fellow of the British Academy of Film and Television Arts (BAFTA).

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Charles Chaplin was made a Fellow of the British Academy of Film and Television Arts (BAFTA) and met HM the Queen Elisabeth II

Six of Chaplin’s films have been selected for preservation in the National Film Registry by the United States Library of CongressThe Immigrant (1917), The Kid (1921), The Gold Rush (1925), City Lights (1931), Modern Times (1936), and The Great Dictator (1940).

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Filmography

The British Film Institute has compiled an excellent filmography with plenty of information on Chaplin’s films, including detailed descriptions of the very early shorts.

With Keystone Studios

1914

  • Making a Living
  • Kid Auto Races at Venice
  • Mabel’s Strange Predicament
  • A Thief Catcher
  • Between Showers
  • A Film Johnnie
  • Tango Tangles
  • His Favorite Pastime
  • Cruel, Cruel Love
  • The Star Boarder
  • Mabel at the Wheel
  • Twenty Minutes of Love
  • Caught in a Cabaret
  • Caught in the Rain
  • A Busy Day
  • The Fatal Mallet
  • Her Friend the Bandit
  • The Knockout
  • Mabel’s Busy Day
  • Mabel’s Married Life
  • Laughing Gas
  • The Property Man
  • The Face on the Bar Room Floor
  • Recreation
  • The Masquerader
  • His New Profession
  • The Rounders
  • The New Janitor
  • Those Love Pangs
  • Dough and Dynamite
  • Gentlemen of Nerve
  • His Musical Career
  • His Trysting Place
  • Tillie’s Punctured Romance
  • Getting Acquainted
  • His Prehistoric Past

With Essanay Film Manufacturing Company

1915

  • His New Job
  • A Night Out
  • The Champion
  • In the Park
  • A Jitney Elopement
  • The Tramp
  • By the Sea
  • Work
  • A Woman
  • The Bank
  • Shanghaied
  • A Night in the Show

1916

  • Charlie Chaplin’s Burlesque on Carmen
  • Police

Other Essanay titles

  • Triple Trouble (film put together by Essanay from unfinished Chaplin films two years after he had left the company)
  • His Regeneration [not generally considered a ‘Chaplin’ title although he did make a brief appearance]

With Mutual Film Corporation

1916

  • The Floorwalker
  • The Fireman
  • The Vagabond
  • One A.M
  • The Count
  • The Pawnshop
  • Behind the Screen
  • The Rink

1917

  • Easy Street
  • The Cure
  • The Immigrant
  • The Adventurer

With First National

1918

1919

1921

1922

1923

With United Artists

Other Productions

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Sources and research publications

I used a large number of books, periodicals, magazines and on line libraries in order to research the life and the works of Charles Chaplin.

It has taken longer than a year to gather the photographs for this article.

I sincerely hope that reading this illustrated biography and researching the sources will drive you to further viewing and analysis of Chaplin’s work.

There is much to learn from his unsurpassed cinematic genius. 

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Notes

Wikipedia references and footnotes

  1. Jump up^ An MI5 investigation in 1952 was unable to find any record of Chaplin’s birth.[3]Chaplin biographer David Robinson notes that it is not surprising that his parents failed to register the birth: “It was easy enough, particularly for music hall artists, constantly moving (if they were lucky) from one town to another, to put off and eventually forget this kind of formality; at that time the penalties were not strict or efficiently enforced.”[2] In 2011 a letter sent to Chaplin in the 1970s came to light which claimed that he had been born in a Gypsy caravan at Black Patch Park in Smethwick, Staffordshire. Chaplin’s son Michael has suggested that the information must have been significant to his father in order for him to retain the letter.[4]Regarding the date of his birth, Chaplin believed it to be 16 April, but an announcement in the 11 May 1889 edition of The Magnet stated it as the 15th.[5]
  2. Jump up^ Sydney was born when Hannah Chaplin was 19. The identity of his biological father is not known for sure, but Hannah claimed it was a Mr. Hawkes.[7]
  3. Jump up^ Hannah became ill in May 1896, and was admitted to hospital. Southwark Council ruled that it was necessary to send the children to a workhouse “owing to the absence of their father and the destitution and illness of their mother”.[15]
  4. Jump up^ According to Chaplin, Hannah had been booed off stage, and the manager chose him – as he was standing in the wings – to go on as her replacement. He remembered confidently entertaining the crowd, and receiving laughter and applause.[27]
  5. Jump up^ The Eight Lancashire Lads were still touring until 1908; the exact time Chaplin left the group is unverified, but based on research, A. J. Marriot believes it was in December 1900.[30]
  6. Jump up^ William Gillette co-wrote the Sherlock Holmes play with Arthur Conan Doyle, and had been starring in it since its New York opening in 1899. He had come to London in 1905 to appear in a new play, Clarice. Its reception was poor, and Gillette decided to add an “after-piece” called The Painful Predicament of Sherlock Holmes. This short play was what Chaplin originally came to London to appear in. After three nights, Gillette chose to close Clarice and replace it with Sherlock Holmes. Chaplin had so pleased Gillette with his performance in The Painful Predicament that he was kept on as Billy for the full play.[38]
  7. Jump up^ Chaplin attempted to be a “Jewish comedian”, but the act was poorly received and he performed it only once.[45]
  8. Jump up^ Robinson notes that “this was not strictly true: the character was to take a year or more to evolve its full dimensions and even then – which was its particular strength – it would evolve during the whole rest of his career”.[65]
  9. Jump up^ After leaving Essanay, Chaplin found himself engaged in a legal battle with the company that lasted until 1922. It began when Essanay extended his last film for them, Burlesque on Carmen, from a two-reeler to a feature film (by adding out-takes and new scenes with Leo White) without his consent. Chaplin applied for an injunction to prevent its distribution, but the case was dismissed in court. In a counter-claim, Essanay alleged that Chaplin had broken his contract by not producing the agreed number of films and sued him for $500,000 in damages. In addition, the company compiled another film, Triple Trouble (1918), from various unused Chaplin scenes and new material shot by White.[91]
  10. Jump up^ The British embassy made a statement saying: “[Chaplin] is of as much use to Great Britain now making big money and subscribing to war loans as he would be in the trenches.”[108]
  11. Jump up^ In her memoirs, Lita Grey later claimed that many of her complaints were “cleverly, shockingly enlarged upon or distorted” by her lawyers.[165]
  12. Jump up^ Chaplin left the United States on 31 January 1931, and returned on 10 June 1932.[193]
  13. Jump up^ Chaplin later said that if he had known the extent of the Nazi Party’s actions he would not have made the film; “Had I known the actual horrors of the German concentration camps, I could not have made The Great Dictator; I could not have made fun of the homicidal insanity of the Nazis.”[218]
  14. Jump up^ Speculation about Chaplin’s racial origin existed from the earliest days of his fame, and it was often reported that he was a Jew. Research has uncovered no evidence of this, and when a reporter asked in 1915 if it was true, Chaplin responded, “I have not that good fortune.” The Nazi Party believed that he was Jewish and banned The Gold Rush on this basis. Chaplin responded by playing a Jew in The Great Dictatorand announced, “I did this film for the Jews of the world.”[223]
  15. Jump up^ Nevertheless, both Winston Churchill and President Roosevelt liked the film, which they saw at private screenings before its release. Roosevelt subsequently invited Chaplin to read the film’s final speech over the radio during his January 1941 inauguration, with the speech becoming a “hit” of the celebration.[231] Chaplin was often invited to other patriotic functions to read the speech to audiences during the years of the war.[231]
  16. Jump up^ In December 1942, Barry broke into Chaplin’s home with a handgun and threatened suicide while holding him at gunpoint. This lasted until the next morning, when Chaplin was able to get the gun from her. Barry broke into Chaplin’s home a second time later that month, and he had her arrested. She was then prosecuted for vagrancy in January 1943 – Barry had been unable to pay her hotel bills, and was found wandering the streets of Beverly Hills after taking an overdose of barbiturates.[235]
  17. Jump up^ According to the prosecutor, Chaplin had violated the act when he paid for Barry’s trip to New York in October 1942, when he was also visiting the city. Both Chaplin and Barry agreed that they had met there briefly, and according to Barry, they had sexual intercourse.[237] Chaplin claimed that the last time he was intimate with Barry was May 1942.[238]
  18. Jump up^ Carol Ann’s blood group was B, Barry’s was A, and Chaplin’s was O. In California at this time, blood tests were not accepted as evidence in legal trials.[243]
  19. Jump up^ Chaplin and O’Neill met on 30 October 1942 and married on 16 June 1943 in Carpinteria, California.[246] Eugene O’Neill disowned his daughter as a result.[247]
  20. Jump up^ Chaplin had already attracted the attention of the FBI long before the 1940s, the first mention of him in their files being from 1922. J. Edgar Hoover first requested that a Security Index Card be filed for Chaplin in September 1946, but the Los Angeles office was slow to react and only began active investigation the next spring.[268] The FBI also requested and received help from MI5, particularly on investigating the false claims that Chaplin had not been born in England but in France or Eastern Europe, and that his real name was Israel Thornstein. The MI5 found no evidence of Chaplin being involved in the Communist Party.[269]
  21. Jump up^ In November 1947, Chaplin asked Pablo Picasso to hold a demonstration outside the US embassy in Paris to protest the deportation proceedings of Hanns Eisler, and in December, he took part in a petition asking for the deportation process to be dropped. In 1948, Chaplin supported the unsuccessful presidential campaign of Henry Wallace; and in 1949 he supported two peace conferences and signed a petition protesting the Peekskill incident.[276]
  22. Jump up^ Limelight was conceived as a novel, which Chaplin wrote but never intended for publication.[280]
  23. Jump up^ Before leaving America, Chaplin had ensured that Oona had access to his assets.[293]
  24. Jump up^ Robinson speculates that Switzerland was probably chosen because it “was likely to be the most advantageous from a financial point of view.”[296]
  25. Jump up^ The honour had already been proposed in 1931 and 1956, but was vetoed after a Foreign Office report raised concerns over Chaplin’s political views and private life. They feared the act would damage the reputation of the British honours system and relations with the United States,[335]
  26. Jump up^ Despite asking for an Anglican funeral, Chaplin appeared to be agnostic. In his autobiography he wrote, “I am not religious in the dogmatic sense … I neither believe nor disbelieve in anything … My faith is in the unknown, in all that we do not understand by reason; I believe that … in the realm of the unknown there is an infinite power for good.”[340]
  27. Jump up^ Stan Laurel, Chaplin’s co-performer at the company, remembered that Karno’s sketches regularly inserted “a bit of sentiment right in the middle of a funny music hall turn.”[348]
  28. Jump up^ Although the film had originally been released in 1952, it did not play for one week in Los Angeles because of its boycott, and thus did not meet the criterion for nomination until it was re-released in 1972.[417]
  29. Jump up^ On his birthday, 16 April, City Lights was screened at a gala at the Dominion Theatre in London, the site of its British premiere in 1931.[458] In Hollywood, a screening of a restored version of How to Make Movies was held at his former studio, and in Japan, he was honoured with a musical tribute. Retrospectives of his work were presented that year at The National Film Theatre in London,[459] the Munich Stadtmuseum[459] and the Museum of Modern Art in New York, which also dedicated a gallery exhibition, Chaplin: A Centennial Celebration, to him.[460]

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References

Footnotes

  1. Jump up to:a b Cousins, p. 72; Kemp, pp. 8, 22; Gunning, p. 41; Sarris, p. 139; Hansmeyer, p. 3.
  2. Jump up to:a b Robinson, p. 10.
  3. Jump up^ Whitehead, Tom (17 February 2012). “MI5 Files: Was Chaplin Really a Frenchman and Called Thornstein?”The TelegraphArchived from the original on 24 April 2012. Retrieved 11 April 2012.
  4. Jump up^ “Charlie Chaplin Was ‘Born into a Midland Gipsy Family'”Express and Star. 18 February 2011. Archived from the original on 22 February 2012. Retrieved 17 February 2012.
  5. Jump up^ Robinson, p. xxiv.
  6. Jump up^ Robinson, pp. 3–4, 19.
  7. Jump up to:a b Robinson, p. 3.
  8. Jump up^ Robinson, pp. 5–7.
  9. Jump up^ Weissman & (2009), p. 10.
  10. Jump up^ Robinson, pp. 9–10, 12.
  11. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 13.
  12. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 15.
  13. Jump up^ Robinson, p. xv.
  14. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 16.
  15. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 19.
  16. Jump up^ Chaplin, p. 29.
  17. Jump up^ Robinson, pp. 24–26.
  18. Jump up^ Chaplin, p. 10.
  19. Jump up^ Weissman & (2009), pp. 49–50.
  20. Jump up^ Chaplin, pp. 15, 33.
  21. Jump up to:a b Robinson, p. 27.
  22. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 36.
  23. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 40.
  24. Jump up^ Weissman (2009), p. 6; Chaplin, pp. 71–74; Robinson, p. 35.
  25. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 41.
  26. Jump up^ Chaplin, p. 88; Robinson, pp. 55–56.
  27. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 17; Chaplin, p. 18.
  28. Jump up^ Chaplin, p. 41.
  29. Jump up^ Marriot, p. 4.
  30. Jump up^ Marriot, p. 213.
  31. Jump up^ Chaplin, p. 44.
  32. Jump up^ Louvish, p. 19.
  33. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 39.
  34. Jump up^ Chaplin, p. 76.
  35. Jump up^ Robinson, pp. 44–46.
  36. Jump up^ Marriot, pp. 42–44; Robinson, pp. 46–47; Louvish, p. 26.
  37. Jump up^ Robinson, pp. 45, 49–51, 53, 58.
  38. Jump up^ Robinson, pp. 59–60.
  39. Jump up^ Chaplin, p. 89.
  40. Jump up^ Marriot, p. 217.
  41. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 63.
  42. Jump up^ Robinson, pp. 63–64.
  43. Jump up^ Marriot, p. 71.
  44. Jump up^ Robinson, pp. 64–68; Chaplin, p. 94.
  45. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 68; Marriot, pp. 81–84.
  46. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 71; Kamin, p. 12; Marriot, p. 85.
  47. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 76.
  48. Jump up^ Robinson, pp. 76–77.
  49. Jump up^ Marriot, pp. 103, 109.
  50. Jump up^ Marriot, pp. 126–128; Robinson, pp. 84–85.
  51. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 88.
  52. Jump up^ Robinson, pp. 91–92.
  53. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 82; Brownlow, p. 98.
  54. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 95.
  55. Jump up^ Chaplin, pp. 133–134; Robinson, p. 96.
  56. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 102.
  57. Jump up^ Chaplin, pp. 138–139.
  58. Jump up^ Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis Community Development Project. “Consumer Price Index (estimate) 1800–”. Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Retrieved January 2, 2018.
  59. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 103; Chaplin, p. 139.
  60. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 107.
  61. Jump up^ Chaplin, p. 141.
  62. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 108.
  63. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 110.
  64. Jump up^ Chaplin, p. 145.
  65. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 114.
  66. Jump up to:a b c d Robinson, p. 113.
  67. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 120.
  68. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 121.
  69. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 123.
  70. Jump up^ Maland & (1989), p. 5.
  71. Jump up^ Kamin, p. xi.
  72. Jump up^ Chaplin, p. 153.
  73. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 125; Maland (1989), pp. 8–9.
  74. Jump up^ Robinson, pp. 127–128.
  75. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 131.
  76. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 135.
  77. Jump up^ Robinson, pp. 138–139.
  78. Jump up^ Robinson, pp. 141, 219.
  79. Jump up^ Neibaur, p. 23; Chaplin, p. 165; Robinson, pp. 140, 143.
  80. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 143.
  81. Jump up^ Maland & (1989), p. 20.
  82. Jump up^ Maland & (1989), pp. 6, 14–18.
  83. Jump up^ Maland & (1989), pp. 21–24.
  84. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 142; Neibaur, pp. 23–24.
  85. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 146.
  86. Jump up^ Louvish, p. 87.
  87. Jump up^ Robinson, pp. 152–153; Kamin, p. xi; Maland (1989), p. 10.
  88. Jump up^ Maland & (1989), p. 8.
  89. Jump up^ Louvish, p. 74; Sklar, p. 72.
  90. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 149.
  91. Jump up^ Robinson, pp. 149–152.
  92. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 156.
  93. Jump up^ “C. Chaplin, Millionaire-Elect”Photoplay. Chicago, Illinois, USA: Photoplay Publishing Co. IX(6): 58. May 1916. Archived from the original on 17 January 2014.
  94. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 160.
  95. Jump up^ Larcher, p. 29.
  96. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 159.
  97. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 164.
  98. Jump up^ Robinson, pp. 165–166.
  99. Jump up^ Robinson, pp. 169–173.
  100. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 175.
  101. Jump up^ Robinson, pp. 179–180.
  102. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 191.
  103. Jump up^ “”The Happiest Days of My Life”: Mutual”Charlie Chaplin. British Film Institute. Archivedfrom the original on 22 November 2012. Retrieved 28 April 2012.
  104. Jump up^ Brownlow, p. 45; Robinson, p. 191; Louvish, p. 104; Vance (2003), p. 203.
  105. Jump up^ Chaplin, p. 188.
  106. Jump up^ Brownlow, Kevin; Gill, David (1983). Unknown Chaplin. Thames Silent.
  107. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 185.
  108. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 186.
  109. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 187.
  110. Jump up to:a b Robinson, p. 210.
  111. Jump up^ Robinson, pp. 215–216.
  112. Jump up to:a b Robinson, p. 213.
  113. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 221.
  114. Jump up^ Schickel, p. 8.
  115. Jump up^ Chaplin, p. 203; Robinson, pp. 225–226.
  116. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 228.
  117. Jump up to:a b “Independence Won: First National”Charlie Chaplin. British Film Institute. Archived from the original on 24 March 2012. Retrieved 5 May 2012.
  118. Jump up^ Chaplin, p. 208.
  119. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 229.
  120. Jump up^ Robinson, pp. 237, 241.
  121. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 244.
  122. Jump up^ Chaplin, p. 218.
  123. Jump up^ Robinson, pp. 241–245.
  124. Jump up^ Chaplin, pp. 219–220; Balio, p. 12; Robinson, p. 267.
  125. Jump up to:a b Robinson, p. 269.
  126. Jump up^ Chaplin, p. 223.
  127. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 246.
  128. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 248.
  129. Jump up^ Robinson, pp. 246–249; Louvish, p. 141.
  130. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 251.
  131. Jump up^ Chaplin, p. 235; Robinson, p. 259.
  132. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 252; Louvish, p. 148.
  133. Jump up^ Louvish, p. 146.
  134. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 253.
  135. Jump up^ Chaplin, pp. 255–253.
  136. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 261.
  137. Jump up^ Chaplin, pp. 233–234.
  138. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 265.
  139. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 282.
  140. Jump up^ Robinson, pp. 295–300.
  141. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 310.
  142. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 302.
  143. Jump up^ Robinson, pp. 311–312.
  144. Jump up^ Robinson, pp. 319–321.
  145. Jump up^ Robinson, pp. 318–321.
  146. Jump up^ Louvish, p. 193.
  147. Jump up^ Robinson, pp. 302, 322.
  148. Jump up^ Louvish, p. 195.
  149. Jump up^ Kemp, p. 64; Chaplin, p. 299.
  150. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 337.
  151. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 358.
  152. Jump up^ Robinson, pp. 340–345.
  153. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 354.
  154. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 357.
  155. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 358; Kemp, p. 63.
  156. Jump up^ Kemp, pp. 63–64; Robinson, pp. 339, 353; Louvish, p. 200; Schickel, p. 19.
  157. Jump up^ Kemp, p. 64.
  158. Jump up^ Vance & (2003), p. 154.
  159. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 346.
  160. Jump up^ Chaplin and Vance, p. 53; Vance (2003), p. 170.
  161. Jump up^ Robinson, pp. 355, 368.
  162. Jump up^ Robinson, pp. 350, 368.
  163. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 371.
  164. Jump up^ Louvish, p. 220; Robinson, pp. 372–374.
  165. Jump up^ Maland & (1989), p. 96.
  166. Jump up^ Robinson, pp. 372–374; Louvish, pp. 220–221.
  167. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 378.
  168. Jump up^ Maland (1989), pp. 99–105; Robinson, p. 383.
  169. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 360.
  170. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 361.
  171. Jump up^ Robinson, pp. 371, 381.
  172. Jump up^ Louvish, p. 215.
  173. Jump up to:a b Robinson, pp. 382.
  174. Jump up to:a b Pfeiffer, Lee. “The Circus – Film by Chaplin [1928]”Encyclopædia BritannicaArchived from the original on 5 September 2015. Retrieved 9 August 2015.
  175. Jump up^ Brownlow, p. 73; Louvish, p. 224.
  176. Jump up^ Chaplin, p. 322.
  177. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 389; Chaplin, p. 321.
  178. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 465; Chaplin, p. 322; Maland (2007), p. 29.
  179. Jump up to:a b Robinson, p. 389; Maland (2007), p. 29.
  180. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 398; Maland (2007), pp. 33–34, 41.
  181. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 409, records the date filming ended as 22 September 1930.
  182. Jump up to:a b Chaplin, p. 324.
  183. Jump up^ “Chaplin as a composer”. CharlieChaplin.com. Archived from the original on 5 July 2011.
  184. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 410.
  185. Jump up^ Chaplin, p. 325.
  186. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 413.
  187. Jump up^ Maland (2007), pp. 108–110; Chaplin, p. 328; Robinson, p. 415.
  188. Jump up to:a b “United Artists and the Great Features”Charlie Chaplin. British Film Institute. Archivedfrom the original on 6 April 2012. Retrieved 21 June2012.
  189. Jump up^ Maland & (2007), pp. 10–11.
  190. Jump up^ Vance, p. 208.
  191. Jump up^ Chaplin, p. 360.
  192. Jump up^ Louvish, p. 243; Robinson, p. 420.
  193. Jump up^ Robinson, pp. 664–666.
  194. Jump up^ Robinson, pp. 429–441.
  195. Jump up^ Silverberg 2006, pp. 1-2.
  196. Jump up^ Larcher, p. 64.
  197. Jump up^ Chaplin, pp. 372, 375.
  198. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 453; Maland (1989), p. 147.
  199. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 451.
  200. Jump up^ Louvish, p. 256.
  201. Jump up^ Larcher, p. 63; Robinson, pp. 457–458.
  202. Jump up^ Louvish, p. 257.
  203. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 465.
  204. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 466.
  205. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 468.
  206. Jump up^ Robinson, pp. 469–472, 474.
  207. Jump up^ Maland & (1989), p. 150.
  208. Jump up^ Maland & (1989), pp. 144–147.
  209. Jump up^ Maland (1989), p. 157; Robinson, p. 473.
  210. Jump up^ Schneider, p. 125.
  211. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 479.
  212. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 469.
  213. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 483.
  214. Jump up^ Robinson, pp. 509–510.
  215. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 485; Maland (1989), p. 159.
  216. Jump up^ Chaplin, p. 386.
  217. Jump up^ Schickel, p. 28; Maland (1989), pp. 165, 170; Louvish, p. 271; Robinson, p. 490; Larcher, p. 67; Kemp, p. 158.
  218. Jump up to:a b Chaplin, p. 388.
  219. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 496.
  220. Jump up^ Maland & (1989), p. 165.
  221. Jump up^ Maland & (1989), p. 164.
  222. Jump up^ Chaplin, p. 387.
  223. Jump up^ Robinson, pp. 154–155.
  224. Jump up^ Tunzelmann, Alex von (2012-11-22). “Chaplin: a little tramp through Charlie’s love affairs”the Guardian. Retrieved 2018-02-19.
  225. Jump up^ Maland & (1989), pp. 172–173.
  226. Jump up^ Robinson, pp. 505, 507.
  227. Jump up^ Maland & (1989), pp. 169, 178–179.
  228. Jump up^ Maland (1989), p. 176; Schickel, pp. 30–31.
  229. Jump up^ Maland, p. 181; Louvish, p. 282; Robinson, p. 504.
  230. Jump up^ Maland & (1989), pp. 178–179.
  231. Jump up to:a b Gehring, p. 133.
  232. Jump up^ Pfeiffer, Lee. “The Great Dictator”Encyclopædia BritannicaArchived from the original on 6 July 2015. Retrieved 16 March 2013.
  233. Jump up^ Maland & (1989), pp. 197–198.
  234. Jump up^ Maland & (1989), p. 200.
  235. Jump up to:a b Maland & (1989), pp. 198–201.
  236. Jump up^ Nowell-Smith, p. 85.
  237. Jump up to:a b Maland & (1989), pp. 204–205.
  238. Jump up^ Robinson, pp. 523–524.
  239. Jump up^ Friedrich, pp. 190, 393.
  240. Jump up^ Maland & (1989), p. 215.
  241. Jump up^ Maland & (1989), pp. 214–215.
  242. Jump up^ Louvish, p. xiii.
  243. Jump up^ Maland & (1989), pp. 205–206.
  244. Jump up^ Frost, pp. 74–88; Maland (1989), pp. 207–213; Sbardellati and Shaw, p. 508; Friedrich, p. 393.
  245. Jump up^ Louvish, p. 135.
  246. Jump up^ Chaplin, pp. 423–444; Robinson, p. 670.
  247. Jump up^ Sheaffer, pp. 623, 658.
  248. Jump up^ Chaplin, pp. 423, 477.
  249. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 519.
  250. Jump up^ Robinson, pp. 671–675.
  251. Jump up^ Chaplin, p. 426.
  252. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 520.
  253. Jump up^ Chaplin, p. 412.
  254. Jump up^ Robinson, pp. 519–520.
  255. Jump up^ Louvish, p. 304; Sbardellati and Shaw, p. 501.
  256. Jump up^ Louvish, pp. 296–297; Robinson, pp. 538–543; Larcher, p. 77.
  257. Jump up^ Louvish, pp. 296–297; Sbardellati and Shaw, p. 503.
  258. Jump up^ Maland & (1989), pp. 235–245, 250.
  259. Jump up^ Maland & (1989), p. 250.
  260. Jump up^ Louvish, p. 297.
  261. Jump up^ Chaplin, p. 444.
  262. Jump up^ Maland & (1989), p. 251.
  263. Jump up^ Robinson, pp. 538–539; Friedrich, p. 287.
  264. Jump up^ Maland & (1989), p. 253.
  265. Jump up^ Maland & (1989), pp. 221–226, 253–254.
  266. Jump up^ Larcher, p. 75; Sbardellati and Shaw, p. 506; Louvish, p. xiii.
  267. Jump up^ Sbardellati, p. 152.
  268. Jump up to:a b Maland & (1989), pp. 265–266.
  269. Jump up^ Norton-Taylor, Richard (17 February 2012). “MI5 Spied on Charlie Chaplin after the FBI Asked for Help to Banish Him from US”The Guardian. London. Archived from the original on 18 November 2010. Retrieved 17 February 2012.
  270. Jump up^ Louvish, pp. xiv, 310; Chaplin, p. 458; Maland (1989), p. 238.
  271. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 544.
  272. Jump up^ Maland & (1989), pp. 255–256.
  273. Jump up^ Friedrich, p. 286; Maland (1989), p. 261.
  274. Jump up^ Larcher, p. 80; Sbardellati and Shaw, p. 510; Louvish, p. xiii; Robinson, p. 545.
  275. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 545.
  276. Jump up^ Maland & (1989), pp. 256–257.
  277. Jump up^ Maland (1989), pp. 288–290; Robinson, pp. 551–552; Louvish, p. 312.
  278. Jump up^ Maland & (1989), p. 293.
  279. Jump up^ Louvish, p. 317.
  280. Jump up^ Robinson, pp. 549–570.
  281. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 562.
  282. Jump up^ Robinson, pp. 567–568.
  283. Jump up^ Louvish, p. 326.
  284. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 570.
  285. Jump up to:a b c Maland & (1989), p. 280.
  286. Jump up^ Maland (1989), pp. 280–287; Sbardellati and Shaw, pp. 520–521.
  287. Jump up^ Chaplin, p. 455.
  288. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 573.
  289. Jump up^ Louvish, p. 330.
  290. Jump up^ Maland & (1989), pp. 295–298, 307–311.
  291. Jump up^ Maland & (1989), p. 189.
  292. Jump up^ Larcher, p. 89.
  293. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 580.
  294. Jump up^ Dale Bechtel (2002). “Film Legend Found Peace on Lake Geneva”http://www.swissinfo.ch/eng. Vevey. Archived from the original on 9 December 2014. Retrieved 5 December 2014.
  295. Jump up^ Robinson, pp. 580–581.
  296. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 581.
  297. Jump up^ Robinson, pp. 584, 674.
  298. Jump up^ Lynn, pp. 466–467; Robinson, p. 584; Balio, pp. 17–21.
  299. Jump up^ Maland (1989), p. 318; Robinson, p. 584.
  300. Jump up to:a b Robinson, p. 585.
  301. Jump up^ Louvish, pp. xiv–xv.
  302. Jump up^ Louvish, p. 341; Maland (1989), pp. 320–321; Robinson, pp. 588–589; Larcher, pp. 89–90.
  303. Jump up^ Robinson, pp. 587–589.
  304. Jump up^ Epstein, p. 137; Robinson, p. 587.
  305. Jump up^ Lynn, p. 506; Louvish, p. 342; Maland (1989), p. 322.
  306. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 591.
  307. Jump up^ Louvish, p. 347.
  308. Jump up^ Vance & (2003), p. 329.
  309. Jump up to:a b Maland & (1989), p. 326.
  310. Jump up to:a b Robinson, pp. 594–595.
  311. Jump up^ Lynn, pp. 507–508.
  312. Jump up to:a b Robinson, pp. 598–599.
  313. Jump up^ Lynn, p. 509; Maland (1989), p. 330.
  314. Jump up^ Robinson, pp. 602–605.
  315. Jump up^ Robinson, pp. 605–607; Lynn, pp. 510–512.
  316. Jump up to:a b Robinson, pp. 608–609.
  317. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 612.
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  319. Jump up^ Vance & (2003), p. 330.
  320. Jump up to:a b Epstein, pp. 192–196.
  321. Jump up^ Lynn, p. 518; Maland (1989), p. 335.
  322. Jump up to:a b Robinson, p. 619.
  323. Jump up^ Epstein, p. 203.
  324. Jump up^ Robinson, pp. 620–621.
  325. Jump up to:a b Robinson, p. 621.
  326. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 625.
  327. Jump up^ “Charlie Chaplin Prepares for Return to United States after Two Decades”. A&E Television Networks. Archived from the original on 18 November 2010. Retrieved 7 June 2010.
  328. Jump up^ Maland & (1989), p. 347.
  329. Jump up to:a b Robinson, pp. 623–625.
  330. Jump up^ Robinson, pp. 627–628.
  331. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 626.
  332. Jump up to:a b Thomas, David (26 December 2002). “When Chaplin Played Father”The TelegraphArchived from the original on 15 July 2012. Retrieved 26 June 2012.
  333. Jump up to:a b Robinson, pp. 626–628.
  334. Jump up^ Lynn, pp. 534–536.
  335. Jump up^ Reynolds, Paul (21 July 2002). “Chaplin Knighthood Blocked”. BBC. Archived from the original on 18 November 2010. Retrieved 15 February 2010.
  336. Jump up^ “To be Ordinary Knights Commanders …” The London Gazette (1st supplement). No. 46444. 31 December 1974. p. 8.
  337. Jump up^ “Little Tramp Becomes Sir Charles”New York Daily News. 5 March 1975. Archived from the original on 3 March 2016.
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  355. Jump up^ Robinson, pp. 173, 197, 310, 489.
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  359. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 460.
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  361. Jump up^ Robinson, pp. 234–235; Cousins, p. 71.
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  375. Jump up^ Robinson, p. 212.
  376. Jump up^ Brownlow, p. 30.
  377. Jump up^ Kemp, p. 63.
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  380. Jump up^ Mast, pp. 83–92; Kamin, pp. 33–34.
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  385. Jump up^ Dale, p. 17.
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  390. Jump up^ Larcher, p. 75.
  391. Jump up^ Louvish, p. 204.
  392. Jump up^ Kuriyama, p. 31.
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  397. Jump up^ Larcher, pp. 62–89.
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  403. Jump up^ Epstein, pp. 84–85; Mast, pp. 83–92; Louvish, p. 185.
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  405. Jump up^ Chaplin, p. 250.
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  424. Jump up^ Schickel, p. 41.
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  485. Jump up^ “National Film Registry”. Library of Congress. Archived from the original on 28 March 2013. Retrieved 5 November 2013.

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