Charlie Chaplin Biography
Charlie Chaplin was a comedic British actor
who became one of the biggest stars of the 20th century's silent-film era.
Synopsis
Born on April 16, 1889, in
London, England, Charlie Chaplin worked with a children's dance troupe before
making his mark on the big screen. His character "The Tramp" relied
on pantomime and quirky movements to become an iconic figure of the silent-film
era. Chaplin went on to become a director, making films such as City
Lights and Modern Times, and co-founded the United Artists
Corporation. He died in Corsier-sur-Vevey, Vaud, Switzerland, on December 25,
1977.
Early
Life
Famous for his character "The
Tramp," the sweet little man with a bowler hat, mustache and cane, Charlie
Chaplin was an iconic figure of the silent-film era and one of film's first
superstars, elevating the industry in a way few could have ever imagined.
Born Charles Spencer Chaplin
in London, England, on April 16, 1889, Charlie Chaplin's rise to fame is a true
rags-to-riches story. His father, a notorious drinker, abandoned Chaplin, his
mother and his older half-brother, Sydney, not long after Chaplin's birth. That
left Chaplin and his brother in the hands of their mother, a vaudevillian and
music hall singer who went by the stage name Lily Harley.
Chaplin's mother, who would
later suffer severe mental issues and have to be committed to an asylum, was
able to support her family for a few years. But in a performance that would
introduce her youngest boy to the spotlight, Hannah inexplicably lost her voice
in the middle of a show, prompting the production manager to push the
five-year-old Chaplin, whom he'd heard sing, onto the stage to replace her.
Chaplin lit up the
audience, wowing them with his natural presence and comedic angle (at one point
he imitated his mother's cracking voice). But the episode meant the end for
Hannah. Her singing voice never returned, and she eventually ran out of money.
For a time, Charlie and Sydney had to make a new, temporary home for themselves
in London's tough workhouses.
Early
Career
Armed with his mother's
love of the stage, Chaplin was determined to make it in show business himself,
and in 1897, using his mother's contacts, landed with a clog-dancing troupe
named the Eight Lancashire Lads. It was a short stint, and not a terribly
profitable one, forcing the go-getter Chaplin to make ends meet any way he
could.
"I (was) newsvendor,
printer, toymaker, doctor's boy, etc., but during these occupational
digressions, I never lost sight of my ultimate aim to become an actor,"
Chaplin later recounted. "So, between jobs I would polish my shoes, brush
my clothes, put on a clean collar and make periodic calls at a theatrical
agency."
Eventually other stage work
did come his way. Chaplin made his acting debut as a pageboy in a production of
Sherlock Holmes. From there he toured with a vaudeville outfit named
Casey's Court Circus and in 1908 teamed up with the Fred Karno pantomime
troupe, where Chaplin became one of its stars as the Drunk in the comedic
sketch A Night in an English Music Hall.
With the Karno troupe,
Chaplin got his first taste of the United States, where he caught the eye of
film producer Mack Sennett, who signed Chaplin to a contract for a $150 a week.
Film
Career
In 1914 Chaplin made his
film debut in a somewhat forgettable one-reeler called Make a Living. To
differentiate himself from the clad of other actors in Sennett films, Chaplin
decided to play a single identifiable character, and "The Little
Tramp" was born, with audiences getting their first taste of him in Kid
Auto Races at Venice (1914).
Over the next year, Chaplin
appeared in 35 movies, a lineup that included Tillie's Punctured Romance,
film's first full-length comedy. In 1915 Chaplin left Sennett to join the
Essanay Company, which agreed to pay him $1,250 a week. It is with Essanay that
Chaplin, who by this time had hired his brother Sydney to be his business
manager, rose to stardom.
During his first year with
the company, Chaplin made 14 films, including The Tramp (1915).
Generally regarded as the actor's first classic, the story establishes
Chaplin's character as the unexpected hero when he saves the farmer's daughter
from a gang of robbers.
By the age of 26, Chaplin,
just three years removed from his vaudeville days, was a superstar. He'd moved
over to the Mutual Company, which paid him a whopping $670,000 a year. The
money made Chaplin a wealthy man, but it did not seem to derail his artistic
drive. With Mutual, he made some of his best work, including One A.M.
(1916), The Rink (1916), The Vagabond (1916) and Easy Street
(1917).
Through his work, Chaplin
came to be known as a gruelling perfectionist. His love for experimentation
often meant countless takes, and it was not uncommon for him to order the
rebuilding of an entire set. Nor was it uncommon for him to begin filming with
one leading actor, realize he'd made a mistake in his casting and start again
with someone new.
But the results were hard
to refute. During the 1920s, Chaplin's career blossomed even more. During the decade,
he made some landmark films, including The Kid (1921), The Pilgrim
(1923), A Woman in Paris (1923), The Gold Rush (1925), a movie
Chaplin would later say he wanted to be remembered by, and The Circus
(1928). United Artists, a company Chaplin co-founded in 1919 with Douglas
Fairbanks, Mary Pickford, and D.W. Griffith, released the latter three.
Off-Screen
Drama
Chaplin became equally
famous for his life off-screen. His affairs with actresses who had roles in his
movies were numerous. Some, however, ended better than others did.
In 1918, he quickly married
16-year-old Mildred Harris. The marriage lasted just two years, and in 1924 he
wed again, to another 16-year-old, actress Lita Grey, whom he'd cast in The
Gold Rush. An unplanned pregnancy, and the resulting union, which produced
two sons for Chaplin (Charles Jr. and Sydney), was an unhappy one for both
partners, had brought on the marriage. They divorced in 1927.
In 1936, Chaplin married
again, this time to a chorus girl who went by the film name of Paulette
Goddard. They lasted until 1942. A nasty paternity suit followed that with
another actress, Joan Barry, in which tests proved Chaplin was not the father
of her daughter, but a jury still ordered him to pay child support.
In 1943, Chaplin married
18-year-old Oona O'Neill, the daughter of playwright Eugene O'Neill.
Unexpectedly the two would go on to have a happy marriage, one that would
result in eight children.
Later Films
Chaplin kept creating
interesting and engaging films in the 1930s. In 1931, he released City
Lights, a critical and commercial success that incorporated music Chaplin
scored himself.
More acclaim came with Modern
Times (1936), a biting commentary about the state of the world's economic
and political infrastructures. The film, which did incorporate sound, was, in
part, the result of an 18-month world tour Chaplin had taken between 1931 and
1932, a trip during which he'd witnessed severe economic angst and a sharp rise
in nationalism in Europe and elsewhere.
Chaplin spoke even louder
in The Great Dictator (1940), which pointedly ridiculed the governments
of Hitler and Mussolini. "I want to see the return of decency and
kindness," Chaplin said around the time of the film's release. "I'm
just a human being who wants to see this country a real democracy . . ."
However, Chaplin was not
universally embraced. His romantic liaisons led to his rebuke by some women's
groups, which in turn led to him being barred from entering some U.S. states.
As the Cold War age settled into existence, Chaplin did not withhold his fire
from injustices he saw taking place in the name of fighting Communism in his
adopted country of the United States.
Chaplin soon became a
target of the right-wing conservatives. Representative John E. Rankin of
Mississippi pushed for his deportation. In 1952, the Attorney General of the
United States obliged when he announced that Chaplin, who was sailing to
Britain on vacation, would not permitted to return to the United States unless
he could prove "moral worth." The incensed Chaplin said good-bye to
United States and took up residence on a small farm in Corsier-sur-Vevey,
Switzerland.
Final
Years
Nearing the end of his
life, Chaplin did make one last visit to the United States in 1972, when he was
given an honorary Academy Award. The trip came just five years after Chaplin's
final film, A Countess from Hong Kong (1967), the filmmaker's first and
only colour movie. Despite a cast that included Sophia Loren and Marlon Brando,
the film did poorly at the box office. In 1975, Chaplin received further
recognition when Queen Elizabeth knighted him.
In the early morning hours
of December 25, 1977, Charlie Chaplin died at his home in Corsier-sur-Vevey,
Vaud, Switzerland. His wife, Oona, and seven of his children were at his
bedside at the time of his passing. In a twist that might very well have come
out of one of his films, Chaplin's body was stolen not long after he was buried
from his grave near Lake Geneva in Switzerland by two men who demanded $400,000
for its return. The men were arrested and Chaplin's body was recovered 11 weeks
later.
With affection,
Ruben
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