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Chicago, January 12th, 1927

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Charlie was en route to New York to meet with his lawyer about his former press agent Jim Tully's Pictorial Review articles which he had tried (unsuccessfully) to keep from getting published. The day after he left California by train, Lita Grey filed her famous, 42-page divorce complaint. At a stop in Chicago, Chaplin was met by a throng of reporters at the train station.  When asked about the case, Chaplin said: "It's terrible, too terrible for words." He went on to say that Lita had "defiled" his reputation and that he planned to contest the divorce and file a cross bill. One reporter asked him about his children. "I have two wonderful children," he said. "They are very different temperaments, one being very musical, the other more serious.""Which is your favorite?" he was asked. "Well, the baby is the baby," he replied, "and all babies are marvelous."* 



*Chicago Tribune, January 14, 1927

Playing piano, Summit Drive house, c. 1948

Edna Purviance (October 21, 1895 - January 13, 1958)

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Edna died of throat cancer1 at the Motion Picture Country Home 56 years ago today. She was 63. Her funeral was held at Forest Lawn Memorial Park, but she was interred at Grand View Cemetery in Glendale, CA. Edna was a widow at the time of her death. Her husband, Jack Squire, passed away in 1945.

Edna often wrote to Chaplin over the years, even after his move to Switzerland. Although he admitted that he never responded to her letters, they must have meant something to him, especially since he includes two of them in the closing pages of his autobiography. The following is one of those letters. In it, Edna tells Charlie about her horrific cancer treatments and thanks him for keeping her on his payroll. As always, Edna ends her letter with a joke:

November 13th, 1956
Dear Charlie,
Here I am again with a heart full of thanks, and back in the hospital (Cedars of Lebanon), taking cobalt X-ray treatment on my neck. There cannot be a hell hereafter! . . . Am thankful my innards are O.K., this is purely and simply local, so they say. All of which reminds me of the fellow standing on the corner of Seventh and Broadway tearing up little bits of paper and throwing them to the four winds. A cop comes along and asks him what was the big idea. He answers, "Just keeping the elephants away." The cop says, "There aren't any elephants in this district." The fellow answers: "Well, it works, doesn't it?" This is my silly for the day, so forgive me.
Hope you and the family are well and enjoying everything you have worked for.
Love always,
Edna 2
In My Autobiography, Charlie wrote that shortly after he received this letter, Edna died. "And so the world grows young. And youth takes over. And we who have lived a little longer become more estranged as we journey on our way."

After Edna's passing, Charlie was asked by an interviewer if he remembered her. He responded, "How could I forget Edna? She was with me when it all began."3


Charlie and Edna on the set of Work, 1915

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According to Edna's death certificate, she died of "carcinoma of the tonsil with metastasis."
Charles Chaplin, My Autobiography, 1964
3David Toll, Edna Purviance, Nevada's Forgotten Movie Star 

Chaplin with Bela Lugosi and Gloria Swanson, c. late 1940s

"The Chaplin Coat Of Arms"

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This sketch was drawn by Chaplin in 1935 when working on the score for Modern Times and presented to his musical assistant David Raksin.


From "Life With Charlie Chaplin" by David Raksin,
 Quarterly Journal of the Library of Congress, Summer 1983

With Sid Grauman at the Hollywood premiere of The Gold Rush, June 1925

Chaplin & his eldest sons on the set of Monsieur Verdoux, c. 1946

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Sydney is on the left, Charlie, Jr. on the right.
Both boys had just returned from service in WWII.

Charlie, Edna Purviance, & Emery Rogers, 1919

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Rogers was vice president of the Syd Chaplin Aircraft Corporation which provided the first airline service between Los Angeles and Catalina Island. Edna was the honored guest at the inaugural flight in July 1919 and christened one of the seaplanes by breaking a bottle of grape juice on it. She then accompanied Rogers and another pilot on the flight to Catalina.


Charlie playing his fiddle on the set of THE VAGABOND, 1916

Charlie at his studio swimming pool, c. 1926

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Charlie is in the middle with dyed black hair (for The Circus).

With Flamenco dancers Antonio & Rosario (aka Los Chavalillos Sevillanos--"The Kids from Seville"), NYC, 1940

Article 2

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Thanks to "JustMe" for my little packet of goodies from the San Francisco Silent Film Festival last weekend. Sounds like a great time was had by all. I wish I could have been there. 

The program was written by Jeffrey Vance, who also introduced the films, which included The Kid& The Gold Rush with live accompaniment by the SF Chamber Orchestra conducted by Timothy Brock. There was also a showing of Kid Auto Races At Venice as well as some Mutuals. It's hard to see the button on the left because of the flash, but it has Charlie and Edna on it. I love the mask!

Thanks again, JM!




Short video clip, New York City, January 1927

Behind the camera

At a tennis match with Paulette, 1937

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The big rock Paulette is wearing was supposedly a gift from Chaplin.

Cary Grant greeting Chaplin in 1972

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Grant first encountered Chaplin when he saw the Fred Karno troupe perform in England as a young boy. He was also briefly married to the blind girl from City Lights, Virginia Cherrill. In 1953, a few months after Chaplin's reentry permit was revoked by the U.S. government, Grant held a press conference to announce his retirement. He used this opportunity to speak out publicly in defense of Chaplin, his idol: "He has given great pleasure to millions of people, and I hope he returns to Hollywood. Personally, I don’t think he is a Communist, but whatever his political affiliations, they are secondary to the fact that he is a great entertainer. We should not go off the deep end."

Cary Grant was born 110 years ago today.

On the set of The Floorwalker, 1916

Chaplin observes a painting of himself as the Tramp, c. 1950s

Rare audio of Charlie delivering the final speech from The Great Dictator at the third inaugural ball of Franklin Delano Roosevelt, January 19th, 1941

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Halfway through the speech Charlie’s throat gets dry & begins to crack (probably from nerves) and he pauses and asks for water. In his autobiography, Charlie recalled that a glass could not be found, so water was brought to him in an envelope.1

Charlie & Mickey Rooney, who also performed, talk to First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt
 at the inaugural gala which was held the evening before  the swearing-in ceremony
 (which Charlie also attended). 

1 Contemporary newspaper articles (as well as the announcer in the clip) say that master of ceremonies, Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., brought Charlie a "glass" of water.

List of dates for live orchestral screenings of Chaplin films

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