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CITY LIGHTS set visit

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Charlie is at far right. Other familiar faces include: Henry Bergman (far left, in the back), Virginia Cherrill, Douglas Fairbanks, & Toraichi Kono (behind Doug). That might be Alf Reeves behind Charlie (in the hat) but it's hard to tell.

Photo credit: Charles Chaplin In Japan by Ono Hiroyuki


Rehearsing the tightrope scene in THE CIRCUS

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These scenes were filmed high up in the circus tent with Chaplin suspended only a few feet above a wooden platform which is out of camera range. Assistant director Harry Crocker, who also portrays “Rex, King Of The Air" is at bottom left. Like Chaplin, he also learned to walk the tightrope for his role and claimed that in some of the scenes his legs doubled for Charlie’s when he needed a rest.

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Swiping thoughts, ideas, or basically any content from this blog and posting it on your own blog is called plagiarism. Twice today I have come across Tumblr blogs with my content on them and no citation whatsoever. Not just pictures (I'm used to that, unfortunately), but text. One of these blogs belongs to a person who should know better and is basically trying to make themselves appear more knowledgeable than they really are. I want my blog to be used as a resource and if someone finds content on here useful for their own blog, or any other project, that's great, but please remember where you found it.

Jessica

Charlie & Paulette with King Vidor, his wife, Betty Hill, and stepson, Robert, by the Chaplin pool, c.1936

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The identity of the boy is just a guess. He doesn't look like either of Charlie's sons. Vidor himself only had daughters but his third wife, Betty, had a son by a previous marriage. If this is Robert, he would be killed in action during WWII.

ONE A.M., released August 7th, 1916

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Except for a brief appearance at the beginning by Albert Austin, this film features Chaplin in a solo performance, which he later called “a pure exercise in mime & technical virtuosity"1 Nevertheless it was an experiment he never repeated. Apparently Chaplin didn't think too highly of the film when it was first released and famously confided to one of his collaborators, “One more film like that and it will be goodbye Charlie.”


1Chaplin, My Life In Pictures, 1974
2Huff, Charlie Chaplin, 1951

Throwback Thursday

A Comedian In New York (1925): Charlie at the Ritz-Carlton

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Taken August 4th, 1925

On the phone in suite #6251:

New York Times, Aug. 9, 1925

On the rooftop:

With Gloria Swanson
Chaplin and publicist Eddie Manson.

See other rooftop photos here and here.

Coming up in next week's edition of "A Comedian In New York (1925)": Who bit Charlie's lip?

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1Harrisburg Telegraph, August 14th, 1925.

Very short clip of Charlie and Paulette at a tennis match from Hollywood On Parade newsreel, 1933

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Charlie does his favorite joke where he turns his hat and poses as Napoleon--a bit he was still doing as an old man.

THE BANK, released 99 years ago today

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The dream sequence in The Bank was borrowed from the Fred Karno sketch “Jimmy The Fearless” in which Chaplin starred as Jimmy, a working-class boy who becomes a hero in his dreams.
"You can see Jimmy The Fearless all over some of his pictures--dream sequences, for instance. He was fond of them, especially in his early pictures. And when it comes right down to it, I've always thought that poor, brave, dreamy Jimmy one day grew up to be Charlie the Tramp." (Stan Laurel quoted in John McCabe's Charlie Chaplin)
The Bank was Chaplin's tenth film for Essanay.


Photos by Witzel, 1914

THE FACE ON THE BARROOM FLOOR, released August 10th, 1914

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Chaplin burlesques the poem "The Face Upon The Floor" by Hugh Antoine d'Arcy & uses several lines from the poem as title cards. The film's flashback storytelling technique is unusual for Chaplin (he uses it only twice more in Shoulder Arms& Limelight). It was also an early attempt by to draw sympathy as well as laughter from his audience.


24 hours of Chaplin on TCM (USA) beginning Thursday at 6:00am EST

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The tribute will include the U.S. premiere of a new French documentary by Serge Bromberg and Eric Lange called The Birth Of The Tramp at 8:00pm (EST).

See the full schedule here: http://summer.tcm.com/day-14/charles-chaplin/schedule

This Chaplin film marathon is part of TCM's annual "Summer Under The Stars" festival which features the films of a different star each day of the month of August.


Chaplin with actress & longtime scenarist for Cecil B. DeMille, Jeanie MacPherson

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MacPherson was also one of the first licensed female pilots in the late 1910s. She was known for her barnstorming stunts.

Picture-Play, September 1917

Random Snippet

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New York Times, April 25th, 1929

According to a Dec. 1929 Screenland article by Rob Wagner, before Charlie began having his hair professionally dyed, he applied a "daily smearing of mascara" to cover up his gray but it became "too messy & irksome." I can well imagine.

Lauren Bacall & Sydney Chaplin during rehearsals for the play, Goodbye Charlie, 1959


At the beach, c.1922

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Front row: Claire Windsor, Lila Lee, Ruth Wightman
Back row: CC, Sam Goldwyn, Gouverneur Morris

Both Claire Windsor and Lila Lee were linked romantically with Chaplin in the early 1920s

Today's the day! 24 hours of Chaplin on TCM

A Comedian in New York (1925): Who bit Charlie's lip?

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Here's Variety's version the lip-biting incident:
Previous to the opening of "The Gold Rush" Chaplin got a flood of publicity in New York without the assistance of a press agent. It was suspected the p. a. sent out, verbally, an account of the comedian's illness. That was picked up by the dailies and carried along, until the "News"published a story that Chaplin had been bitten on the lip by a chorus girl of the Ziegfeld "Follies." The "News" named Katherine Burke of the "Follies" as the biter. It was not Miss Burke, but Flo Kennedy. According to report, and It was not a bite but a sort of crush.

At a dinner given for Chaplin about eight of the "Follies" girls attended. After the dinner Chaplin was asked for a memento by the girls, but, not having eight of anything that could be distributed, he proposed to give away his gold cigarette case to the girl drawing the winning number from a hat. Miss Burke got the case. Miss Kennedy, It is said, in appreciation of Chaplin's good nature, sought to give him a collective kiss for all of the girls, and enthusiastically started to do so, misjudging the distance, however, on a flying leap, with her teeth making a slight mark on the comedian's lips.1,2

Burke later told reporters that she didn't know what all the fuss was about because she didn't see anyone bite Chaplin. "I don't think he was bitten at all," she said.3

Nevertheless, headlines touted that Chaplin had been bitten on the lip, blood poisoning had set it, and that he was near death. It seems Chaplin was ill, but not from a bite on the lip. In a statement made by his doctor, James B. McKenzie, Chaplin was suffering from "low blood pressure" brought on by "overwork" and "the tedious trip from the coast." He called the reports that Chaplin was blood poisoned from a kiss: "a lot of rot." Besides exhaustion, Chaplin was also suffering from a cold.4 Years later in his autobiography, however, Chaplin stated that he had had a "collapse":
I was staying at the Ritz Hotel and I could not breathe, so I frantically telephoned a friend. "I'm dying," I gasped. "Call my lawyer!"
"Lawyer! You want a doctor," said he, alarmed.
"No, no, my lawyer, I want to make a will."

His friend (Harry d'Arrast?) called both. His lawyer was in Europe but he was examined by his doctor who said he had an attack of nerves brought on by the oppressive heat in New York. He suggested that Chaplin leave the city and head to the ocean where he could relax in peace and quiet and get the sea air.5

Chaplin & d'Arrast headed to Brighton Beach. On the way he recalled that he "cried for no reason."

No sooner had they arrived at their beachfront hotel that Chaplin heard a barking dog. "It was a man drowning," recalled Chaplin. "The lifeguards brought him in right in front of my window, and gave him first aid, but it was too late; he was dead." He said that two others were also brought in by lifeguards but they recovered. "I was in a worse state than ever," he wrote, "so I decided to return to New York."6

Coming up on the 16th: Chaplin attends the New York premiere of The Gold Rush.

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1Variety, August 19th, 1925.
2Louise Brooks later asserted that it was actress Blyth Daly who bit Chaplin's lip when she took offense at an unwanted kiss.
3Harrisburg Telegraph, August 14, 1925
4Los Angeles Times, August 12, 1925
5Chaplin, My Autobiography, 1964. Chaplin also states that two days after returning to NY, he was well enough to return to California. He is a bit off in his chronology here. Newspaper reports state that he arrived in Brighton Beach on August 14th. He didn't stay long because he was back in the city for the premiere of The Gold Rush which took place at midnight on August 16th. He didn't return to California until October.
6ibid

Chaplin with Lou Costello, 1942

Lita Grey Chaplin in Seasoned Greetings (1933) (in its entirety)

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I posted a clip from this short a couple of weeks ago but it looks like someone has added the whole thing to youtube since then, so enjoy.

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