Quantcast
Channel: Discovering Chaplin
Viewing all 1853 articles
Browse latest View live

Day By Day: 1936

$
0
0
Sunday, March 22nd: Charlie, Paulette, and Alta are the guests of the Sultan of Johore. 

I could find no details about this visit. It was mentioned only in passing in a Singapore newspaper. There are a number of photos in the Chaplin Archive that are labeled "Johore"* and in some of them Paulette and her mother are wearing different outfits, so they could have had more than one visit with Sultan Ibrahim, including during their return to Singapore in April.

The Sultan is second from left next to Paulette. Behind Charlie is Julius Fisher with his left arm around Alta.
Second from right is Prince Purachatra of Siam who was also a guest.
Charlie, Paulette, and Julius Fisher posing with Sultan Ibrahim and his nephews.
With Prince Purachatra and Julius Fisher.

This was the gang's last day in Singapore. Tomorrow they they head to Java.

Stay tuned for more in Day By Day: 1936 

*Johore (or Johor) is a state in southern Malaysia linked to Singapore by causeway.

Day By Day: 1936

$
0
0
Monday: March 23rd: The gang leaves Singapore at dawn for Batavia, Java.

CC, Qantas captain Russell Tapp, Paulette, and Alta

Charlie, Paulette, her mother, Alta, and valet Frank Yonemori traveled on an Australian Qantas mail plane called "Sydney." This was ironic since the last time Charlie was in these parts it was with his brother, Sydney, in 1932.

They arrived at Tjililitan airfield in Batavia (Jakarta) at 10:30am, Paulette was the first to "jump out" wearing what a Batavian newspaper described as "eerily large" sunglasses and a "sporting costume" consisting of light blue skirt, light brown shirt, and "no socks." The rings on her left hand were also still noteworthy (I should start calling this "ring-gate"). According to De Indische Courant (and Google Translate), it was reported that "Paulette, craftily partially hidden under a silver ring with a giant jade stone, wore a platinum and diamond ring." Alta was next to exit the plane. Then came Charlie, who was dressed in a white linen suit and greeted the reporters with a jovial "morning."

"The gray-haired movie star" declared himself pleasantly surprised at the absence of public curiosity about his arrival and that he was not being asked too many personal questions, except if he still intended to charter the Sea Belle II (aka the "honeymoon yacht"). To which he replied that he had "no intention" of doing so. He was also asked if he would still make a movie about Napoleon. He answered: "I have not absolutely made up my mind."

Chaplin was excited at the prospect of a ten-day tour of Java and Bali, a place that held pleasant memories for him. He planned to replay his 1932 trip and travel by car across Java, arriving in Surabaya on Saturday where they will take the K.P.M. steamer to Bali.

From the airport the travelers went to the Hotel Java for breakfast where it was noted that Paulette ate a generous amount of food but Charlie ate very little. Following breakfast, they drove 11 hours to Bandung, where they planned to spend one day.

Source: De Indische Courant, March 23, 1936

Road trip!

Stay tuned for more in Day by Day: 1936

"Charles Chaplin buried but not dead"

$
0
0

Original caption:
“Charles Chaplin buried but not dead”
“L-R: Miss Keating, Duke [of] Durcal, unknown [Duchess of Durcal], Harry d’Abbadie d’Arrast”
Photo by Trilby Clark at Santa Monica Beach Club, c. 1923

("Charlie Chaplin In His Time," Gabus Galerie, 1993)

Win 4 tickets to the Chaplin's World Museum grand opening!

Day By Day: 1936

$
0
0
March 24-25: Bandung and Garut


When we last left our travelers (Charlie, Paulette, Alta, and Frank), they had begun their road trip across Java--from Batavia to Surabaya. Chaplin makes many of the same stops along the route that he made in 1932. Unlike that trip, however, we sadly do not have a first-hand account of the experience.

Their first stop is Bandung.

See enlargements here.

Tuesday, March 24th: After waking up at the Hotel Praenger in Bandung, the group visits the Craters of Prahoe that morning, then set off for their next destination: Garut. Along the way, they will stop at the lakes of Leles and Bagendit. They arrive exhausted at the Hotel Ngamplang in Garut at 4:00pm. 1

Wednesday, March 25th: The tourists, along with their guide, attempt to see the Kawah Kamojang or the Kamojang crater but were delayed by a fallen tree along the road. They passed the time at the nearby Radium Hotel, where the manager served them strawberries and whipped cream while they waited for the road to be cleared. Much to their disappointment, they never got to see the crater. When they finally left the hotel at 1:00AM, Chaplin told the hotel manager that if he ever returned to the area he would "spend a fortnight at Kamojang."2

Even in a place as remote as Garut, people were curious about whether or not Charlie and Paulette were married. A reporter for the Indische Courant, who interviewed the couple, observed that Paulette never referred to Charlie as "my husband" but as "Mr. Chaplin." While Charlie only said "Miss Goddard" or "the ladies." At the beginning of his interview, the reporter said "your wife" in reference to Paulette, just to see how Charlie would react to it: "He pretended that his nose bled and didn't move a muscle in his face." 3

From Garut, the gang will travel on to Djokja where they will spend two days.

More from Java later this week in Day By Day: 1936.
_________________________________________________________________________________

1De Indische Courant, March 30th, 1936. 
One of my favorite stories from Chaplin's 1932 visit to Garut was his (and his brother's) introduction to the "Dutch Wife." 
2ibid
3De Indische Courant, April 2nd, 1936. Keep in mind that I am translating these stories from Dutch to English. I'm wondering if "pretending that his nose bled" meant that he just had his head tilted back.

CRUEL, CRUEL LOVE, released March 26th, 1914

$
0
0
Directed by George Nichols
Screenplay by Craig Hutchinson

Charlie's fiancee (Minta Durfee) jumps to the wrong conclusion when she sees him assisting her maid (Eva Nelson) who has twisted her ankle. She breaks off their engagement and tells him she never wants to see him again. Distraught, Charlie attempts suicide by taking poison. He writhes in agony and has a "vision of his destiny": being tortured in hell by pitchfork-wielding demons. In the meantime, his fiancee learns the truth and sends him a note telling him all is forgiven. A frantic Charlie phones the doctor and discovers that the supposed poison was only water.

Instead of his Tramp costume, Chaplin is wearing a modified version of the costume he wore in Making A Living.


Day By Day: 1936

$
0
0
March 26-27: Garut to Djokja

From Garut, the travelers' headed northeast to Wonosobo, a town in Central Java. Here they spent the night at the Dieng Hotel and Chaplin was interviewed by the Bataviaasch Nieuwsblad (Batavia Newspaper).

Asked about the local hotels, he replied that they were "extraordinarily good" and "the best in the Far East." He added that the Dutch cuisine was "exquisite" and expressed his love of their mangosteens. "How delightful they are!"

"Is your itinerary too tiring? In many places you stay only one night."

"Indeed it is quite tiring but I always make sure there is enough bed rest."

The reporter told Chaplin that he looked young for his age and asked how he kept fit. Charlie replied that he enjoys tennis and swimming, but added that he was starting to get a bit of a tummy (there was a laugh when Charlie slapped his belly) and feared that once he left the Dutch East Indies he will have put on several pounds due to their excellent food. As for Paulette, Charlie said that she is fortunately not affected by it and does nothing special to preserve her slender figure, but of course they regularly play tennis or swim.

Paulette and her mother at the Ruins of Borobudor.

The Javanese took a particular interest in Paulette's clothing. In Wonosobo, it was reported that she came to dinner wearing white flannel trousers, a white flannel jacket with large lapels, and with her bare feet in ordinary Indian leather sandals (without a heel) which she had purchased in Garut. "They are so hygienic and healthy," she enthused.  The paper also noted that Paulette and her mother did not wear skirts during their travels but "pajama pants abound!" Paulette was described as being much smaller in person and with a figure that any woman would envy.1

On Friday, the 27th, the group spent the day at the Borobudur Ruins in Magelang, then traveled on to Djokja where they will spend their last night of the Java road trip.

Tomorrow: the gang departs for Bali.

©Roy Export Co. Est.

Day By Day: 1936

1Bataviaasch Nieuwsblad, April 2nd, 1936

Day By Day: 1936

$
0
0
Saturday, March 28th: Destination: Bali

Charlie and his companions spent their last night of the Java road trip in Djokja. The next morning they drove to Surabaya to catch the boat for Bali.

A large crowd gathered in the lobby of the Orange Hotel in Surabaya where they were due to arrive at 2:00. But in true Chaplin form he was late. When they finally arrived at 3:30, many of the people who had been waiting had already left, except for a handful of reporters and autograph seekers.* Charlie didn't seem to mind. He signed autographs for those who stuck around and answered the reporters' questions.

"What will you do in Bali?"he was asked.

"I will get a wonderful full week of rest."

"How was your journey through Java?"

"Beautiful. Miss Goddard was especially thrilled by the tropical nature. I like to take my vacations in countries near the equator. First because of the tropics, and secondly we travel a lot quieter here without a lot of enthusiastic admirers, especially in Java. We enjoy our peace."**

The travelers were given two rooms at the hotel to freshen up and change clothes. It was noted that Paulette and her mother took one room, and Charlie took the other. Afterward they partook of a "well-stocked rijstafel."

At 5:00 they departed for the Port of Tanjung Priok where they boarded the steamer Merak for Bali.

I'll have more from Bali coming up in Day By Day: 1936

_________________________________________________________________________________


*This welcome paled in comparison to Chaplin's first visit to the Orange Hotel in 1932.
**Translated from Dutch.

Sources:
Soerabaijasch handelsblad, March 30th, 1936
De Indische Courant, March 30th, 1936

By the Summit Drive pool, c.1930

Article 0

$
0
0
I'm poking my head out just to mention that something exciting happened to me this weekend. For the first time in 8 years my Chaplin (and Chaplin-related) books are now together in the same place. For as long as I can remember, they have been scattered in 3 or 4 different places in my house. So it's nice to have them (most of them) in one bookcase. There are still a handful that I couldn't fit. Anyway, that's all. I'll go back behind the blog curtain now.


Jess



Sydney Chaplin in Bells Are Ringing (1957) for which he won a Tony Award

Chaplin's Mann Act testimony, March 30-31, 1944

$
0
0
Charlie in court, March 30th, 1944

According to one reporter,  Charlie appeared in court on his first day of testimony wearing a navy blue suit and his "favorite" polka-dot blue tie but "no sign of a smile."

His attorney, Jerry Giesler, later wrote that Chaplin was "the best witness I've ever seen in a law court. He was effective even when he wasn't being cross-examined but merely sitting there, lonely and forlorn, at a far end of the counsel table. He is so small that only the toes of his shoes touched the floor." He said Chaplin's greatest quality on the stand was his "outward humility--whether he was inwardly humble or not. He wept as he described his relations with Joan Barry and said, 'Yes, I was intimate with her. I liked the girl.' Both during direct and cross-examination he gave the appearance of utter sincerity. He wasn't arrogant, nor did he duck the verbal blows flung in his direction."

Before Chaplin took the stand, several other witnesses were called including two of Joan Barry's other lovers, J. Paul Getty & Hans Ruesch. Then, in rapid succession, Giesler called five employees of the Chaplin Studio to the stand. First was general manager, Alfred Reeves, who testified that Joan told him she had given up the idea of playing Bridget (her role in Shadow and Substance), given up the idea of a screen career, and that Chaplin had agreed to pay her fare to New York and that of her mother. He also said that, at Chaplin's instruction, he had given her $500 to pay her bills.

Cameraman Rollie Totheroh took the stand next. He testified that he shot 4500 feet of test film of Joan, given her a voice test, and around September 1942 had a conversation with Joan in which she said that she was sick of rehearsing and wanted to go to New York for good. Other employees who testified were Chaplin's secretary Catherine Hunter and bookkeeper Lois Watts.
Chaplin had been an intent spectator during earlier testimony but as his employees testified, he "cupped his chin in one hand and looked dreamily, aloofly toward the ceiling."

Chaplin's employees wait to testify for the defense (L-R):
 O.B. Gooding, Alf Reeves, Rollie Totheroh,
Frank Antunez, and Frank Testera.

Below is Chaplin's testimony. I have tried to compile as much of it as possible from various resources:

Asked to state his full name, Chaplin smiled and said: "Charles Spencer Chaplin."

Charlie then coughed, wiped his mouth with a handkerchief and settled into the witness chair.

"Where do you reside?"

"Los Angeles"

Giesler asked his address. Charlie fumbled. "Summit Rd," he admitted. But what about the number? He ruffled his white hair and looked puzzled. "If I told you it was 1085?" prompted Giesler. "Of course," Charlie said, relieved, "1085 Summit Drive."

Charlie was still amused as he gave vital statistics. He caressed his chin with one hand as he said he is 54, has lived in Los Angeles since 1914, and has had his own studio since 1918.

Then came the questions about Joan.

"Do you recall the first time you met Miss Barry?" asked Giesler.

Charlie threw his arm over the back of the witness chair, studied the ceiling for a moment, then answered:

"Somewhere in 1941."





"Thereafter did she sign a contract with your studio?"

"She did."

"Afterwards, did you direct her to some dramatic coach?"

Charlie ran his fingers through his hair. Finally, he replied:

"Yes, the Reinhardt School."

"Did you recommend other tests?"

"I gave her the tuition myself--I also directed the tests at the studio."

"Did you have anything personally to do with her wardrobe?"

"I designed it myself."


          
Costume tests for Joan Barry, 1941

"Was this for a particular part and a particular story you had purchased?"

"Yes, I purchased it for $20,000 dollars."

Chaplin then explained it was Shadow And Substance, an Irish play.

"How many tests did you give her--camera tests, that is?"

"I suppose we worked three days on makeup, rendition of lines and I wanted to get teh photographic contours and see if she was photogenic, you know. I know we used a lot of film."

"After the tests did you form any conclusion as to her screen possibilities? Did you think she was photogenic?

"I did before that."

"Yes, but did you then?"

"Yes, afterward too."

"What conclusion did you reach?"

"I thought that she photographed very appealingly. I thought she had histrionic ability."

"Did she show any development as a result of her studies at the Max Reinhardt School?"

"No, I don't think so. This is no reflection on the school, but I don't think she concentrated. I don't think she took her studies seriously enough."

"The part in the story you bought, with the idea of making it into a picture, was it the leading part?"

"It was the leading part."

"The role of Bridget?"

"Yes."

"It was the role of a simple girl, was it not?"

"The part was supposed to be this very humble little servant, who is sort of modern Joan of Arc whose implicit faith in Catholicism transcended the orthodoxy of the priests."

Chaplin told of the termination, by mutual agreement,  of Joan's contract to him because she wished to try her luck elsewhere.

"She was very adamant about it," Charlie said with distress in his voice. "She wanted to go. I said, 'If you feel it will further your career, by all means do."

"I'm not sure what happened then, but two or three weeks later she came back. I told her she was more or less on probation, that if she studied and worked, well and good, but I was not going to put her under contract. It was a verbal contract."

All this time, he said, he was working on Shadow and Substance, rewriting the play, injecting action and scenes.

"You were going to play a part in it?" asked Giesler.

"No. Well, yes. I had an idea of doing so, but I vacillated a great deal. I was directing."

One day in September 1942, he said Joan wanted to talk to him. He hadn't seen her for a month or so. He was distressed as he told the jury why. She had had the principle role in a Reinhardt amateur play, and had failed. "She couldn't concentrate," he testified. She couldn't recall her lines." Then she came to his house and said she wanted to go to New York. "I told her her that instead of going to New York, she should go back to school and study diligently. She insisted on going.  She made quite a scene and became hysterical, which is part of her nature."

Prosecutor Charles H. Carr objected to the final phrase. It was stricken from the record.

Giesler prompted Chaplin to continue.

"Well, I told her she should concentrate, become more conscientious. She said, 'Oh, you'll never finish that [Shadow & Substance]. You've been on it a year. It's getting very irksome.' I said, 'I can't stop you from going, but if you're not prepared for your part, I'll have to get someone else.' She left very upset."

"Was there again any conversation on the subject?"

"The next time came while I was dictating to my secretary on the porch in the daytime. She came around the house to where I was and she was very excited. I was quite mad, I must say. She asked me: 'Are you not going to send me to New York?' and I said, 'I am not.' She turned on her heels and went out, back to where she came from. I was very upset and couldn't work any more that day."

Then again she came:

"She said, 'Look here, I'm not an actress. I don't want a career. I'm through with acting. I'm going to New York. Hollywood is no good for me.'

"I was distressed," Chaplin continued, his eyes sad. "Then she said, 'If you'll pay the fare for me and my mother to New York, I'll call the whole thing off.'

"I was discouraged, I was defeated. When you've worked a whole year on someone, putting heart and soul into it..." His voice trails away.

"Then there were two or three other little items. She had a few bills. Would I agree to pay them? I said I would. I was very philosophical about it. I said, 'Now, I am completely finished. That is out of my mind. I'll have to look for someone else to play the part."

This was Chaplin's version of why he paid Joan Barry's railroad fare to New York. Giesler read him Joan's testimony that he said he wanted her "to be near me."

"Did you say that?"

"I did not. Nothing of that sort took place at my home or anywhere else."

"When you authorized the purchase of the tickets did you have any intent or purpose that Miss Barry go to New York so you could have immoral relations with her?"

"I did not."

And then for the controversial New York stay.

Chaplin said he made his speech at Carnegie Hall, had dinner with Paulette Goddard and Constance Collier.

"Who is Constance Collier?" asked Giesler.

Chaplin started to say she was "an old, old actress," but corrected himself smilingly and said, "she was a very dear friend of mine and a very well-known actress."

Chaplin delivering a Second Front speech at Carnegie Hall,
Oct. 16th, 1942

After the speech, Tim Durant and Arthur Kelly joined the party, which adjourned to the 21 Club.

"Then Durant, Kelly and I were invited to the Stork Club and we went."

"Was there any prearrangement with Barry to meet her there?"

"There was not."

The next day, his butler Edward Chaney, told him Joan had called. He wouldn't talk to her. Later she called Tim Durant repeatedly.

"I believe," he began, then corrected himself, "mustn't say believe--well, I was in a quandary. I didn't know what to do about it. Mr. Durant told me she seemed very excited. He said, 'I think you should see her, she's staying in New York and won't be bothering you again. Otherwise she might come up tot he hotel and make trouble.'

"I said, all right. If we have an evening...then I think he made an appointment for dinner."

He said he and Durant and Joan had dinner at the 21 club, then went on to "an amusement floor, a cabaret of some sort." Later the three got into a taxi.

"Did you say, 'Joan, I want to talk to you. Will you come to my hotel?"

"I did not."

"What did you say?"

"Oh, ordinary pleasantries. I thought we were going to take her to her hotel first, but she said she wanted to see our suite, so I said all right, that's all."

"So we sat around for a while reading the papers. Just ordinary pleasantries. I remember Mr. Durant said he was tired, so he went to bed. Miss Barry and myself sat there and talked for about 20 minutes. Eventually I made the suggestion that I was tired--and saw her home.

This was Chaplin's answer to the first count of the Mann Act indictment.

"Was there an act of sexual intercourse?"

"There was not."

"Did you undress and redress?"

"I did not!"

"Was there any conversation on the way to her hotel?"

"Yes. I asked her how she was getting along, and she said she was putting up a front and everything, but she was very hard up. I said if she was hard up, how come she was staying at the Pierre. She said, 'Well, that's on Getty [referring to J. Paul Getty.] But I don't have anything else. She said: 'I need money for my mother. She's in debt and she's sick.'" Chaplin added that she was very convincing. "So she asked if I would loan her some money. I said: 'All right. I'll leave some with Edward.' Then I dropped her at the Pierre. That was the sum and substance of the conversation."

This was Chaplin's answer to the second Mann Act count, which charges he gave Joan $300 to go back to Los Angeles.

"Had you given her money other than her salary any time before going to New York?"

"I had--on frequent occasions"

"Did you give her this money to go back to California?"

"I did not. Not at all, not at all."

"Did you ask or suggest at any time that you wanted her back in California?"

"I did not."

"For the purpose of sexual relations?"

"I did nothing of the sort. I gave her money for her mother because she was in debt and out of a job."

"Did you see her again in New York?"

"No."

Now Giesler took him back to California. He said Joan called him so many times that he finally telephoned her. She told him she was only there for a brief stop on her way to Tulsa. She wanted to see him, but if he wouldn't see her, she wouldn't bother him.

"Naturally after that contrite statement," he told the jury, but the remark was stricken. Anyway, he asked her for dinner and drove by her hotel the next night to pick her up. He thought she was acting strangely, but he took her to Romanoff's. "She seemed to be worse," he testified, "so I said, 'You'd better go straight home.'

"She was quite inarticulate," he added, and on the way home he lectured her severely.

"I told her there was only one person who could play Bridget and that was she. I saod that after the tremendous expense I had gone through I couldn't afford to give her another chance. I told her she was very irresponsible.  I was very impatient with her. I told her I didn't want to see her again."

"You had not intent to have sexual relations at that time."

"I did not."

"Did you ever call her after the evening at Romanoff's?"

"No"

"Ever?"

"No. No. I think she left and went to Tulsa because I received some letters from her."

"Ever try to locate her?"

"I did not."

"You made a second trip to New York?"

"Yes. I returned around December 20th"

"When was the first you knew she had returned from Tulsa?"

"I think that was the time she came up with the gun."

"Will you please explain that incident?"

Chaplin turned directly to the jury. He said he had just come home. It was after midnight and he was on the telephone.

"Suddenly I heard a noise. I turned around." He acted it out, as he talked. "There was my bathroom door and Joan was pointing a gun. She made a half-circle around the two beds. She came to me and said, 'I'm going to kill you.'

"Although it was rather melodramatic and absurd," he said, " I was scared." I tried to reason with her. I said, 'All your supposed love and affection for me is a pretense and a sham. Why do you resort to this violence?"

"I reminded her that I never put myself in a false position with her and she never had with me. From the beginning it was she who telephoned me night after night until, naturally, an intimacy grew. I admit it. I asked her why she embarrassed me night after night in front of servants with scenes and tantrums."

"I told her I believed in her as an actress. I believed she had histrionic ability; that I bought a play for her on which I spent $250,000 overhead; that the whole experience was frustrating."

"Then she said, 'I'm not going to kill you. You're not worth it. I'm going to kill myself and am going to do it in your bedroom.'

"At that moment I heard a disturbance in the hall. My children were downstairs."

"I went to the archway and said, 'there's a little trouble, sons. You'd better go back to your mother and stay there tonight." It was here Chaplin choked up.

"It appears they couldn't go because they hadn't a car or something."

"So all the time Joan was holding a gun in the archway. I said to her, 'You have to go. My children are here.'

"She said, 'I haven't any hotel. I haven't any home. I'm destitute. I'm going to stay here!'

"I said, 'I'm going to throw you out!'

She said, 'If you come any nearer, I'll kill myself.'

"I said, 'Don't be absurd. No one is coming near you.'

Chaplin told the jury that he assigned her to a bedroom separated from his room by a bathroom.

He related that the next morning she left his home after he had given her money.

"Did you in your home have an act of sexual intercourse with Miss Barry that night?"

"I did not"

"Did you have any under any circumstances?"

"I did not."

"Did you see Miss Barry on December 9, 10, 11, 12, or 13th?"

"No."

"Did you have sexual intercourse with her on any of these dates?"

"I did not."

"Did you say you were going to rehabilitate Miss Barry and give her another chance?"

"No."

"Did you tell her you would see her only when you wanted to?"

"No, I did not."

This ended the first day of testimony.

Charlie talks to Jerry Giesler following his first day testimony, March 30th, 1944


 On March 31st, Giesler continued his questioning.

"On the early morning of Dec. 31st, did you see Joan Barry?"

"I did."

"Will you kindly relate to the jury what happened?"

" I know I was home. I believe I was playing solitaire in my front room. I suddenly heard bells ringing in my kitchen. I went to the door. I saw lying on the mat outside Miss Joan Barry. I looked at her, I went to the kitchen. I rang all the bells to see if anyone was up. I knew we were going to have a lot of trouble."

Carr objected to the last statement. The judge told Chaplin his conclusions were improper testimony.

"I see," Chaplin said contritely. "Well, I beg your pardon. I wanted to see if I could get some help. I shouted and nobody paid any attention to me. I wanted help because on the night previous or two or three nights before she had come up with a gun."

He said the only man he could rouse was someone new whom he didn't know well, so he went back to the door alone.

"I aroused her. I said, 'what do you want?' She said, 'I'm destitute.' I said, 'I don't care what you are. You can't stay here!' She said, 'I haven't any car.' I said, 'I'll drive you.'

"So eventually I got her to the car. She said, 'Drive me to Olympic Blvd.' She said, 'Never mind that. I'm destitute. I'll sleep at the police station.'

"Did she enter the..."

"She did not," Chaplin replied before Giesler could finish.

The judge leaned over. "Mr. Chaplin you should wait until your council finishes the question."

"I beg your pardon," Chaplin said quickly, shaking his hands in vexation, and smiling at the judge. "It's just my eagerness."

Giesler repeated the question.

"Did she enter the house at all?"

"She did not."

At this point, Prosecutor Charles H. Carr  began cross-examination. He asked Chaplin if on his second date with Miss Barry he hadn't told her she was very pretty and very charming. "And didn't you try to kiss her?" he insisted.

"I think I kissed her before that," Chaplin said, smiling faintly.

"Did you ever tell Miss Barry you were in love with her?"

"No, never," said Chaplin.

"Well, did she tell you she was in love with you?"

"Yes, she did."

"Did you ever call her 'Hunchy'?"

"Yes. I used that as a term of endearment. I often use terms of endearment."

"When did you stop calling her 'Hunchy'?"

"I don't remember."

Charlie during cross-examination, March 31, 1944

Carr started on the night Chaplin met Joan, an introduction arranged by Tim Durant. Chaplin said they went to Perino's for dinner.

"Then you and Miss Barry drove to and from the beach several times?"

"That isn't true. No, we didn't."

"Where did you go?"

"I think we drove to her home."

"What did you do?"

"We talked a great deal in the car."

"You saw her the next day?"

"No, two or three days later."

"You had Mr. Durant get in touch with her again?"

"I did not."

"You called her?"

"No, I did not."

"Well, how did you get together?"

"I think we met at Mr. Durant's home."

"You had a long conversation with her?"

"I think so."

"At that time you told her you were more or less enchanted by her?"

"No, I did nothing of the kind."

"You told her she was a very pretty girl and interesting?"

"I told her she was interesting. I may have said something about her having personality."

Chaplin recalled they had dinner alone a few days later, but couldn't remember where.

"When?"

"Now, this is a long time ago, you are pinning me down to dates and I cannot remember."

"How long were you together that evening?"

"I don't know."

"You took her home then?"

"Very soon...I think it is the time you allude to...I'm trying to catch the entire scene."

"She came to my house," Chaplin explained, "and said she was going to New York to marry someone. And I said I thought it was a very good idea. She said, 'Oh, don't send me back to New York!' I said, 'My dear girl, I hardly know you.' And I thought it very strange.  Oh (shaking his head at the words) I'm sorry, I couldn't understand this conversation so very soon after I met her."

"Had you signed a contract at that time?"

"No."

He admitted her took her to Santa Barbara and a yachting trip to Catalina Island.

"After the contract was signed," asked Carr, "you were seeing Miss Barry quite often weren't you?"

"Yes."

"Three or four times a week?"

"Maybe twice a week."

"She spent the night there once or twice a week, didn't she?"

"Sporadically."

"Did you read Shakespeare to her at your house?"

"Probably"

"You began to tell her you were in love with her, didn't you?"

"No."

"Did she tell you she was in love with you?"

"Yes."

"Quite often didn't she spend the night?"

"No, it wasn't very frequent."

"That relationship continued through December 1941?"

"Yes."

Carr asked about their time at the Waldorf-Astoria in New York and Chaplin insisted he only spent 20 minutes with her and did not take her into his room, and then escorted her to her hotel by taxicab

Carr brought the questioning back to Los Angeles. He tried to get Chaplin to admit to a series of quarrels with Joan at Romanoff's restaurant.

Chaplin said there had been no quarrels, merely that Joan was not feeling well at Romanoff's.

"But don't you recall her coming to the back of your house and insisting that you come out on the night of December 11th or 12th?" Carr insisted.

"No, I do not recall any such thing."

"Isn't it true that you slapped her at that time?"

"No," Chaplin said, turning to the jury, "I've never slapped a woman in my life."

Carr tried to elicit testimony as to the frequency of acts of intimacy since first meeting her to the night of December 30-31, 1942:

"I will ask you, as nearly as you can remember, what was the last date you had sexual intercourse with Miss Barry?"

"Sexual intercourse isn't that important in my life."

Subsequently, Chaplin testified that he "might have been" having sexual relations with Barry in January 1942, and that "maybe" he did during the following May.

Chaplin wept again as he told the story of how Joan came to his house one day in January 1942 to tell him she had had an operation.

"She took me to one side," he said visibly upset and halting frequently in his statement.

"She told me what she had gone through. I believed her, and I was very upset when I was confronted with all of this very suddenly." Tears streamed down his face, and he burst out: "And that is why I have been suffering ever since. And that is why she is doing all this to me."

"Isn't it true," demanded Carr, "that you took her in your arms and said to her, "you poor, dear thing."

"Yes, I did," Chaplin admitted. "I was so upset."

"Don't you recall that you embraced her on that occasion?"

"Yes, I did. When she told me."

"Well, do you recall that Miss Barry was put to bed in your home?"

"That's right."

"You stated you changed the locks on your door three of four times. Did Miss Barry have a key?"

"Yes. She stole keys."

"Did she steal three of four?"

"She must have done so."

Chaplin and prosecutor Charles Carr.

Carr then questioned Chaplin about the gun episode.

"How long was she in your bedroom?"

"I don't know, I was so excited, so upset, so bewildered. It seemed hours. Maybe two hours."

"Do you recall saying having an affair under those circumstances [with a gun nearby] was a new wrinkle?"

"No, of course not."

"She was destitute and had no place to sleep. That was her reason and motive for being there."

"You didn't call the police?"

"No."

"You had cars available to take Miss Barry away didn't you?"

"Yes."

"Didn't you have breakfast with her the next morning?"

"No, I had breakfast alone. Then I went up to see her. She was still asleep with the gun."

"In her hand?"

"Yes."

"On Dec. 30th, when you said you found her on your doormat, was she unconscious?"

"No, because she spoke to me at the door."

"What time was that?"

Running his fingers through his hair, Chaplin replied, "I don't know. I didn't look at the clock, I was too excited."

"Didn't you drive her around Beverly Hills while she argued that $25 was too little to pay for a hotel bill?"

"No, that is not true."

"And didn't you finally say, 'Well, here's a good place for you,' and point to the police station?"

Chaplin flatly denied this and said he didn't even know where the police station was. "I didn't notice, I was very upset."

Carr jumped to June 1943 when Joan told Chaplin she was pregnant.

"And did Joan at this time, referring to her unborn baby, say, 'What are you going to do about it?' And you said, 'I suggest you go to New York to have it.' And she said, 'Charles, why don't you marry me?' And you said, 'I'm not marrying anyone, Joan, if you make this matter public, I'll spend my entire fortune fighting it and if necessary blacken your name, and I will not be any issue at all.' Didn't that conversation take place, Mr. Chaplin?"

"No, that is not true."

On redirect examination by Giesler, Chaplin examined his studio records and discovered that his final payment for film rights to Shadow and Substance was made on March 28th, 1942. He said he had been considering it two months.

On recross Carr asked, "Why did you raise Miss Barry's salary from $75 a week to $100?"

"Because I thought she was worthy of it."

"That's all," Carr said, and Chaplin stepped down.


Read more in my Mann Act Series here.

_________________________________________________________________________________

Sources: 

Freeport Journal, March 31, 1944
Chicago Daily Tribune, March 30-31, 1944
Salt Lake City Tribune, March 31, 1944
Mason City Globe-Gazette, March 31, 1944
"The Jerry Giesler Story," Saturday Evening Post, November 21, 1959
"Accusations Against Charles Chaplin for Political and Moral Offenses," Film Comment, Winter 1969

Chaplin and Wallace Beery outside the Essanay Studio in Chicago, 1915

$
0
0
Chicago Tribune, April 26th, 1936

Charlie and Wallace Beery pt. 2

Day By Day: 1936

$
0
0
March 29th - April 6th: Bali!

Very little is known about Chaplin's second trip to Bali.1 Four years before (almost to the day), he had visited the island with his brother, Sydney (here and here) & was taken with their natural way of living. This time, however, he found it "a changed place." It was more "civilized" and more "commercialized."2 Nevertheless the place still inspired him. Before he returned to the States in June, Chaplin was already thinking about a film with a Balinese setting. It would be a talkie and would star Paulette as a native girl.3 In fact, an unfinished screenplay for the film still exists in the Chaplin Archive.4

After a week in Bali, the group will sail back to Java on April 6th.

Stay tuned for more in Day By Day: 1936.




--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

1Chaplin evidently made one more trip to Bali in 1961. Even less is known about this visit. His impressions of his first visit can be found in his travel memoir A Comedian Sees The World and My Autobiography
 2Singapore Free Press, April 8, 1936
3Los Angeles Times, June 4, 1936. Chaplin also discussed the Bali film with Jean Cocteau aboard the Tashima Maru in May 1936.
4The film is referred in the Archive as "The Bali Story," but according to Maurice Bessy, the film at one point had a name. In late 1936, Chaplin told him: "I've abandoned The Wild Woman of Bali, but I've still promised Paulette a script, which I'll direct." (Bessy, Charlie Chaplin, 1985). It should also be pointed out that Chaplin began the script following his first visit in 1932. He continued to expand upon it for the next ten years. 

Chaplin visits Sophia Loren and Gregory Peck on the set of their film, Arabesque, 1965

Chaplin Library

Day By Day: 1936

$
0
0
Monday, April 6th: Charlie and Co. return from Bali.

Aboard the steamer Van der Wyck, the group arrived in Surabaya in the morning. They spent a few hours shopping and then flew to Batavia at noon.

Below: Charlie and Paulette are welcomed after landing in Batavia.

That might be a rare sighting of valet Frank Yonemori at far left. I don't see Alta, perhaps she is taking the photos.

The following recollection is from a fellow passenger who sailed on the Van der Wyck with the Chaplin party:
I never heard Charlie Chaplin make one jest. His smile was charming, but rare, and he was very, very quiet; sometimes he looked almost sad," said Mrs. C. Stuart, who...travelled in the same ship from Bali to Sourabaya with the world-famed comedian and his fiancee, Miss Paulette Goddard, and her mother.
"He hated publicity," Mrs. Stuart continued "and his greatest, wish was to be left alone. No one spoke to him of his work or sought to make his friendship."
"He had a most delightful speaking voice," she added. 
"It was amazing to find how his name was commonly known by the natives of all the Islands; even the natives of Bali, where there is no picture show, knew of him, and when the ship stopped in various ports, children would come on board and give him flowers. He was always very friendly and kind to the children. His name has come to mean so much to the natives that even the snake charmers' dolls are all called 'Charlie Chaplin.'
"He was so retiring that, when a number of visitors were dining in the ship at Bali, he had his dinner served in his own cabin."
Mrs. Stuart said that Miss Goddard also had a most infectious smile. ("Sydney Morning Herald," June 8, 1936)
Charlie and his companions will spend the night in Batavia at the Hotel des Indes and then fly to Singapore the next morning. Stay tuned... Day By Day: 1936

Day By Day: 1936

$
0
0
Tuesday, April 7th: Return to Singapore

"Apart from being bitten by two or three mosquitos I got through Bali safely," said Chaplin after he arrived by K.N.I.L.M. plane from Batavia. He recalled with a smile how almost exactly 4 years ago he was rushed to the Singapore General Hospital in an ambulance after his first visit to Bali, where he contracted dengue fever, a mosquito-borne illness.

Interviewed by the Singapore Free Press, he was asked again regarding his marriage plans. He replied: "There is no news to seek in that direction, I am afraid. I did not start this marriage story; it was made up by the press."

Chaplin was also informed that Mussolini had partially banned his new film, Modern Times, in Italy--ordering large sections of it to be cut. He remembered that Hitler had completely banned the film in Germany. "I am sure the dictators are thoroughly wrong," he said. "If they believe my picture is Communist propaganda, I can only say it is absolutely untrue. Our only purpose was to amuse and it is just my character in the circumstances of 1936. It is certainly a blunder, because as a film star I have no political aims. The film was shown throughout America  and they did not find it was propaganda."

From the airport, Charlie, Paulette, Alta, and Frank were driven to the Adelphi Hotel, where they will stay for the next three days. They will leave for Saigon on the 10th.

(Source: Singapore Free Press, April 8th, 1936)

I'm following one year of Charlie's life. Catch up on the first four months here: Day By Day: 1936

Chaplin selling Liberty Bonds on Wall Street, 98 years ago today

$
0
0

In the Spring of 1918 Chaplin spent one month touring the southern U.S. selling Liberty Bonds. Last year I created a short series which focused on several dates of the tour, providing an in-depth "play by play" of each appearance, as well as the physical and mental toll the tour had on him. There were enormous crowds everywhere he went. Just imagine if you were around in 1918 and Charlie Chaplin was coming to your town?

Click here for the series.
Viewing all 1853 articles
Browse latest View live


<script src="https://jsc.adskeeper.com/r/s/rssing.com.1596347.js" async> </script>