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Charlie Chaplin, Edna Purviance and Charlie's brother Sydney on the set of The Immigrant (1917) Gaining independence. When his contract with Mutual expired in 1917, Chaplin decided to become an independent producer in a desire for more freedom and greater leisure in making his movies.
Biography, Filmography, News, Live Performances dates, Video Clips and Trailers, Music and Song Lyrics (Smile), Products, a Community. Everything you wish to know about Charlie Chaplin's life and work, and the latest News about all things Chaplin...
Did Charlie Chaplin Once Lose His Own Lookalike Contest? Is this famous story about Charlie Chaplin too good to be true?
Inspired by notorious French serial killer Landru, Henri Verdoux lures wealthy women by promising them sweet happy-ever-afters. After the wedding bells chime, however, he murders them for their fortunes. In this particularly dark comedy, Chaplin q...
Chaplin spent many months drafting and re-writing the speech for the end of the film, a call for peace from the barber who has been mistaken for Hynkel. Many people criticized the speech, and thought it was superfluous to the film.
Biography, Filmography, News, Live Performances dates, Video Clips and Trailers, Music and Song Lyrics (Smile), Products, a Community. Everything you wish to know about Charlie Chaplin's life and work, and the latest News about all things Chaplin...
Charlie Chaplin’s Children. Left to right: Charlie Chaplin, his wife Oona, and six of their eight children, Josephine, Victoria, Eugene, Jane, Annie and Christopher . Norman Spencer Chaplin, son of Mildred Harris and Charlie Chaplin, was born on July 7th, 1919, but sadly died three days later. He is buried under a stone marked simply The ...
Music by Charles Chaplin, Lyrics by John Turner and Geoffrey Parsons. Smile, though your heart is aching Smile, even though it’s breaking When there are clouds in the sky you’ll get by If you smile through your fear and sorrow Smile and maybe tomorrow You’ll see the sun come shining through for you. Light up your face with gladness
Charlie Chaplin and Buster Keaton in Limelight, 1952. In his family home in Switzerland, Chaplin continued to the end of his life to develop his love and knowledge of music and to entertain musicians, among them Arthur Rubinstein, Isaac Stern, Rudolf Serkin, and Clara Haskil.
Building on traditions forged in the commedia dell’arte which he learned in the British music halls, Charles Chaplin brought traditional theatrical forms into an emerging medium and changed both cinema and culture in the process...