TIME 100: Artist & Entertainers - Charlie Chaplin







The Comedian
Charlie Chaplin

The endearing figure of his Little Tramp was instantly recognizable around the globe and brought laughter to millions. Still is. Still does


BY ANN DOUGLAS

Every few weeks, outside the movie theater in virtually any American town in the late 1910s, stood the life-size cardboard figure of a small tramp--outfitted in tattered, baggy pants, a cutaway coat and vest, impossibly large, worn-out shoes and a battered derby hat--bearing the inscription I AM HERE TODAY. An advertisement for a Charlie Chaplin film was a promise of happiness, of that precious, almost shocking moment when art delivers what life cannot, when experience and delight become synonymous, and our investments yield the fabulous, unmerited bonanza we never get past expecting.

Eighty years later, Chaplin is still here. In a 1995 worldwide survey of film critics, Chaplin was voted the greatest actor in movie history. He was the first, and to date the last, person to control every aspect of the filmmaking process--founding his own studio, United Artists, with Douglas Fairbanks, Mary Pickford and D.W. Griffith, and producing, casting, directing, writing, scoring and editing the movies he starred in. In the first decades of the 20th century, when weekly moviegoing was a national habit, Chaplin more or less invented global recognizability and helped turn an industry into an art. In 1916, his third year in films, his salary of $10,000 a week made him the highest-paid actor--possibly the highest paid person--in the world. By 1920, "Chaplinitis," accompanied by a flood of Chaplin dances, songs, dolls, comic books and cocktails, was rampant. Filmmaker Mack Sennett thought him "just the greatest artist who ever lived." Other early admirers included George Bernard Shaw, Marcel Proust and Sigmund Freud. In 1923 Hart Crane, who wrote a poem about Chaplin, said his pantomime "represents the futile gesture of the poet today." Later, in the 1950s, Chaplin was one of the icons of the Beat Generation. Jack Kerouac went on the road because he too wanted to be a hobo. From 1981 to 1987, IBM used the Tramp as the logo to advertise its venture into personal computers.

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SIDEBAR: Other Comic Masters


BORN April 16, 1889, in London

1913 Accepts job with Mack Sennett's Keystone Studios

1915 The Tramp debuts

1919 Forms United Artists with Pickford, Fairbanks and Griffith

1940 First talkie: The Great Dictator

1952 Denied re-entry into U.S.; settles in Switzerland

1972 Returns to U.S. to accept a special Oscar

1975 Knighted by Queen Elizabeth II

1977 Dies on Dec. 25


MOVIE CLIPS:

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The Gold Rush
Chaplin turns into a chicken before his starving companion's eyes.

City Lights
The Little Tramp tries his hand at boxing to raise money for a damsel in distress

Modern Times
Chaplin gets trapped in a factory's machine works during this classic film satire of American capitalism

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