CHARLES CHAPLIN
İn 1911 a penniless young music-hall artist left England
for America. His future was uncertain, but he did not believe it
could be unhappier than his past. He had grown up in the
slums of London's East End and had experienced great
poverty. His mother's life had been so hard that she had finally
gone mad, and his father had died of drink. Both parents had been on the
stage and lived in the hope that they would one day be stars. Their son was
determined to succeed where they had failed. By 1914 his optimism and determination had
been justified. Charles Chaplin was the most talked-about man in America, the king of silent
movies. He was not only admired as a first-class actor and comedian, he was also making his
name as a director. How did he reach the top of the film world in such a short time? He was
not an instant success. His attempts to copy other slapstick comedians who were popular at
that time were a failure. However he gradually began to develop the character of the tramp
that will always be connected with his name. He borrowed ideas from many sources and
though he "stole" most of his clothes from other slapstick comedians of the time, he
developed his own special mannerisms to go with them. He used his bowler hat to signal
secret messages and his walking stick allowed him to cause confusion and punish his enemy
from a distance. He got the idea for his famous flat-footed walk from a London taxi driver who
had sore feet.
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