ThePerson: Charlie Chaplin, biography, creativity, life story. Chaplin's World: "Charles and Charlie - two different stories. Charlie Chaplin's first performance

MUSIC FROM THE MOVIE "STAMP LIGHTS"

On April 16, 1889, at eight o'clock in the evening, in London, on East Lane, in the Walworth area, a boy was born - Charles Spencer Chaplin. His parents - Lily Harley and Charles Chaplin - were actors and met when they played together in the same melodrama. They were in love, but during the tour Lily met an elderly lord and ran away with him to Africa. Sidney, Charlie's older brother, was born there. Lily soon returned to England, her romance with Charles resumed, and they soon married. And three years later, Charlie was born to them.

As he recalled later, in early childhood he did not suspect the existence of his father and did not remember the time when he lived with his family. The fact is that Charles drank a lot, which is why, according to Lily, they separated a year after the birth of their son.
Charlie's mother performed as soubrette in a variety theater and earned good money. She and her two sons lived in a three-room flat in West Square, Lambeth. Charlie said that his mother loved to dress him and his brother up on Sundays and take him for walks. “We strolled sedately along Kennington Road, bursting with pride and self-satisfaction,” he recalled.
But when Charlie was five years old, trouble happened - Lily lost her voice.

More and more often he broke down while singing and turned to a whisper. She received engagements less and less often, and then they stopped inviting her completely. It so happened that Lily's last performance was also her first performance little Charlie on stage. That day, his mother lost her voice, the audience started booing her, and she had to go backstage.

The director said that he could try putting her son on stage (he once saw the boy presenting something to his friends). Finding himself in front of the audience, Charlie was not at a loss and sang the then popular song “Jack Jones”, but before he could finish, coins flew onto the stage. The boy announced that he would first collect them and only then continue to sing. This amused the audience even more. "I felt at home on stage, chatted freely with the audience, danced, imitated famous singers, including my mother, performing her favorite Irish march,” said Charlie. Repeating the chorus, he depicted how his mother’s voice was breaking - this caused a storm of delight among the audience, and they again began throwing money on stage, and when Lily came out to take Charlie away, the audience greeted her with applause.

....When Sydney left Exmouth and Charlie left the orphanage, he and his mother moved often, and as a result they ended up back in the workhouse, from where the boys were sent to Norwood Asylum, which, according to Charlie, was even darker than Hanwell . While they were there, sad news arrived: Lily had lost her mind and was sent to psychiatric hospital. Sydney was crying, and Charlie was overcome by despair: “Why did she do this? Mom, so cheerful and carefree, how could she go crazy? I had a vague feeling that she lost her mind on purpose so as not to think about us. My heart sank from despair and it seemed to me that I saw her in front of me! She looked at me pitifully, and was carried away by the wind somewhere into the void,” he later recalled about the feelings experienced that day.

After some time, it became known that Lily had recovered and left the hospital. She rented a cheap room and took the boys in with her. During this time, she began to awaken Charlie's interest in theater and convinced him that he had talent. However, he was not accepted to play in the school production of Cinderella. Charlie was jealous of those who were chosen, and the performance itself seemed very dull to him then, and he was saved only by the beauty of the girl who played Cinderella, with whom Charlie was secretly in love.

But two months later success came to him. One day Lily saw a funny poem in a bookstore window, rewrote it and brought it home. Charlie learned it and read it to a friend during a break at school. He was overheard by a teacher who then asked Charlie to speak to the class. The guys were rolling around laughing. The next day, Charlie was taken from class to class, after which the fame of his talent spread throughout the school. Teachers and students became interested in him. As Charlie said, he only now tasted fame, although he had to perform before. Since then, he became interested in school, he even began to study better. But his education was soon interrupted when Charlie left school to join the Eight Lancashire Boys clogdance group.

...................After some time, Charlie persuaded his mother to allow him to leave school so that he could go to work. He tried many jobs: he worked as a delivery boy in a small shop, worked in a waiting room for two doctors, was a servant in a rich house, worked in a writing supplies store, worked as a glass blower for one day, then in a printing house... But as Charlie admitted later, he understood that that all this is temporary and in the end he will become an actor. While working at the printing plant, Charlie fell ill with the flu and Lily insisted that he return to school.

One fine day a telegram arrived in which Sydney said that he was arriving the next day. From that moment on, life changed for the better. My brother brought home good earnings and things started to improve. And one fine day, Charlie was invited to a theater agency and learned that he had been hired for the role of the messenger Billy in the play “Sherlock Holmes,” and before rehearsals began, he was offered to play the boy Sammy in the play “Jim, a Ragamuffin Novel.” As Charlie rode home in the omnibus, he began to realize what had happened: “Finally, I have escaped the shackles of poverty and entered the long-awaited kingdom of my dreams - the kingdom that my mother spoke about so often and so selflessly. I will become an actor!”

..Charlie hardly knew how to read, but Sydney helped him with this. He read aloud, and within three days Charlie had memorized all thirty-five pages of his considerable role as the boy Sammy.
At the rehearsals of "Jim" he performed very well, and Mr. Saintsberry, the author of the play, had to correct only one flaw: Charlie jerked his head and grimaced too much when speaking.
"Jim" was not a success; reviewers tore it to smithereens. However, the role of Charlie was a success. Here is what a reviewer from the London Tropical Times wrote after reviewing the play: “The only thing that saves the play is the role of Sammy - the newsboy, a kind of smart London boy, who made the audience laugh. Quite banal and hackneyed, she was, however, very funny performed by young Charles Chaplin, capable and temperamental young actor. I have yet to hear about this boy, but I hope to hear a lot about him in the very near future."

.After a two-week tour of "Jim", rehearsals for "Sherlock Holmes" began. A big tour followed. The play was a success. When the troupe returned to London after ten months of touring, Charlie asked the director to give Sydney a small role in the play, and they went on the second tour together. Shortly before returning to London, they received news that their mother had recovered. Lily came to see her sons, but after a while she went home to arrange housing. Charlie and Sydney visited her at the end of the second tour, but soon went on tour again. One day they learned that Lily was sick again. Clarity of mind never returned to her.

Text from a biography about Charles Chaplin.

THE FURTHER SUCCESSES OF CHARLES SPENCER CHAPLIN ARE KNOWN.

HE BECAME A GREAT ACTOR AND COMEDIAN.

A PERSON WHO WON THE LOVE AND APPLAUSE OF THE WHOLE WORLD.

MAN IS A LEGEND..

MAN IS THE ERA.

ACTOR, MUSICIAN, COMPOSER, DIRECTOR, SCREENWRITER -

GENIUS!!!

AND HE OFTEN WRITTEN THAT IF IT WERE NOT FOR THE LOVE, ATTENTION FOR THE CHILDREN OF HIS POOR MOTHER

LILY HE WOULD NEVER BE THE SAME WE KNOW HIM...

AT THE FIRST OPPORTUNITY,

WHEN MONEY WAS NO LONGER A PROBLEM FOR HIM.

HE BOUGHT LILY FOR MOM, WHO NEVER CAME OUT OF MADNESS,

HOUSE, SET HER THERE,

WHERE SHE SPENT THE LAST YEARS...

Charlie Chaplin is an American and English actor, a symbol of silent cinema, best known for his role as the tramp Charlie - whose little tragedies the whole world still laughs at.

Difficult childhood and first roles

Charlie Chaplin was born into a family of actors. His father was at one time a very famous performer of songs in London music halls. But literally a year after Charlie was born, he left the family. Mother was also a singer and actress. He grew up with his older brother Sidney, whom his mother gave birth to before marriage. But the boy also bore the last name Chaplin.

Charlie Chaplin played his first role at the age of 5. My mother fell ill - she started having problems with her throat, and could not go on stage. Then little Charlie came out into the spotlight instead of her and began to sing her song. The enthusiastic public received the baby with a bang: he was bombarded with coins and bills, which he immediately began collecting. The audience was very amused by this number, because the boy did not even finish the song. But, having collected the money, he finished singing the song and ran away.

Thus, this was both the first performance and the first money earned.

Since then, the mother has never returned to the stage: after leaving her husband’s family, she began to have mental problems and was placed in a hospital. The children were sent to a shelter for poor children.

At the age of 9, Charlie joined the dance group for talented children “Eight Lancashire Boys”, it was there that he first succeeded in a comic role, but he would have to leave the group after a year and a half - he needed to earn a living. Therefore, the boy sells newspapers on the streets, helps a doctor he knows, works part-time at a local printing house - but give permanent job little boy no one took the risk.

At the age of 14, he finally finds himself in his element: he is taken as a messenger to the theater and offered a small role in the play. Charlie's greatest fear was that he would be told to read the role out loud - after all, he practically could not read, but his older brother helped him cope with this problem.

Charlie the actor and the USA

Already at the age of 16, Charlie began to play in the theater constantly, he took part in variety show productions. In addition, he studies music diligently - he plays the violin for four and sometimes 16 hours every day and takes additional lessons from the theater conductor.

At the beginning of 1908 he received permanent place actor in the theatrical enterprise of Fred Karno - they supply sketches and pantomimes for almost all London music halls. Charlie jumps at the chance and soon becomes one of the main actors in a number of productions.

In 1910-1912, Charlie was on tour with the Carnot troupe in the USA. The next few months in England lead him to the idea that he needs to return to America, so when the troupe gathers there again for performances, Charlie goes too. Nose firm decision stay there.

At one of his performances, Charlie caught the eye of film producer Mack Sennett, and he invited him to try himself in the film industry. The first roles did not bring success: Sennett even began to think that he had made a mistake, but the actress Mabel Normand persuaded him to give the boy another chance. And she was right - films with Chaplin began to generate income. But Charlie wanted to write his own scripts and make his own films.

The birth of "Tramp" and popularity

In February 1914, the first film with the tramp Charlie, “Children's Car Race,” appeared. The image of the clumsy young man took shape literally in a few minutes: trousers that were too wide, big shoes, but a small bowler hat and mustache that didn’t fit his size. As Charlie himself explained: he glued on his mustache so as not to appear too young, but at the same time he did not want to hide his facial expressions with anything.

But Chaplin no longer wanted to work for someone. Therefore, he left Sennett and in the same 1914 he released his film, where he was a screenwriter, director, and actor. He likes this life: his earnings have also increased significantly. This is no longer $150 a week, but a minimum of $1,250, and this does not include bonuses for contracts.

In 1917, Charlie Chaplin became the most expensive actor of his time - he signed a contract for $1 million with the film studio First National Pictures.


First independent films

In 1919, Chaplin formed his own studio, United Artists, with Mary Pickford, Douglas Fairbanks and David W. Griffith. He begins making feature films.

But his first work, the film “A Woman of Paris,” was received rather coolly by the public. People didn't want deep dramas; they preferred tramp Charlie to laugh at. But critics appreciated the movie; they realized that although Chaplin is a successful actor, he is, first of all, an author.

Then his masterpieces appeared: “The Gold Rush” in 1925 and “The Circus” in 1928.

Despite the fact that films had already begun to be made with sound, Chaplin remained faithful to silent films. His last film in this genre was the anti-Hitler film “The Great Dictator,” which was released in 1940. Tramp Charlie never appeared in his films again.

At the same time, US authorities begin persecution against Chaplin. He is suspected of communism, so the FBI is collecting dirt on him. “The Great Dictator” played a cruel joke on Chaplin: in countries where Nazism flourishes, he is considered a “dirty Jew,” and in America they blame him for “pointing a communist finger at the audience.” Viewers wrote him threatening letters, and distributors waved him off - they did not dare rent such a film because of the slippery subject matter.

His next film, Monsieur Verdoux, was banned from release altogether.

Departure from the USA, last years of life

When Charlie Chaplin left for England in 1952 to present his new film Footlights there, he could no longer return to the USA - he was banned from returning.

Therefore, the actor buys a house in Switzerland in the city of Vevey.

The next time he comes to America is only in 1972 - he will be given a short-term visa for the Academy Awards ceremony.

Charlie Chaplin's last film was A Countess from Hong Kong, starring Sophia Loren and Marlon Brando.

The actor died in his sleep on December 25, 1977, and was buried in the local cemetery in the city of Vevey. A monument to the actor was erected on the shore of Lake Geneva.


Titles and awards:

In 1954 he was awarded the Peace Prize.

In 1965 he received the Erasmus Prize for his contribution to the development of European culture.

In 1975, Queen Elizabeth II knighted Charlie Chaplin.

Chaplin received three Oscars: in 1929, 1972 and 1973.

  • Chaplin once took part incognito in a Tramp look-alike competition at a San Francisco theater and did not even make it to the finals of the competition.
  • Chaplin was very proud that a drop of gypsy blood flowed in his veins - his grandmother came from a family of gypsies.
  • Charlie Chaplin's famous cane stance is a tribute to his father. This is how Charlie remembered him from a photograph he saw as a child.
  • Chaplin was married four times and had 12 children.
  • After his death, Chaplin's coffin was stolen for ransom. The criminals were caught, and the actor’s body was reburied under an almost 2-meter layer of concrete.

"...the world gave me all the best and only a little of the worst"- Charles Chaplin was able to say about his life.

Chaplin was born in London in 1889. His parents were artists, so Charlie's first performance on stage took place at the age of five. A child stood in the bright light of the footlights and sang popular songs, feeling at home on stage, chatting freely with the audience, dancing and imitating famous singers, which caused laughter and applause.

Little Charlie had a bright personality and a talent for life: the family was poor, and he constantly implemented all kinds of business projects. Chaplin was not yet 12 years old when his mother allowed him to leave school so he could go to work. Extremely inventive, he glued toys, sold newspapers, worked in a printing house, in a glass-blowing workshop, in a doctor's office, delivered groceries, was a servant in a rich house, but Charlie always wanted and was ready to become an artist...

And so the theater agency wrote down his name, and then he was invited to play a role in the play. And in the first newspaper response, the reviewer writes: “I have not heard about this boy, but I hope to hear a lot about him in the near future.”

At the age of 17, Charles Chaplin was accepted into the Carnot troupe, where he was already greeted with applause on stage.

But still daily life The London actor soon begins to cause him a feeling of dissatisfaction, he decides to go to America. On a Sunday morning in September 1909, Charles Chaplin arrived in New York. A year later he was in California, in Hollywood. Thus began his journey as a film artist and director. Very soon the “great magician” - cinema brought Chaplin - world fame. The actor created a tragicomic image" little man"in his cinematic works - humanistic and anti-fascist films. In total, the actor played in more than 80 films. In many films he was simultaneously an actor, director and scriptwriter.

In 1954, Charles Spencer Chaplin was awarded the International Peace Prize. Charles Chaplin lived a long life creative life. In his declining years, he was still full of creative ideas and believed that even in these years his life was “even more exciting than ever before.”

N. Aleeva

Charlie Chaplin told Einstein: “People applaud you because no one understands you, but they applaud me because everyone understands”.

First performance

I owe my first performance on stage at the age of five to my mother’s sick voice. She did not like to leave me alone in furnished rooms in the evenings and usually took me with her to the theater.

I remember standing backstage when suddenly my mother’s voice broke. The audience began to laugh, some began to sing in falsetto, others meowed. It was all strange, and I didn't quite understand what was happening. But the noise kept increasing, and the mother was forced to leave the stage. She was very upset and argued with the director. And suddenly he said that he could try to let me out instead of her - he once saw me presenting something to my mother’s friends.

I remember how he led me by the hand onto the stage amid this noise and, after a short explanation, left me there alone. And so, in the bright light of the stage lights, behind which the faces of the spectators could be seen in the tobacco smoke, I began to sing the then popular song “Jack Jones” to the accompaniment of the orchestra, which for a long time could not tune in to me.

Before I could sing half the song, coins began to rain down on the stage. I interrupted the singing and announced that I would first collect money, and only then I would sing. My remark caused laughter. The director came on stage with a scarf and helped me quickly collect the coins. I was afraid that he would keep them for himself. The audience noticed my fear, and the laughter in the audience intensified, especially when the director wanted to leave the stage, but I did not take a step away from him. Only after making sure that he handed them to his mother did I return and finish the song.

Charles Chaplin (From the book "My Biography")

Sir Charles Spencer (Charlie) Chaplin (1889-1977) was an American and English film actor, producer and composer, screenwriter and film director. He created the most famous character in comedy films - tramp Charlie. Became the only person on the Planet, who received an Oscar "for his invaluable contribution to the fact that cinema has become an art in this century."

Birth and family

Charlie was born late in the evening of April 16, 1889 in the British capital London. This happened on East Lane in the Walworth area, where the Chaplin family of artists lived.

His father, Charles Chaplin Sr., had a pleasant baritone voice and was incredibly popular in the London music halls in the 1880s. He toured a lot in European countries and also performed in America. There were also songs in his repertoire that were written personally. But the father of the future great comedian ended his life early and tragically. He drank and died in the spring of 1901 at St. Thomas's Hospital in London while being treated for alcoholism. Chaplin's father was only 37 years old.

His paternal grandmother also died early; baby Charlie was not yet six years old. All he knew about her was that her family had gypsy roots, which Chaplin himself was incredibly proud of all his life.

Charlie's mother, Hannah Chaplin (stage name Lily Gurley) was a stage actress who performed in many London theaters as a dancer and singer. Before her marriage to Charles, Hannah had a relationship with a certain Jew named Hawks, which resulted in the birth of a boy, Sidney Hill. Later, his stepfather gave him his last name, Chaplin. So Charlie had a half-brother on his mother's side, Sydney Chaplin, who also became an actor.

Childhood

Charlie Chaplin's early childhood years can be called happy. The father was popular, earned enough money, and the young children had no particular needs. But soon Charles Chaplin Sr. found a new love interest and left his family. From then on, hopeless poverty began in the life of little Charlie.

The boy spent all his time with his mother, standing behind the scenes and watching her performances. The baby knew his mother’s entire song repertoire by heart. Thanks to this, at the age of 5 he first appeared on the theater stage, but this happened by chance.

During the number, Charlie stood backstage and listened to his mother sing. Suddenly Lily Gurley coughed and stopped singing. A laryngeal disease had been tormenting her for a long time, and it had to happen to lose her voice during a performance. The rather tipsy audience began to be indignant. And in an instant, five-year-old Charlie thought that now his mother would not be paid and there would be nothing to eat. The kid jumped onto the stage, began to finish singing the song and made funny faces at the same time. The people in the hall were so delighted that they began throwing coins onto the stage. And the boy, without stopping singing, began to collect them, which amused the audience even more.

Her mother's illness no longer allowed her to go on stage, this caused the poor woman to lose her mind, and she was placed in a clinic for the insane.

In 1896, Charlie was taken in by his own father, but he already had new family, and the boy lived there quite a bit. At the age of seven, he and his older brother were sent to a workhouse in Lambeth. This is so charitable social institution, where those in need were provided with shelter, food and work, but there were no forced obligations.

Early years

In 1898, Chaplin became a member of the children's dance group "Eight Lancashire Boys", the guys gave concerts in which Charlie often got short comic numbers. In 1900, at Christmas the group staged the pantomime “Cinderella”, Chaplin got the role of the cat. The audience liked it, they laughed at his pantomime, but in the spring of 1901 the boy left the group. He began to earn extra money whenever the opportunity presented itself:

  • sold newspapers;
  • assisted doctors, performing the functions of an orderly;
  • worked as a courier in a printing house.

Chaplin did not stay anywhere for a long time and at the same time always dreamed that the day would come when he would make a living as an actor.

At the age of 14, he finally got a permanent place in the theater. Moreover, in the production of Sherlock Holmes he got to play the messenger Billy. However, having reached that age, the guy was practically illiterate. What he was most afraid of when he was given the text of the role was what he would now be asked to read. Thank God, this did not happen, and his older brother Sidney helped him learn the words.

Along with the theater, Charlie performed in variety shows. He got some money, which at the age of 16 he decided to spend on learning to play the violin; he took lessons from a theater conductor.

When Chaplin was 19 years old, his older brother Sidney, who by that time had already established himself as an actor, brought him to Fred Karno's theatrical enterprise. At first Fred did not like the gloomy, short, overly shy young man. After all, the enterprise was based on comedic pantomimes and sketches, what kind of comedian could this Chaplin make? But Charlie revealed his acting talent to Carnot so much that he soon became a leading artist in some productions.

America and the beginning of a career

In the autumn of 1910 it happened important event in Chaplin's life, which turned his whole creative destiny. A multi-deck white liner set sail from the shores of Great Britain to America, and Fred Karnot's theater troupe went on tour to the USA.

At one of the performances, film producer of the Keystone studio Mack Sennett drew attention to Charlie. Chaplin was offered to act in films for $150 a week. For him it was a lot of money, he immediately agreed, opened a bank account into which he deposited his first salary. He adored the film industry, one might even say he raved about it, but at the same time his dreams future life Chaplin had more down-to-earth ideas; he wanted to buy a small plot in England and start pig farming.

The start of his film career did not go well; they even wanted to break the contract with Chaplin, but soon the films with his participation began to make a profit.

However, he did not really like the image invented for him - an arrogant swindler and womanizer. Charlie wanted to convey more warmth and lyricism to the viewer. And he came up with a brilliant character - his “little tramp”, who made Charlie Chaplin famous throughout the planet. Wide baggy pants, a tight jacket, a small bowler hat, huge boots, a small mustache and a cane in his hands - in this image he burst into the world of the 20th century film industry.

The audience instantly fell in love with the sophisticated tramp with gentlemanly manners. And Charlie began to understand that he could be not only a successful actor, but also a screenwriter and director, and much more successful and talented than those who filmed him at the Keystone studio. Chaplin left Mack Sennett. And in 1914, the premiere of his first film “Caught in the Rain” took place, where he acted in several roles at once - actor, director and screenwriter.

The path from tramp to genius

Wages Charlie began to grow. In 1915, instead of 150 dollars, he was already paid 1,250 weekly at the Essanay Film studio, and in 1916, 10,000 at the Mutual Film studio. In 1917, Charlie signed a contract for $1 million with the First National Pictures studio and acquired the title of the most expensive actor in history. English newspapers then published his photo with a check in his hands and signed: “Charlie Chaplin is the most expensive thing in the world since the World War.”

In 1919, Charlie founded his own film studio, United Artist, all of the films shot there were full-length:

  • "Parisian Woman" (1923);
  • "Gold Rush" (1925);
  • "Circus" (1928);
  • "Lights big city"(1931);
  • "Modern Times" (1936).

Charlie became famous in silent films, and he remained faithful to him even after 1927, when sound films began to be made. He managed to turn crude sketches into a comedy genre and made them an art. Charlie had an amazing gift: he not only had a keen sense of humor and knew how to joke perfectly, he could accurately determine time intervals: how long it would take the audience to laugh at one joke and hear the next one.

Despite his huge income, Chaplin lived for a long time in modest hotel rooms, and kept checks received from the film studio in an old suitcase. And only in 1922 he built his own home in Beverly Hills - a house with forty rooms with a cinema hall and an organ.

Persecution and departure from the USA

In 1940, Charlie made his first sound film, it was the anti-Hitler film “The Great Dictator.” In this tape he appeared as a tramp last time.

During World War II, Charlie advocated opening a second front as quickly as possible. In the United States they began to see him as a secret communist and suspect him of anti-American activities. They began to collect an extensive dossier on him.

In 1952, Chaplin went on a world tour with the premiere of his new film Footlights, but he was banned from returning to America.

Charlie went to Switzerland, where he settled in the town of Vevey. Here he wrote music for silent films, published memoirs, on the basis of which the biographical film “Chaplin” was created in 1992. In 1967 he wrote and directed last movie“The Countess from Hong Kong,” starring Sophia Loren and Marlon Brando.

In 1941, Chaplin was awarded an Oscar for his performance as “Best Actor” in the film “The Great Dictator.” In 1948, he won the second award for best screenwriter (Monsieur Verdoux). In 1970, his star was placed on Hollywood Alley Glory.

In 1972, Charlie was given a limited visa so that he could come to the United States to receive an Oscar statuette for his invaluable contribution to the development and history of cinema. The audience gave the great comedian a standing ovation for exactly 12 minutes. In 1975, Elizabeth II awarded Chaplin the Order of the Knight Commander British Empire.

Personal life

Charlie has always been incredibly popular with women.

His first love was the dancer Ketty Halley. They met in London, she was 14, he was 19. There were only five dates in their life, and then he left for America.

In Los Angeles in 1915, Charlie met actress Edna Purviance. Until 1918, they worked together at film studios and were members of love relationships. In 1918, Edna began an affair with another actor, but Chaplin continued to star her in his films until 1923, and then paid her a weekly allowance until she died in 1958.

In the fall of 1918, the actor entered into a legal marriage with Mildred Harris for the first time. He was 13 years older than the girl. The reason for the wedding turned out to be Mildred's pregnancy, and only later it turned out that it was a lie. In 1919, they finally had a boy, Norman, but three days later the child died. In 1920, Charlie filed for divorce. As he wrote in his memoirs, “he never managed to know the soul of his wife, because Mildred filled her with all sorts of nonsense and pink rags.”

In 1924, Charlie married 16-year-old Lita Gray. They had two boys - Charles Chaplin Jr. and Sidney Earle. During the divorce, Charlie paid his wife a record amount at that time - $825 thousand. Chaplin's biographers agree that his marriage to Lita served as the basis for the plot of Nabokov's novel Lolita.

For a long time Charlie had a relationship with actress Paulette Goddard. She lived in his house, starred in his films, and after the separation it became known that in 1936 they secretly got married. Paulette was the only woman Charlie with whom they were able to part peacefully and support until the end of their days friendly relations. Fate so happened that recent years Paulette also spent her life in Switzerland; the woman later married the writer Erich Maria Remarque for the second time.

Fourth and last wife Charlie, Una Oneil (daughter famous writer And Nobel laureate), was younger than husband for 36 years. After the marriage, her father stopped communicating with his daughter. But this union finally turned out to be happy for Chaplin; Una gave birth to three sons (Eugene, Michael and Christopher) and five daughters (Anna-Emile, Josephine, Geraldine, Victoria and Joanna).

Among all Chaplin's children, the famous film actress was his daughter Geraldine and his son Sydney, a theater actor. Also great success Granddaughter Oona Chaplin achieved success in Spanish cinema.

Death

In the autumn of 1977, in the small Swiss town of Vevey, in an old park, every day a tall brunette rolled in front of her wheelchair, in which an elderly man was sitting in dark glasses and a hat. His legs were carefully wrapped in a blanket. And no one guessed that this 88-year-old man - The Great Tramp, cinematic genius Charlie Chaplin. He was happier these days than he had ever been in his life.

Charlie died in his sleep. This happened on December 25, 1977, he was 88 years old. The actor was buried in the city cemetery of Vevey.

Two months later, vandals removed Charlie's coffin from the grave and stole it to demand and receive a ransom. The villains were detained by the police, and the body was reburied in Corsier-sur-Vevey at the Meruz cemetery. In order to prevent such kidnapping attempts, 6 feet of concrete was poured on top.

The young man smiled - even without any solitaire he knew what happened. He was born in London in April 1889. His mother, Lily Harley, was a popular variety show artist, and his father, Charlie Chaplin, also made a living by acting. He left the family immediately after the birth of Charlie Jr., but Lily had enough money to adequately support her children (she had another son, Sydney, from her first marriage).

Charlie remembered very well the day when their well-being collapsed like a house of cards. He was five years old, and, as usual, he stood backstage and watched his mother perform. Suddenly her voice stopped mid-sentence. Charlie didn't understand what was happening. Screams were heard in the hall, someone whistled, someone began to sing in falsetto, and someone meowed. Lily stood in the spotlight, confused, and finally ran into the dressing room. The director grabbed Charlie by the hand, pulled him onto the stage and, introducing him to the audience, left him alone.

Charlie was not embarrassed and began to sing the popular song "Jack Jones". For a long time the orchestra could not adapt to the five-year-old boy, but this only amused the audience, and coins began to fall onto the stage. Charlie interrupted his performance and explained that he would first raise money and then continue singing. The remark caused laughter. The director ran onto the stage and began to help him. Charlie was afraid that he would take all the money for himself, and began to grab the coins even faster. It was Charlie Chaplin's first performance and Lily Harley's last performance - she lost her voice. Soon there was not enough money even to live in the slums, and family council it was decided to go to the workhouse. This, of course, was considered shameful, but they friendly family More serious tests lay ahead. Mother was sent to the women's ward, Sydney to the senior ward, and Charlie to the infant ward. The children had already begun to get used to the difficult existence in the workhouse when a new misfortune befell them. Lily could not come to terms with extreme poverty and separation from her children, and she was placed in a mental hospital.

The first attack of the disease, fortunately, was short-lived, and soon the family was together again. Lily sewed blouses, Sydney delivered telegrams, then got a job as a bugler on the liner. Charlie tried to study, but was unsuccessful. He dropped out of school and also started working part-time.

The second time Lily was hospitalized was while Sydney was swimming. The money had long since run out, and Charlie and his mother had been sitting not only without bread for several weeks, but also without tea. Sometimes Charlie managed to stay for lunch or dinner with friends of his mother. Lily was starving, and this affected her health. Charlie did not want to return to either the workhouse or the orphanage. He wandered aimlessly around London and felt like a blind rat that had been driven into a corner and was about to be beaten with a stick. He was on the verge of despair when Sydney returned from the voyage. The elder brother brought not only money, with which they rented a decent apartment and began to live more or less tolerably, but also new idea- Charlie should become an artist. From that moment on, no matter what Charlie did - selling newspapers, gluing toys, working in a printing house or in a glass-blowing workshop - he knew that all this was temporary and sooner or later he would perform on stage.