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  1. Charlie Chaplin

    Charlie Chaplin

    English comic actor and filmmaker

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  2. The Great Dictator. 1941 Nominee Oscar. Best Writing, Original Screenplay. The Great Dictator. 1972 Winner Honorary Award. For the incalculable effect he has had in making motion pictures the art form of this century. 1 more. Bodil Awards. 1959 Winner Honorary Award. 1949 Winner Bodil. Best American Film (Bedste amerikanske film) Monsieur Verdoux.

    • April 16, 1889
    • December 25, 1977
  3. Chaplin received three Academy Awards: an Honorary Award for "versatility and genius in acting, writing, directing, and producing The Circus" in 1929, a second Honorary Award for "the incalculable effect he has had in making motion pictures the art form of this century" in 1972, and a Best Score award in 1973 for Limelight (shared with Ray ...

  4. Feb 19, 2008 · 200K. 13M views 16 years ago #Oscars #academyaward #CharlieChaplin. Charlie Chaplin receiving an Honorary Oscar® - 44th Annual Academy Awards®. Subscribe for more Oscars videos...

    • Feb 19, 2008
    • 14M
    • Oscars
  5. Chaplin has received multiple recognitions and awards, especially later in life. In 1992, Chaplin was ranked at no. 5 in Sight & Sound Critics’ Top Ten Poll list of the “Top 10 Directors” of all time. Several of Chaplin’s works are still regarded in the 21st century as classics among the greatest films ever made.

    • Overview
    • Early life and career

    Comedian, actor, producer, writer, and director Charlie Chaplin is widely regarded as the greatest comic artist of the screen and one of the most important figures in motion-picture history. In 1972 he received a special Academy Award for “the incalculable effect he has had on making motion pictures the art form of this century.”

    What is Charlie Chaplin remembered for?

    Charlie Chaplin is best remembered for his recurring silent film character “the Little Tramp.” Outfitted in a too-small coat, too-large pants, floppy shoes, and a battered derby, Tramp was shunned by polite society and unlucky in love but ever a survivor. Audiences loved his cheekiness, his deflation of pomposity, his unexpected gallantry, and his resilience.

    What were Charlie Chaplin’s achievements?

    Charlie Chaplin starred in, wrote, and directed some of most memorable films in motion-picture history, including The Kid (1921), The Gold Rush (1925), City Lights (1931), Modern Times (1936), The Great Dictator (1940), for which he was nominated for an Academy Award as best actor, Monsieur Verdoux (1947), and Limelight (1952).

    What was Charlie Chaplin’s childhood like?

    Chaplin was named after his father, a British music-hall entertainer. He spent his early childhood with his mother, the singer Hannah Hall, after she and his father separated, and he made his own stage debut at age five, filling in for his mother. The mentally unstable Hall was later confined to an asylum. Charlie and his half brother Sydney were sent to a series of bleak workhouses and residential schools.

    Using his mother’s show-business contacts, Charlie became a professional entertainer in 1897 when he joined the Eight Lancashire Lads, a clog-dancing act. His subsequent stage credits include a small role in William Gillette’s Sherlock Holmes (1899) and a stint with the vaudeville act Casey’s Court Circus. In 1908 he joined the Fred Karno pantomime troupe, quickly rising to star status as The Drunk in the ensemble sketch A Night in an English Music Hall.

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    Oscar-Worthy Movie Trivia

    While touring America with the Karno company in 1913, Chaplin was signed to appear in Mack Sennett’s Keystone comedy films. Though his first Keystone one-reeler, Making a Living (1914), was not the failure that historians have claimed, Chaplin’s initial screen character, a mercenary dandy, did not show him to best advantage. Ordered by Sennett to come up with a more-workable screen image, Chaplin improvised an outfit consisting of a too-small coat, too-large pants, floppy shoes, and a battered derby. As a finishing touch, he pasted on a postage-stamp mustache and adopted a cane as an all-purpose prop. It was in his second Keystone film, Kid Auto Races at Venice (1914), that Chaplin’s immortal screen alter ego, “the Little Tramp,” was born.

    In truth, Chaplin did not always portray a tramp; in many of his films his character was employed as a waiter, store clerk, stagehand, fireman, and the like. His character might be better described as the quintessential misfit—shunned by polite society, unlucky in love, jack-of-all-trades but master of none. He was also a survivor, forever leaving past sorrows behind, jauntily shuffling off to new adventures. The Tramp’s appeal was universal: audiences loved his cheekiness, his deflation of pomposity, his casual savagery, his unexpected gallantry, and his resilience in the face of adversity. Some historians have traced the Tramp’s origins to Chaplin’s Dickensian childhood, while others have suggested that the character had its roots in the motto of Chaplin’s mentor, Fred Karno: “Keep it wistful, gentlemen, keep it wistful.” Whatever the case, within months after his movie debut, Chaplin was the screen’s biggest star.

  6. Awards. Trivia. FAQ. IMDbPro. All topics. Charles Chaplin (1889-1977) Writer. Actor. Director. IMDbPro Starmeter Top 5,000 229. Play trailer 2:16. Churchill and the Movie Mogul (2019) 8 Videos. 99+ Photos.

  7. Apr 21, 2020 · 1929 – At the first annual Academy Awards, Chaplin is honored with a special trophy for his work on The Circus, a film he produced in 1927.

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