Charlie Chaplin
Charlie Chaplin
Tramp"
An intermediate level English resource.
Throughout the world, people recognise the figure of Charlie Chaplin,
perhaps the most famous Londoner in history.
Chaplin‘s Little Tramp is one of the most recognized fictional figures ever created. The
Tramp made his last appearance in a film nearly a hundred years ago, yet he is still
instantly recognized and loved in almost every corner of the world. Fellini called him "a
sort of Adam from whom we are all descended."
For several generations in the first half of the twentieth century — for artists,
intellectuals, and for popular audiences across the world, — Chaplin was the symbol
of the little man and the oppressed masses. It was significant that he was the one
to challenge the German Kaiser, to challenge Hitler, to challenge urbanism and
automation, to challenge intolerance and cruelty and hypocrisy. He even
challenged McCarthyism*.
In 1980, when the film-makers of Poland wanted a symbol for their assertion of
human liberty, they found it natural to choose the figure of the Tramp.
But who was Charlie Chaplin, and where did he come from? He was born on April
16th 1889, and as a child he grew up in the poor East End of London. It was a hard
place to live in, and Charlie's family was poor, indeed very poor. But Charlie was a
determined child, who had the courage to defy poverty and difficulties that would have
ended many young lives. It took more courage, later, for him to give up growing
success and a guaranteed income of £50 per week in vaudeville, and go for the
unknown new world of the "movies".
This happened in 1913. Charlie was in New York at the time with an English troupe,
playing in vaudeville. He was invited to go to Hollywood and take part in some movies.
The movie industry in Hollywood was very new, and Charlie had no guarantee of
success. But he had courage, and he went, in spite of the risks.
It was a good move ! By 1914, he was established as one of Hollywood's most
successful stars, and was earning $1,250 a week, making him a rich man! It was in
1915 that he first appeared in his most famous role, as the tramp.
Although Charlie Chaplin became very rich, he never forgot his poor childhood; and
money was not the most important thing in his life. He loved the USA, but he could see
that it was not perfect., and he was ready to say so. Going against commercial
caution, he questioned the symbolism of the Statue of Liberty in The Immigrant; then
he offended American foreign policy with The Great Dictator, and later he ridiculed
McCarthyist America at a time when no other film-maker dared to do so.
For this he paid the price, as in 1952, while he as travelling to England for a film
première, the FBI warned him that he would be arrested if he came back to the USA.
He was one of the high-profile victims of the McCarthyist "witch hunts". He did not return
to the USA again until 1972, when he received an honorary Oscar.
Despite all, he remained to the end, in the words of René Clair, " a monument to the
cinema of all countries and all times."
WORD GUIDE
tramp: vagabond - fictional - invented - we are descended: we come - popular
audiences: ordinary people - to challenge: to speak openly against - urbanism : the
growth of cities - intolerance: bigotry, refusing to listen to other opinions -
assertion: declaration - to defy: to fight against - give up: abandon - troupe : theatre,
group of actors - income: money - vaudeville : a type of live theatre - commercial
caution: fear of losing money - warn : tell, alert -
remained: continued - denounce: report, inform about .