REEL CHAPLIN: RICHARD SCHICKEL'S VIEW OF THE LEGENDARY COMEDIAN
At the beginning of the 20th century, when filmmaking was still in its infancy, Charlie Chaplin (1889 - 1977) became one of the best-known actors and directors. His "Tramp" character, along with movies such as City Lights, Modern Times, The Great Dictator and The Kid, among others, made him famous around the world.
Richard Schickel is a film critic for TIME Magazine, documentary film maker and movie historian, who has written over 30 critically acclaimed books, among them The Essential Chaplin: Perspectives on the Life and Art of the Great Comedian. He also produced a documentary about Chaplin, entitled Charlie: The Life and Art of Charles Chaplin.
Q: In your book, The Essential Chaplin: Perspectives on the Life and Art of the Great Comedian, you call Charlie Chaplin "the most famous man in the world" in his time. What do you think made him so universally popular, and what set him apart from other actors of his day?
A: Chaplin was present at the creation of the movies. He began appearing in them as they made the transition from short films to feature length,
which made him, along with Mary Pickford and Douglas Fairbanks, Sr., one of
the movies' first superstars. Film was, in those days, central to the
creation of the modern celebrity system. The instant replication of star
imagery in hundreds of prints circulated simultaneously all over the world,
made the famous more famous than ever much more quickly. And the ancillary
celebrity media - newspapers, magazines, even merchandising - were also ready
and waiting, at this moment, to amplify that imagery. Beyond that, Chaplin's
screen character had a universal appeal. He was an everyman with whom
everyone could identify. Finally, the intellectual community took him up. He
seemed to be an artist, which the movies had never had before, and he gave
this new medium respectability and credibility it had not had before.
The movies needed him almost as much as he needed the movies.
Competitors would emerge in the 1920s, but he had been there first and there
was a richness and a purity in his screen character that the merely
beautiful, the merely sexy, could not match. Later, when his production pace
slackened, and he was threatened by the arrival of sound, people remained as
fascinated by his fame and by his struggles to assert himself in what was
essentially a new medium.
Q: How did Chaplin "invent" the Little Tramp character, and his signature outfit of baggy pants, a cutaway coat and vest, large, worn-out shoes, and a battered derby hat?
A: He always said he more or less instinctively grabbed the costume and props from what was around Mack Sennett's studio.
Maybe so. But in a lot of his early films he experimented with different
personae - a swell, a dandy, a drunk. It took him a few years to settle
definitively on The Little Fellow. People liked him well enough when he
was not playing The Tramp - he would have been some sort of (silent) movie
star without that character. But that figure was lovable in ways that
transcended mere stardom.
Q: Why did Chaplin refuse to make a talkie featuring the Little Tramp, even though the technological innovations made the transition from silent to talking films possible?
A: The Little Fellow was a creature of silence. Chaplin's genius--and he was
assuredly a genius--was largely a kinetic one. He could say anything he
needed to say through pantomime; he did not need words to get what he wanted
to say across. So talking was superfluous to him. And given that his
voice - rather thin and prissy - was antithetical to The Tramp's character,
sound was an option that justifiably frightened him. So though the mass
public was enamored of sound, it was willing to cut him a break. The first
films he made during the sound era were every bit as successful as his
silent films had been.
Q: Why did he decide to "retire" the Tramp in Modern Times? Did he or the public have enough of the character?
A: I don’t think it was a conscious decision. But The Tramp's essentially
Edwardian world was disappearing, replaced by industrialism, modernism, evil
political forces - the very forces he satirized in Modern Times. It became
increasingly difficult for him to escape down the open roads that had been
available to him in his younger years. Also, by the late thirties and
forties, he was a portly, middle-aged man, lacking the quickness and
insouciance of his youth. He toyed with various ideas that would have
brought back The Tramp. Dictator was surely a close variant on The Tramp - but by this time he wanted to make grand philosophical statements, which required words. He was
not good with them. He was verbose, repetitive and unfunny. So I don't think
he was tired of The Tramp (and the public surely was not). He just seemed
irrelevant to Chaplin's changing body and priorities.
Q: How did Chaplin get along with other comedic film stars of his time, for example Buster Keaton and Laurel and Hardy?
A: He respected Keaton without being particularly close to him, as he was
with other movie star peers. But aside from Doug Fairbanks, who was his best
friend, he was not wildly interested in Hollywood celebrities. He was after
much grander figures - Einstein, Churchill, et al - people whose fame was not,
as he saw it, merely frivolous.
Q: Is it true that Chaplin often inserted elements of his own life into his films and if so, which ones were the most biographical?
A. In the largest sense, all of his work drew on his life. He had been
living on the streets, on his wits, since his childhood as a virtual orphan
in London and I'm sure that incidents from that life were incorporated, in
embroidered form, in his films. For example, he perfectly reproduced the
fence where he had courted his first serious girlfriend, for his meetings
with the blind flower girl in City Lights. But it was the emotions he had
felt, more than the places he had been, that informed The Tramp. It seems
to me that The Kid is the film that most perfectly captures the child he
had been. Jackie Coogan was the projection of Chaplin as a child and the
character Chaplin plays represents the loving parents - taken from him by
death and madness - that he only briefly knew and all his life yearned for.
Q: By the same token, many critics say that the messages of Chaplin's films were inseparable from his own convictions, which were openly liberal. Which of his films express Chaplin's personal beliefs the best?
A: Chaplin was no mere liberal. He was in his later years, a Stalinist,
that is to say, he embraced totalitarian leftism. He sometimes spoke
guiltily about having become a rich man by playing a desperately poor man.
Most of his audience – with the exception of the lunatic right - forgave him his politics out of affection for his genius and the apolitical gifts that had endeared him
to the world.
Q: Do we know what was Hitler's reaction to being mocked by Chaplin in The Great Dictator?
A: Hitler, of course, hated Chaplin and his films were banned in Germany
from the earliest days of the Nazi regime. I doubt that Hitler saw The Great
Dictator. The Nazi leader was convinced that Chaplin was a Jew (almost
certainly not so) and Chaplin gave a great answer to that opinion. "I do not
have that honor," he said. There are people like David Thomson, the film
historian, who insist that they were in some perverse sense kindred
spirits - given their ability to manipulate the feelings of the mass audience.
I’m dubious about that, given that Chaplin’s appeal was non-verbal, while
Hitler’s was purely verbal, and given that their political views were
diametrically opposite. They did share the historical accident of being born
in the same week in the same year (1889) and, of course, there were those
mustaches.
Q: What sparked your own interest in Charlie Chaplin?
A: As a film critic and historian, I naturally knew much of Chaplin's work,
but in a rather casual way. He was not a passion of mine, probably because
he achieved the height of his fame before I was born and because I am always
dubious about sentiment in movies - indeed, in any kind of fiction. But in
2001 Warner Bros. acquired the rights to distribute Chaplin’s films and
invited me to make a documentary film - a biography intended to reintroduce
Chaplin to an audience that had, like me, rather lost touch with him in
recent years. As I studied his work and talked to people who had known and
worked with him, my admiration for his achievements rose radically. He was a
difficult and not entirely agreeable man - I don’t think I would particularly
have liked knowing him - but he was a great artist whose successes far
outweighed his latter day failures and I now count myself among his more
devoted admirers.
Q: Which of his movies are your favorites?
A: The Kid, The Circus, and City Lights.