Star of the silent-film era—and one of the most recognisable figures in motion picture history—Charlie Chaplin died on December 25th 1977. Geraldine Chaplin, his daughter, talks about “the moment he started to be fascinated with Hitler”
Charlie Chaplin's films in Berlin
A timeless entertainer with timely ideas
ON JULY 15th, a chilly evening in Berlin, around 3,000 people flocked to the Brandenburg Gate to watch a free open-air screening of Charlie Chaplin's 1940 film “The Great Dictator” (pictured). It was the first night of “Chaplin Complete”, a festival run by the city's Babylon cinema, which is showing all 80 Chaplin films in 24 days. But the crowds also came to see Geraldine Chaplin, Charlie's eldest daughter, who opened proceedings.
“This is an historic moment,” she said to me at the Adlon hotel, a short walk from the Brandenburg Gate, the day before the opening. “My father walked through history and he became history and now his film is shown here.”
Her father also stayed at the Adlon on a visit to Berlin in 1931, on a promotional trip for his last and most successful silent film, “City Lights”. Although he missed the premiere—a pro-Nazi media campaign defaming Chaplin as an “anti-German warmonger” and an “American film-Jew” forced him to abscond to Vienna ahead of time—Geraldine is convinced the visit left a mark on her father. The Nazis didn't come to power until 1933, but she says that Chaplin's visit “was the moment he started to be fascinated with Hitler”.
Geraldine recounts an interview Chaplin gave to Life magazine in the 1970s, when he was asked what he thought of Hitler's acting style. “Well, it was very oratory,” he said, “and a little bit over the top. The gestures were maybe just a little bit too big, which made me think, ‘This man does not have much confidence in himself.' He must have had someone back there behind the scenes saying to him, ‘You are doing good. You are doing great, guy.'” Geraldine suggests that these views of Hitler informed her father's parodic performance in "The Great Dictator”, his first talking picture and one of his most successful.
The only time Geraldine heard her father speak about Berlin was through a closed door. “I did a lot of eavesdropping,” she says. She remembers hearing Chaplin telling a German friend, “In Berlin I fell in love”, and then she “heard this name which wasn't my mother's.” Shocked, she ran to the kitchen, where her mother was cooking, but she didn't dare tell her what she had heard. She then chuckles, adding: “Of course, it was Nefertiti that he'd fallen in love with.” He was talking about the famous bust of the wife of the Egyptian Pharaoh Akhenaten, which sits in Berlin's Neues Museum.
“Chaplin Complete” is the second silent film season organised by the Babylon. Ten of the screenings will be accompanied by the Chamber Orchestra Potsdam. Timothy Brock, who is conducting the performances, has been working since 2000 to restore all the original scores from Chaplin's silent films. Geraldine is certain her father would approve. “He loved big audiences,” she says. “He also liked to watch his own films.” So do Berliners—recent screenings of “City Lights” and “The Gold Rush” both earned rapturous standing ovations. Timothy Grossman, head of the festival, is cheered. “The audiences' response and enthusiasm tell me that Charlie Chaplin is reaching people's hearts to this day.”
Chaplin Complete runs until August 7th at the Babylon cinema in Berlin
“This is an historic moment,” she said to me at the Adlon hotel, a short walk from the Brandenburg Gate, the day before the opening. “My father walked through history and he became history and now his film is shown here.”
Her father also stayed at the Adlon on a visit to Berlin in 1931, on a promotional trip for his last and most successful silent film, “City Lights”. Although he missed the premiere—a pro-Nazi media campaign defaming Chaplin as an “anti-German warmonger” and an “American film-Jew” forced him to abscond to Vienna ahead of time—Geraldine is convinced the visit left a mark on her father. The Nazis didn't come to power until 1933, but she says that Chaplin's visit “was the moment he started to be fascinated with Hitler”.
Geraldine recounts an interview Chaplin gave to Life magazine in the 1970s, when he was asked what he thought of Hitler's acting style. “Well, it was very oratory,” he said, “and a little bit over the top. The gestures were maybe just a little bit too big, which made me think, ‘This man does not have much confidence in himself.' He must have had someone back there behind the scenes saying to him, ‘You are doing good. You are doing great, guy.'” Geraldine suggests that these views of Hitler informed her father's parodic performance in "The Great Dictator”, his first talking picture and one of his most successful.
The only time Geraldine heard her father speak about Berlin was through a closed door. “I did a lot of eavesdropping,” she says. She remembers hearing Chaplin telling a German friend, “In Berlin I fell in love”, and then she “heard this name which wasn't my mother's.” Shocked, she ran to the kitchen, where her mother was cooking, but she didn't dare tell her what she had heard. She then chuckles, adding: “Of course, it was Nefertiti that he'd fallen in love with.” He was talking about the famous bust of the wife of the Egyptian Pharaoh Akhenaten, which sits in Berlin's Neues Museum.
“Chaplin Complete” is the second silent film season organised by the Babylon. Ten of the screenings will be accompanied by the Chamber Orchestra Potsdam. Timothy Brock, who is conducting the performances, has been working since 2000 to restore all the original scores from Chaplin's silent films. Geraldine is certain her father would approve. “He loved big audiences,” she says. “He also liked to watch his own films.” So do Berliners—recent screenings of “City Lights” and “The Gold Rush” both earned rapturous standing ovations. Timothy Grossman, head of the festival, is cheered. “The audiences' response and enthusiasm tell me that Charlie Chaplin is reaching people's hearts to this day.”
Chaplin Complete runs until August 7th at the Babylon cinema in Berlin
卓別林的音樂才華:從影五十二年來,他唯一拿到的競賽奧斯卡獎,竟然是音樂獎。
卓別林電影劇本選
著者
卓別林 查理(Chaplin, Charlie) 著
李 正倫 等譯
出版地 北京
出版者 中國電影出版社
出版日期 1979[民68]
632面 圖 21公分
卓別林的電影藝術
新潮文庫 215
著者 米提 戎(Mitry, Jean) 著
杜 讚貴 譯
台北市 出版者 志文
出版日期 民68
[95],159面 圖 19公分
版本
初版
附註
含索引
參考書目: 面153-156
巴贊論卓別林
文景人文 電影館
相關題名 譯自:Charlie Chaplin
著者 Bazin Andr'e 著
著者 吳 蕙儀 譯 林 清華 校
上海 出版者 上海人民出版社
出版日期 2008[民97]
ISBN
978-7-208-07943-4
157面 23公分
附註
含譯名對照表
卓別林 :笑淚交織的粉墨人生
發現之旅 60
著者 Robinson David 著
著者 葛 智強 譯
台北市 出版者 時報文化
出版日期 2002[民91]
ISBN
957-13-3604-1
147面 照 18公分
附註
含見證與文獻.電影作品集錄.圖片目錄與出處.索引
卓別林傳
人間傳記 001
著者
薩杜爾 喬治(Sadoul, George) 著
著者 邵 牧君 譯
出版者 人間印行 76
[5], 240面 圖 21公分
附註
含年表
別林的一生
著者
薩杜爾 喬治(Sadoul, George) 著
著者
韓 默 譯徐 繼曾 譯
出版地 北京
出版者
中國電影出版社
出版日期 1980[民69]
稽核項
267面 圖 21公分
附註
1985[民74]二刷
查利.卓別林
者
卓別林 小查爾斯 著
著者
文 剛 譯
吳 家驤 譯
其他著者
文剛, 吳樾譯
出版地
香港
出版者
綠洲出版公司
出版日期
1985[民74]
訂價
贈閱
裝訂
平裝
稽核項
154面 圖 19公分
附註
附錄 : 查利.卓別林年表
卓別林
集叢名
文化巨人叢書
著者 羅 永年 袁 仁慶 編著
出版地 香港 三聯書店 2000[民89]
[4], 136面 21公分
卓別林
著者
張 秀楓 編
出版地
長春市
出版者
時代文藝出版社
出版日期
1996[民85]
訂價
人民幣46.80元
ISBN
7-5387-1064-7
裝訂
一套 : 平裝
稽核項
2冊 圖 21公分
版本
第一版