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J**S
Very Matter of Fact, Well Written Account of Charlie Chaplin's Life.
I thoroughly enjoyed this autobiography by Charlie Chaplin in his own words. It's an interesting and intriguing read about his life from his own perspective and first-hand knowledge of events that you cannot get from any biography. With him being a film maker, his writing style keeps you very interested and engrossed from beginning to finish. He truly lived a remarkable life. I love his very matter of fact way of presenting the events in his life. It definitely puts everything that happened to him in perspective.[SPOILER ALERT!]I especially loved reading the parts about him going unrecognized dressed as himself. He was humbled when he first found out how popular he truly was. He went unrecognized on a train until it became known he was on the train. He was even the last in line for the washroom and waited in line like everyone else. There was another time when he was in NY that a cab driver drove him around all night looking for a hotel. He was trying to avoid people at his hotel but all the hotels were full. The cab driver, not recognizing him, invited him to stay with him and his family. Charlie hesitated but decided to trust him. The cab driver and his family were very surprised and happy to have him stay there as their guest. The accommodations were humble but better than what he had as a boy in London so he didn't complain.As for the scandal in his life, he talks about it in a very matter of fact way. Even he admitted he wasn't a total angel. However, hearing it from his side, shame on the US press, legal system, and government for the way they treated him. He did not deserve that! With his first 2 divorces, his young naive wives were manipulated by greedy lawyers who just saw dollar signs. So they dragged his name through the mud and scandalized the whole thing to get as much out of him as they could. The Joan Barry trial and family court hearings were used by the FBI to try to tarnish his name further. He was thankfully cleared of all criminal charges. However, in family court, he wasn't so lucky. Blood tests proved he wasn't the father of Joan Barry's child; but they were inadmissible in court at that time. Therefore, with circumstantial evidence alone, he was ruled as the father and had to pay child support. Unbelievable! Today Joan Barry would have had stalking and harassment charges brought against her. What a nut!The Communist accusations were a huge miscarriage of justice. He was not a Communist aka enemy of the US. If he had joined a US political party, I believe he would have been a Liberal Democrat. He may have associated with Communists, but that's guilt by association. He had fans and friends who were Communists before it was considered a dirty word. And he didn't believe in snubbing them when it did become a dirty word. Charlie was a humanitarian. Nothing more! He wanted to help people and help make the world a better place by pulling down barriers. He promoted peace and pointed out the evils in this world to try to get people thinking about them. His hope was perhaps they would see the evils and do something to change things for the better. Nothing wrong with that. His films are still relevant today because they are about human nature. The reason they are so hilarious is because there is so much truth in them, even today. As he put it (paraphrasing), the only thing he was guilty of was being a nonconformist. Amen to that! He was a rebel. I admire that about him because I'm a bit of a rebel myself. It took a lot of courage for him to speak the truth.I'm just glad he was finally vindicated of all of this 20 years after he left the US. He received a lifetime achievement Academy Award in 1972 and was invited to the US to receive that award. However, this autobiography was written prior to that happening. Also, when the FBI files were released to the public 50 years later, there was no evidence found that proved he was a Communist either. Despite this, it just saddens and infuriates me that he was treated so poorly. Just imagine how many more films he might have made if he hadn't gone through all that. His three films after The Great Dictator were either boycotted or banned in the US for years. They are real gems! Great films that I am so glad I had the opportunity to watch and own copies of them.After reading about his near death experiences, he definitely had someone looking out for him. He had a sixth sense about his safety, even as a child, and had some near misses. That explains why he was an agnostic. With the experiences he had, he had to believe there was a higher power out there. He was saved, I believe, because he had a purpose. His movies speak for themselves in this case. He spoke the truth and gave laughter and hope when there was none.He was not only a great comedian, but also a great visionary and artist who had the courage to pave his own path and not conform to society's norms. Because of this, his movies will remain relevant for many years to come.
S**3
From Hardship To a Dream Fulfilled
What an incredible read! I felt as though Charlie himself took me along for the ride. He describes everything in such well written detail. You'll feel as though you stepped back in time with each chapter. It's like reading his diary, which makes me wonder, is it? This book was purchased used in excellent condition. There is an inscription on the inside cover, neatly & lovingly written, to someone as a gift for their Birthday & dated 3 weeks before the birth of my child. I believe in Fate not coincidence & from the moment I opened this book & began to read, I knew I was meant to have this book & to read the uplifting messages within. I'm grateful for the read Charlie. Thanks for the lift.
K**R
What a Life!
I quite enjoyed reading this autobiography by Chaplin. If I had known he had written one before now, I definitely would have read it. The genius in his own words, not ghost written, tells his story and shares his point of view about everything important to him. It is a long book and there is a lot of philosophizing. And yes, he uses some big and unusual words. For a man with only two years schooling at an orphanage, he certainly did an excellent job educating himself. I had not realized the breadth of his talents, i.e., pretty much all aspects that went into his films from conceptualizing, writing, acting, producing, composing music and much more. He was a Renaissance man in so many ways. The story of his fall from grace in the US was sad and unfair. His childhood was poverty stricken and abysmal, his romances tragic but his talent took him to the stratosphere of success and wealth. He met everyone who was anyone. His last decades with his wife, Oona, and their eight children finally brought him a much deserved happiness and peace. Fabulous insights into the early silent film era and some wonderful vignette portraits of the famed of the day. Such a good book!
F**K
the other stories...
i've been watching early chaplin films; archaic (of course), yet humane, clever; i laughed (a lot). so it felt time to know about the man himself, and someone suggested the autobiography.i understand that, when chaplin wrote this, it was a different time. but leaving out so much is a disappointment.it's a great read, mostly; well-written, informative... entertaining. but it's all the things that are NOT in the book that i want to know about; not just the 'scandals' (lita grey, where are you?), but the films. what was it like making 'city lights', 'the kid', 'modern times'? where are those stories?it's his films that bring us here. yet there's nothing about the making of them; where's roland totheroh? where is 'the circus'? how did the films take shape, who helped shaped them? (we're led to believe that all the 'magic' comes from chaplin).there are many pages about william hearst, or various dukes, celebrities. yet no buster keaton, no harold lloyd. SO much is missing here.i expect some restraint from autobigraphies; by definition, they're often (or mostly) self-serving. so, will look for another book. but i did enjoy reading this...
G**E
Chaplin. My Autobiography
El genial Charlie Chaplin se decidió a escribir sus recuerdos. Es curioso que empezara a escribirlos en el año 1958, cuando murió su primera "leading lady" cinematográfica Edna Purviance, "la chica de Nevada", su amor de juventud, aunque nunca llegaran a casarse, a la que dedica más páginas en el libro, de las que emplea con otros personajes. Es asombrosa la química que muestran el uno hacia el otro en la pantalla, en las más de 30 películas que rodaron juntos. A partir de cierto momento, sus vidas siguieron caminos diferentes, aunque conservaron una amistad de por vida. Es emotivo el hecho de que Chaplin tuviera a Edna en la nómina de su Compañía Cinematográfica, pagándole un salario, hasta la fecha de la muerte de esta por cáncer de amigdalas, ocurrida en 1958, con 62 años. Reproduce en su libro algunas cartas de ella, incluyendo en sus últimas páginas la última que le dirigió, un año y medio antes de fallecer, dedicándole un sentido comentario.Otro detalle: Chaplin falleció en 1977 con 88 años. Pues un año antes, en 1976, recuperó de sus archivos privados la última película muda que había rodado con Edna Purviance, el largometraje "Una mujer de París" (1923), para reestrenarla con una banda sonora musical compuesta por Chaplin especialmente para ella. No sé si llegó a tiempo de acabar el proyecto, pero esto dice mucho acerca del cálido recuerdo que guardaba de ella.Hay amores y relaciones que trascienden el tiempo y otras cosas. El libro es realmente ilustrativo para los interesados en conocer detalles de la vida de Chaplin en la época de los inicios del Cine que, si no los explica el autor, hubieran permanecido desconocidos para el gran público. Existe también traducción al español de esta Autobiografía.
E**Y
He's not wrong
It was his autobiography and for that simple truth he must be applauded.
P**A
A memorable book
This summer, I have made it my project to read (auto)biographies of artists I like. may it be writers, painters or whatever.At the end of my holidays, I have come across this wonderful book and I must say I literally eat it page by page.I knew some (not all) of his films, I knew Chaplin often directed and composed his own music.At the beginning, it‘s like Dickens. There is an irresistible flow in it which draws you into this movie industry and makes you want to produce a movie of your own.Chaplin ate words, sprinkled his stories with words of Latin or French origin, though the coherence of his stories and his memory never ever gets lost. Meanwhile, Dickensian London and tragedy (his family could have been written by Dickens) as well as the First and Second World War and the Hoover administration fly by and you always want this little tramp to go further.Thankfully enough, he was quite a womanizer but does not elaborate on that.A thouroughly enjoyable read from a "Modern Times" genius.
G**O
A candid and sincere history of one's personal life
Although I read it when it first appeared (more than 40 years ago) I enjoyed again Chaplin's self irony and sense of humour in dealing with the turning points of his life. The tale of his childhood looks to me a dickens-ian story written one century (and two world wars) later and all fits so nicely with the two periods involved: the end of XIX century (when the events occurred) and the 50's (when the author wrote).Also quite interesting is finding new meaning to his movies (but here you need to know them quite thoroughly).I book I warmly recommend, also to whom does know little of Chaplin.
B**E
喜劇王の自伝
知らない人はいない、チャールズ・チャップリンの自伝です。彼の少年時代や映画製作の裏話など、かなり盛りだくさん。特に、彼の少年時代の話はまるで小説を読んでいるかのようでした。チャップリンの映画を見たことがある人、また、この時代に興味のある人なら間違いなく読んで面白い本だと思います。日本語版が廃盤になってしまっているのがとても残念です。
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