Charlie Chaplin (1951)

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cc 320 Mr. Rich at 666 Prospect Street and bring back one from 999 Prospect Street, they get the signals mixed, dragging the piano upstairs to the 999 address and proceeding to remove the one at the other place until Miss Rich and her father protest. So the pair shove the piano down the street into a lake. Outstanding scene: Charlie's difficulty in straightening up after carrying the piano on his back. HIS TRYSTING PLACE Released by Keystone, November 9, 1 91 4. (2 reels) Written and directed by Charles Chaplin. With Mabel Normand, Mack Swain, Phyllis Allen. (Also known as Family House.) Careless with the baby, Charlie is scolded by Mabel. In a restaurant he gets his coat mixed with Mack's. Mabel finds a note in it from a girl, chases Charlie out. Later she finds him in the park sobbing his marital woes to Mack's wife who finds a bottle in her husband's coat. There is quite a mix-up until all is explained. Outstanding scenes: Charlie carrying the baby by the scruff of its rompers; Mabel breaking an ironing board on Charlie's head and pushing him into an ash can. TILLIE'S PUNCTURED ROMANCE Released by Keystone, November 14, 1914. (6 reels) Directed by Mack Sennett. Sce nario by Hampton Del Ruth, based on the musical comedy "Tillie's Nightmare" by Edgar Smith (in which Marie Dressier starred on the stage). Cast: Marie Dressier (Tillie the country maid), Charlie Chaplin (the city slicker), Mabel Normand (Charlie's partner), Mack Swain (Tillie's father), Charles Bennett (Tillie's rich uncle), and in smaller parts: Chester Conklin, Edgar Kennedy, Charley Chase, Charles Murray, Minta Durfee, Gordon Griffith, Phyllis Allen, Alice Davenport, Harry McCoy, Alice Howell, Wallace MacDonald, the Keystone Cops (who include Slim Summerville, Hank Mann, Al St. John.) See p. 6, 40, 41, 44, 124 GETTING ACQUAINTED Released by Keystone, December 5, 1 91 4. (1 reel) Written and directed by Charles Chaplin. With Chaplin (as Mr. Sniffles), Phyllis Allen (Mrs. Sniffles), Mabel Normand, Mack Swain, Edgar Kennedy (cop), Harry McCoy, Cecile Arnold. (Also known as A Fair Exchange.) Charlie taking the air with buxom wife (Phyllis Allen), Mabel, and her husband Mack, the policeman, and a Turk, ride a veritable merry-go-round until Charlie is yanked away by his spouse. Outstanding scene: Mabel's comic annoyance at Charlie's flirtation, changing to smiles and winks when the cop on the hunt for mashers comes up behind him.