Picture Show (May-Oct 1919)

Record Details:

Something wrong or inaccurate about this page? Let us Know!

Thanks for helping us continually improve the quality of the Lantern search engine for all of our users! We have millions of scanned pages, so user reports are incredibly helpful for us to identify places where we can improve and update the metadata.

Please describe the issue below, and click "Submit" to send your comments to our team! If you'd prefer, you can also send us an email to mhdl@commarts.wisc.edu with your comments.




We use Optical Character Recognition (OCR) during our scanning and processing workflow to make the content of each page searchable. You can view the automatically generated text below as well as copy and paste individual pieces of text to quote in your own work.

Text recognition is never 100% accurate. Many parts of the scanned page may not be reflected in the OCR text output, including: images, page layout, certain fonts or handwriting.

8 T/it I'ktun .Show, May Inl, 1919. CHARLIE'S LOVE LOOK! I'm getting to like you — She doesn't know I'm on the earth— I've made an impression — I Jove you I I love you! I LOVE you!— But — nobody loves Af£. THE REAL CHARLIE CHAPLIN. An Intimate Pen Picture Of The World's Greatest Jester, Who Believes There Is No Place Like Home. TO most men there is one thing that is above all things sacred, and that they would guard from the prying gaze of a curious world. This place they call " Home." The movie star, however, lives in the limelight, and earning a colossal salary, likes to have something to show for it. Which perhaps explains . why the American' magazines are full of flamboyant descriptions of the palatial residences of these super-twinklers on the film horizon. There is one man, however, who.se home is a sanctuary in the truest sense of the word, for Charlie Chaplin lightly argues that the man whose work places him continually in the public e3 e can only preserve his sanity and a wholesome outlook on life by reserving for himself a refuge to which he can retire, and, for a space, be — just himself. Chaplin's home is neither sumptuous nor Bohemian. I'lverything in his surroundings testifies to his excellent natural taste. He likes quiet, restful colours, comfortable furniture meant for use, and plenty of flowers. He, is a great reader. 1 think music is his only real hobby outside his work, and a fine concert '"gi'aud," his 'cello and violin, are the only articles of luxury m Charlie's den." He Loves Work. CHAPLIN is first and foremost a worker. On his desk there are always numerous scrajis of paper full of ccmedy inspirations in his nervous, characteristic hand, and there is a dictaphone at his bedside to record any brain-waves that " happen along " during the night. Charlie is naively detached in his attitude towards his wealth. He liates to be bothered with money, and when travelling, his secretary settles all his bills, and merely reminds his ab.sent-uiinded " boss " of a morning that he has put a few banknotes into his pocket against emergencies. On a certain occasion, one of Chaplin's bankers .sent him a hurry call, as an important investment needed his personal attention. The messenger was sent back with the answer that Charlie was open to discuss the matter if the manager would take a walk with him in the park. " 1 hate banks," was the only reason he gave, " and I hate talking to men behind desks. I guess it's because of the memory of the time when I was a little boy and went hunting for a job." His Early Struggles. — HE loves harmless fun and a good storj^ but fundamentally he is a serious man, and I think the memory of his early straggles has left a mark on his soul that time will never efface. " AVliat I need, you know," he once said in his C[uaint, whimsical wa}', is someone to keep me from feeling pathetic about myself ; someone to saj', ' Here, j-ou poor little devil, what business have you to feel sorry "for yourself, you poor lonely child, with no one to love you, and only about one million pounds between yourself and starvation ? Come, get up here and work ! ' That's what I need." Charlie's warm and unspoilt nature is best shown in his passionate love of little children. There is a big hot^l at Pasadena, and when he takes a day off from his work, he slips down there, gathers the children around him on the sunny porch, and tells them stories. Every child loves him, for he is still a child at heart, and they just feel he is one of themselves. His weekly post runs into thousands of letters, but those he treasures most are the ones that come from his little friends, telling him about all their joj'S r.nd sorrows that mean so much to every child. The Portrait Of A Woman. TO (-oncludc. Showing some pictures one day to a friend, Cliaplin came to one, a woman's portrait, at which he gazed for a time with loving, tender eyes. " My mother ! " he then .said simpl}'. " To her I owe everything and all that I am to-day." And, knowing that a great son is invariably the work of a gi'eat mother, I still like to recall that memory of little Charlie Chaplin gazing with dim eyes at his mother's picture. E.G. A recent home portrait of Charlie Chaplin, who, in the comedy which he is at present filming, for the time abandons the worldfamous Chaplin character, and is appearing in a totally different role, which he hooes you will find just as amusing.