City Lights 1930 1931 1932 next previous
City Lights Clippings 141/387
Speed Kendall, Silver Screen, New York, November 1930.
Reviewing the FAN MAGS
Silver Screen (...)
Publicity space (Approximate) ... U. A. 100sq. inches (...)
Open the July Silver Screen just any place, and you‘ll
find something interesting to read and (miracle) well written.
(...) Hollywood Reporter, June 10, 1933
„A small set, his own company, and quiet“
Editorial content. „Why Chaplin Won‘t Talk
Would any other actor gamble a million for
an ideal?
By staying silent is Charlie the wisest guy
in Hollywood or the most foolish?
By Speed Kendall
It‘s a little over four years since an iconoclassic
little gadget called the microphone first made its appearance
on a motion picture set.
Up to that time the screen had produced one authentic
genius, Charlie Chaplin.“ (...)
„If City Lights fails, I think it will hit Chaplin harder than
anything in his life has ever hit him.“ (...)
First photo. „Let others talk. Charlie stays silent
or he won‘t play.“
Second photo. „What Charlie likes – a small set,
his own company, and quiet. A scene from City Lights with
not a word in nine reels.“
Third photo. „What Charlie hates – blazing lights,
listening mikes, crowds, noise. It‘s killing art, says Charlie,
and not making money.“
Redaktioneller Inhalt
City Lights 1930 1931 1932 next previous