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City Lights Clippings 45/387

Grace Kingsley, Los Angeles Times, L. A., Cal., May 19, 1929


„I choose to work because it is fun“

Editorial content. „The COMEDIAN is Host

      In which Stella sups at Charlie Chaplin‘s – and discovers

      anew his rare humor.

      Photo. „Charlie Chaplin as he appears in his new comedy,

      ,City Lights.‘“

      By GRACE KINGSLEY

      ,JUST home folks!‘ announced Charlie Chaplin, as we

entered the beautiful living-room of his home. I was

going to call that living-room the drawing-room, but, of course,

you can‘t when your host says a thing like that.

      Besides, despite all the beauty and elegance about

us, Charlie really made us feel that comfortable way about his

charming little dinner party.

      ,What a perfect host Charlie is!‘ whispered Stella,

as we went upstairs to leave our wraps. ,I suppose

if he were owner of a castle on the Rhine, he would step

forward to great you with that warm smile of his, and

you‘d believe him when, having introduced you to a couple

of kings and queens, he‘d remark easily, ,Just

home folks!‘

      IT WAS a gesture of great graciousness on Charlie‘s

part which had led us up to his house in the first

place. We had told him of a little picture which a friend

of ours, Russell Birdwell, had made for the sum

of five hundred dollars, and which we considered a little gem.

Charlie is generously anxious to discover talent, and

he kindly invited us to his home for dinner and a showing

of the little two-reeler, Street Corners.

      We had discovered the other guests there before

us, with Charlie avowing he was learning the tango, and that

it was very easy.

      ,Look,‘ he said, as he grasped that exquisite little

Diane Ellis and began circling the room with her. He made

it look easy, at that.

      GEORGIA HALE was there, and Harry Crocker, too,

which made just the right sized party. But, then,

I think Charlie could make you feel that way about

any party.

      ,I like Georgia Hale awfully well,‘ Stella confided. ,She

has such a lot of brains, as well as beauty. And

I think Charlie loves the way she gives him an argument

when she doesn‘t agree with him. She is very clever

as well as very pretty.‘

      Charlie showed us a new book of prints by Barton,

over which he was most enthusiastic. He also

showed us an original drawing by the artist from which

the print had been taken, and pointed out how

a reproduction loses something vital which the original

always has.

      Dinner was announced just then, and we had a lot

of good talk over the table.

      THIS great little comedian always has a reason for

everything which he admires or which he dislikes –

a reason that is penetrating and difficult to argue against,

we found.

      For instance, we find he dislikes talking pictures very

much, and he put his argument thus – ,They lack

charm. That‘s because they go beyond their natural

limitations.‘

      We find that Charlie doesn‘t mean ever to make any

talking pictures, either.

      ,I don‘t have to work any more unless I choose.

I choose to work because it is fun. Making talking pictures

wouldn‘t be fun,‘ he declared.

      Charlie loves at the end of a serious little

argument to end up with a funny quip, putting everybody

at ease. He is awfully quick at a wise crack, too.

      WE were talking about the human fly who walks up the

sides of buildings, and Harry Crocker was telling

us about the fly‘s wife, who sits at the foot of the building

and says to all comers, ,Ten cents to see the human

fly walk up the side!‘

      ,What would she say if he fell?‘ demanded Georgia.

      ,Oh,‘ retorted Charlie, ,she‘d probably call out

twenty cents!‘

      Then Georgia and Charlie began an argument about

voice training, Georgia maintaining that voice training

was good for the stage or the talkers, and Charlie maintaining

that ether you can deliver lines or you can‘t.

      Then it was learned that his first part was played

on the London stage when he was twelve years old and had

fifty sides to speak.

      ,I had never heard of voice culture,‘ he said, ,and yet

all the reviews next day spoke of my enunciation.‘

      After dinner we looked at Birdwell‘s picture, and Charlie

was delighted with it.

      OUR host played the phonograph for us after that – some

of Stravinsky‘s inspiring music and some excellent

Spanish music – and we found out then how Charlie hates

jazz, and much to Stella‘s delight dislikes Gershwin‘s

Rhapsody in Blue, which he pronounced without form and

utterly lacking in charm.

      We found that the only very late piece of music he likes

is that tinkling Flapperette.

      ,Jazz never was meant to be taken seriously,

anyway,‘ he commented, thus again putting his finger exactly

on the chief objection to Gershwin‘s composition.

      Then he began kidding about jazz.

      ,I can#t tell one tune from another when they jazz it up,‘

he explained with his funny little humorous grin.

,They say, ,Listen to this‘ – a bit from My Little Girl‘s a Real

Little Pearl – ,ta-ta-ta‘ – and then they say, ,Now

hear this‘ – When Onions Bloom in Bermuda or something –

,ta-ta-ta‘ – and it sounds just like the other one!‘

      WE BEGGED Charlie to play the violin with hose supple

fingers of his, but when he pleaded to being out of

practice, Stella and Georgia dragged him to the organ and

made him play for us – such lovely, haunting old

melodies, most of them.

      ,What a sense of Charlie‘s essential loneliness

you get when you see that little genius playing

that big organ!‘ Stella whispered. ,He‘s wistful and child-like

somehow, then – like a child story by Barrie

or Quillier-Couch.‘

      The evening had all too soon to come to an end, and

as we were winding down the hill toward home,

Stella expressed all our feelings when she remarked:

      ,Somehow I‘m in a sort of magic daze when

I leave Charlie‘s house. He makes a different place of this

old world – just as he does on the screen.‘“


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