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The Circus Clippings 109/376

James Doherty, Chicago Tribune, Chicago, Ill., Jan. 14, 1927.

Earlier in the day Mr. Chaplin confronted a battalion of seventy

reporters and photographers at the Grand Central

when his train arrived, and then walked out into a surging

crowd of curiosity-seekers who were awaiting

him in the main concourse. He strode quickly to a taxicab,

breakfasted at the Hotel Plaza with Mr. Burkan,

and then walked through Central Park and up Fifth Avenue

to Mr. Burkan‘s apartment at Ninety-fifth Street,

unrecognized by passers-by.

(...) CHAPLIN HERE, PLANS FIGHT FOR CHILDREN,

New York Times, Jan. 15, 1927


„I am temporarily under a cloud“

Editorial content. „CHAPLIN FIGHTS FOR NAME

      Chaplin Says He Will File Cross Bill in Wife‘s Divorce Suit

      Photo. „Movie Comedian Says He‘ll File Cross Bill.

      Charlie Chaplin and his Jap valet about to board Twentieth

      Century in Chicago on his way to see New York lawyer.“

      „Plans to File Cross Bill, Ask for Children

      By James Doherty.“ (...)

      Aboard Twentieth Century Limited. Buffalo, N. Y., Jan. 13. –

(Special.) – Charlie Chaplin is heartsick as he journeys

to New York, the master comedian of the movies revealing

himself as an ordinary husband where marriage has

hit the rocks.

      ,My wife has defiled my reputation,‘ he said, ,but I am

fortified in the knowledge that I am right in my heart.

I have confidence the American public will not condemn

me unheard. The time and place for me to make

answer is in the courts when I return to Los Angeles.

      Thinks Public Will Hear Him.

      ,Of course I deny each and every charge she has made,

and I will be able to prove them all untrue. I am sure

that the public will abide by the truth as it is told in the court.‘

      This last was in reply to a question as to whether

he had heard of the resolution of several women‘s clubs

banning his pictures. He had heard of the proposed

action, similar to that which ended Roscoe Arbuckle‘s career

in the movies, but he does not believe the same fate

will befall him.

      ,Certainly I shall contest the divorce,‘ he said. ,I expect

to file a cross bill and I believe that I will get the divorce.‘

      Chaplin was accompanied on his trip to New York by several

newspaper men and women. He was willing to discuss

almost any subject except his marital difficulties, and those

he touched upon gingerly.

      A question was put to him regarding his children. His face

brightened. ,I have two wonderful children,‘ he said.

,They are of different temperaments, one being very musical

and the other more serious.‘

      ,Which is your favorite?‘ he was asked.

      ,Well, the baby is the baby,‘ he replied, ,and all babies

are marvelous.‘

      Will Ask Children‘s Custody.

      ,Shall you ask for the custody of your children?‘ he was

asked.

      ,Most certainly,‘ he replied. ,That‘s the reason for my fight,

and I will get them, too. I realize that I am temporarily

under a cloud, but those who know me and love me will not

pay any attention to the charges, as they will know

they are untrue.‘

      ,Have you any one woman friend of whom your wife might

have cause for complaint?‘ he was asked.

      ,No; she accuses a large number,‘ he answered. ,Some

one asked me today if I were bitter against all women.

I am not. Another asked me if I was heart broken. The correct

way to answer that would be to say that I am heartsick.‘

      Chaplin, despite his trouble, was still the comedian today.

He entertained press representatives by stories and

a sketch of the new picture he is making, The Circus. For

an hour he told of his various adventures in that

picture, illustrating his actions by gestures, facial expressions,

and body movements. He seemed to relish talking

of the picture, as it diverted attention from his trouble with

his wife, Lita Grey Chaplin.“ (...)

      „WILL EXAMINE BOOKS

      Hollywood, Cal., Jan. 13. – (Special.) – Books, vaults,

cash funds, and secret business archives of Charlie

Chaplin are to be opened to the joint inspection of the court

receivers and the attorney of Chaplin‘s wife at 10:30

o‘clock tomorrow morning in the closed down Chaplin studio.

      Chaplin‘s local attorney, Lloyd Wright, will be

a party to the conference. Tomorrow‘s legal operations will

be the receiver‘s first step toward account for the

$16,000,000 of property which Mrs. Lita Grey Chaplin has

asked the Los Angeles County court to apportion

between herself and the actor she seeks to divorce.

      The forty-two page divorce complaint of Mrs.

Chaplin was withdrawn from the public files in the county

clerk‘s office by Chief Deputy County Clerk R. F.

Gregg this afternoon.

      ,The complaint has been sequestered,‘ Mr. Gregg said.

,There have been so many people in here demanding

the right to read Mrs. Chaplin‘s divorce papers that it has

disorganized my office. There have been old men,

young men, flappers, and married women.‘“ (...)

      „CHAPLIN DIVORCE PLEA HEADS

      LIST OF BEST SELLERS

      Los Angeles, Cal., Jan. 13. – (AP) – Printed copies of Lita

Grey Chaplin‘s sensational divorce complaint headed

the list of best sellers here today when on sale at 25 cents

net. The first edition was exhausted tonight.

      For the last two days the county clerk‘s office has been

besieged by persons seeking an unabridged version

of the spicy charges contained in the forty-two page document.

The waiting line included movie extras, law students,

school girls, and fashionably gowned women.“


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