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The Circus Clippings 157/376

Picture-Play, New York, December 1927.

Seeing the Circus with Wynn

(...) Shadowland, Aug. 1923

& Renee Adoree happily back again with John Gilbert making The Cossacks and doing for Russia what she did for France.

(...) Screenland, Dec. 1927

& A Daughter of the Sawdust Renee Adoree has brought

the loyal spirit of the circus to the screen. By Katherine Albert

(...) Screenland, Dec. 1927

& W. C. Fields, Chester Conklin, Louise Fazenda

(...) Tillie‘s Punctured Romance (...) Paramount

(...) Motion Picture News, Feb. 18, 1928

& CHARLES CHAPLIN is said to be getting ready

to make up for his long absence from the screen by producing

three and possibly four pictures in 1928.

      Chaplin is said to realize that speeding up production

is the only way to meet the situation caused by the

heavy expenses of The Circus, which is reported to be one

of the costliest films ever made because of the long

delays brought about by the comedian‘s domestic difficulties.

      Since he resumed production, Chaplin has been

hard at work, spending long hours in the cutting room and

the selection of stories for his next pictures. The Circus

will be released before the end of 1927, and it would not be

surprising if it is followed by another Chaplin picture

in March.

(...) Motion Picture News, Nov. 25, 1927

& MAN SLAIN WITH HAMMER

      Former Butler in Lita Chaplin Household

      Beaton Over Head by Companion

(...) Nebraska State Journal, Lincoln, Neb., Jan. 8, 1928

& Below, the two Chaplin babies, Sydney Earle

and Charlie, Jr., strenuously object to being thrust into

the spotlight.

(...) Photo, Picture-Play, Sept. 1927

& Will It Ever Be Settled?

(...) Hollywood High Lights By Edwin and Elza Schallert,

Picture-Play, Sept. 1927


„Charlie paid out $1,000,000 and more“

Editorial content. „Hollywood High Lights“ (...)

      „By Edwin and Elza Schallert“ (...)

      „The Rising Cost of Divorce.

      If the Chaplin case is a fair example, the cost of divorce

has gone up fully as much as the expenses of making

super-film productions. Contrast the fact that Charlie paid

out $1,000,000 and more to cover the expense

of his recent divorce with the circumstance that his legal

separation from Mildred Harris cost him only

$150,000.

      Seven years have elapsed since that first marital

difficulty and Charlie, much grayer and more worn,

has now set out again on a lonely course. We wonder whether

he will be lured into any further matrimonial adventures.“


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