laitimes

Charlie. Chaplin

author:The ever-forward lark W

Charlie. Chaplin was born in London, England in 1889, but his exact birth certificate is not available. From June 1896 to January 1898, young Charlie was a regular resident of the Hamwell Central Poor School. On Christmas Day 1898, Charlie Jr., who was not yet 10 years old, became a professional stage actor. With his father's professional connections, he joined a juvenile theater troupe at the time. After several weeks of training, Jackson quickly selected members of the troupe to perform dance. On Christmas Day 1900, the troupe, Lancashire, was given the opportunity to perform the animals in the kitchen in the dance play Cinderella. In this scene, the young Chaplin dresses up as a cat and has the opportunity to make people laugh through the performance for the first time. In the spring of 1901, Charlie left the Lancashire Theatre Company. On May 9 of the same year, his father died at the age of 37 and could no longer continue to provide any kind of help to his young son. Over the next two years, Charlie Jr. worked in a variety of jobs: a flower boy, a barbershop worker, a doctor's little job, and a newsboy. But he spent most of his time working in a glass factory and a printing plant. He also once made toy boats in a private company. In May 1903, his brother Sidney returned from the sea, intending to take the stage with the entertainment he learned on the ship. With Sidney's encouragement, 14-year-old Charlie plucked up the courage to introduce himself to an agent in London's West End, and soon got the role of Billy Peggy in a touring troupe's play Detective Sherlock Holmes. While waiting for the tour to begin, before he worked on the stage play Jim. Played a newsboy in The Romance of Anle Township. He played the role of Billy in stage plays for several companies over two years, after playing the role again at the Princess Theatre in London. In May 1906 he joined another stage play, Casey's Court Circus, and performed for more than a year on the show At the age of 17, Charlie had already begun to play major roles in the comedy repertoire. In 1936, he completed his pinnacle of "Modern Times" and died in the same year, at the age of 88, fat pants, torn dress, mustache, big shoes, plus a crutch that never wanted to leave his hand, Chaplin used his expression and movements to bring the mime to the highest peak let us pay tribute to the deceased old man...

Read on