Chaplin, the world-famous master of comedy. The master is not only talented in comedy, but also likes to be merciful everywhere, and he can't help but make scandals with female stars. The master has been very single-minded in love all his life, only likes little girls, not old women. He has had many women in his life, so pick a few of the main ones to talk about today.

Chaplin
Edna Purviance
In 1915, at the age of 25, Edna Pvens was still working as a secretary in San Francisco. Chaplin was looking for a heroine for the movie A Night Out, and one of his partners met Pvens in a café and recommended her to Chaplin. Chaplin, though he thought Pvens was a bit serious, agreed to let her star.
Chaplin has a habit of teaching inexperienced actors to act by hand, especially young and beautiful actresses, and in the midst of this ear grinding, he falls in love with the actress. Pvins was like this, she didn't act much at first, Chaplin personally directed, and the two were inseparable in the end.
Chaplin and Pvins
Their relationship ended in 1918, when Chaplin met a new, younger girl. Although Pvens appeared in Chaplin's 33 films, the relationship between the two was lost.
2. Mildred Harris
Mildred Harris, Chaplin's first wife. She was born in 1901 and was not yet 17 years old when she met Chaplin. However, Harris is scheming, and the city government is very deep. In order to marry Chaplin, she and Chaplin were two months old and declared her pregnant.
Chaplin wanted to come and go, and since the girl was pregnant, she simply got married. The two married in October 1918, and after the marriage, Chaplin discovered that Harris was not pregnant at all. Despite their anger, the couple later had a child, but unfortunately the child died three days after birth.
Mildred Harris
In 1919, the couple separated. The following year, the two divorced. During the divorce process, the two parties tore each other apart and quarreled. Harris accused Chaplin of being mentally abusive to him, and Chaplin accused Harris of being gay and had an affair with actress Ala Nazimova. A marriage leaves both partners scarred and exhausted.
3. Pola Negri
In 1922, the film star Paula Nigri began to associate with Chaplin. Negri was the wife of a husband, and she and Chaplin met in Germany, admired each other, and soon developed a lover relationship. At first, the relationship between the two belonged to platonic, with only spiritual communication and no physical communication, but soon the two began to combine spirit and flesh.
Paula Nigri and Chaplin
The relationship was well known, and many were still speculating about whether the two would eventually get married when the relationship between the two people suddenly took a sharp turn for the worse. Nigri changed her mind, and she fell in love with another Hollywood actor, Rudolf Valentino. Chaplin, a master of love, tasted abandonment for the first time.
4. Lita Grey
Litai Gray was Chaplin's second wife. Two years after being abandoned by Pola Nigri, 35-year-old Chaplin soaked in Miss Grey, who had just turned 16. Gray was the heroine of the Chaplin film "Gold Rush" at that time, but the film was just 6 months old, gray's pregnant belly could not be hidden, and the film was forced to change the heroine.
Litai Gray
In November 1924, Chaplin married Gray. In 1925, Gray gave birth to his eldest son, Charlie Chaplin Jr., and in 1926 he had a second son, Sidney Chaplin. Despite having two children, the marriage was not harmonious from the start. Chaplin felt that the two people did not have a common language at all, and only married because of children.
Chaplin would rather hide on the set every day than go home. During this time, in addition to filming the movie "Gold Rush", Chaplin also soaked several female stars, cheating continuously, and finally the intolerable Gray asked for a divorce. Because Chaplin was at fault, he was awarded $700,000 in damages, equivalent to $10 million today, a record-breaking compensation at the time.
Chaplin films
5 Paulette Goddard
In 1932, Chaplin met actress Bollet Goddard, who was just 22 years old, and Chaplin was 43 years old, enough to be her father. However, the two men came together hopelessly. In 1936, when the two traveled to China, they secretly married, but did not receive a marriage license. From the perspective of US law, the two are not yet husband and wife.
Bollet Goddard
Goddard starred in Chaplin's Modern Times and The Great Dictator. Originally, Goddard still had the opportunity to play the heroine of the famous "Gone with the Wind", But due to her unclear relationship with Chaplin, the crew gave up Goddard for fear of adversely affecting the film, and finally the film completed Vivien Leigh.
Goddard realized that his relationship with Chaplin had seriously affected his acting career, and the two officially broke up in 1942. After ten years of dating before breaking up, Chaplin's relationship is still relatively long.-
Goddard
6. Joan Barry
In 1941, Chaplin's relationship with Goddard was not broken, but he could not wait to come with other female stars. This one, Joan Barry, was ten years younger than Goddard and 31 years younger than Chaplin. Chaplin was only 21 years old when she met her, but that didn't stop Chaplin from easily tricking girls.
At first, Chaplin thought joan Barry was acting and talented, telling people that the girl "had a quality, an illusory thing, the greatest talent I've ever seen in my life." During the days when Chaplin was crazy for Barry, he had made her pregnant twice and miscarried twice.
Joan Barry
What Chaplin didn't know was that, in addition to her acting talent, Joan Barry was extremely crazy, and she was frantically pestering Chaplin and trying to control Chaplin mentally. Chaplin was exhausted and offered to break up with her, but Joan Barry proposed that she was pregnant for the third time and chaplin had to be responsible.
Later, through blood tests, it was found that Joan Barry was not Chaplin's child at all. During her frantic pestering of Chaplin, she was still confused with other men. Chaplin was a completely happy father and was given a green hat. Joan Barry is madly entangled for Chaplin's money, and Chaplin runs into a green tea.
Although the child had nothing to do with Chaplin, Joan Barry's lawyer used sophistry to make the evidence unacceptable to the court, and the court finally ruled that Chaplin had to pay child support until he became an adult.
7. Oona O'Neill
This was Chaplin's third and final wife, and Una O'Neill's father was playwright Eugene O'Neill. She met Chaplin in 1943, when she was 18 years old, and he was 54 years old, just a year younger than her father. On June 16, 1943, the two were officially married, and the elder O'Neill was so angry that he never spoke to this daughter again in his life.
Chaplin and Una O'Neill and the children
The marriage was relatively happy, with eight children and living together for 34 years. Old Chaplin probably couldn't play anymore and finally stopped.