![]() ![]() ![]() 145, where it is described as a purely coincidental result of improvisation. Born into a family of actors, Charles Chaplin soon started his career on the stage, with limited success, initially, in London and Paris.The "birth" of the classical character "the tramp" does not happen until p. The autobiography proves any such believer wrong.The epithet Dickensian is sometimes applied to the autobiography of Charles Chaplin as Chaplin, born in 1889, was born in, and therefore considered belonging to, the Victorian Age, and because his childhood in London of poverty and hardship so closely resembled that of some characters in Dickens' novels. ![]() The closeness of "no speech" and "dumb" is so near, that in conjunction with the image of the silliness of the characters, prortrayed by Charles Chaplin it is easy to believe that Chaplin was a simpleton. ![]()
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