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Pip Utton
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Chaplin by Pip Utton
Click Chaplin above for a video clip, silent as it should be! (15Mb Windows Media File)
The Tramp never spoke, just one gibberish song, no more, and yet his films said more to their audience than Chaplin ever managed to do in his few talkies. Worshipped for his silent creation Chaplin never achieved the same critical and public acclaim in his other films. The Tramp made Chaplin the best known and best-paid film actor of his age. The Tramp opened the doors of society and celebrity to Chaplin and gave him a life style of endless young women and riches. The Tramp earned Chaplin the reputation of ‘genius’ and he propelled him into the worlds of intellectuals and royalty. Not bad for a street urchin brought up in the Dickensian slums and workhouses of late 19th century London! But His fondness for young ladies is legendary, he married two 16 year olds, and at the age of 54 married the 18 years old Oona. He was accused of sexual perversion by the press and the courts. He was vilified for his treatment of his ex-wives, and accused of being communist, he was investigated by McCarthy. In 1952 his American visa was revoked (he never became an American citizen, calling himself a ‘citizen of the world’) and he settled in Switzerland, where he lived for the rest of his life with Oona and their children. Chaplin remains one of the greatest clowns of all time. He created an image of himself for public consumption that hid the darker sides of his personality. In his new play Pip Utton steps in and out of the screen and becomes Charlie Chaplin, stripping away the myths and the moustache and revealing the man beneath.
‘I remain just one thing, and one thing only, and that is a clown. It places me on a far higher plane than any politician. In the end, everything is a gag.’ Charlie Chaplin
Technical Specification Click here for Chaplin Tech Spec Promotional Material Click here for Chaplin Promo Please contact me, Pip to discuss performances, copies of the script or performing rights.
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Copyright © 2004 to 2011
Pip Utton Theatre Company
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