The Charlie Chaplin Archives
From Alaska to Zimbabwe, the bowler hat, cane, baggy trousers and outsized shoes of the Tramp is still the most recognized silhouette in the world, more than 100 years after Charlie Chaplin first created him. With The Charlie Chaplin Archives, TASCHEN presents the ultimate book on the making of Chaplin’s films, using the vast resources of the Chaplin archives.
Within a year of arriving in Hollywood in 1914, British-born Chaplin, playing the Tramp, had become the slapstick king of America. By the end of his second year on the silver screen, Chaplin’s fame had spread worldwide. He was the first international film star and, with a million dollar contract, became one of the richest men in the world. With his own studio and his stock company of close collaborators, Chaplin began making his greatest movies: The Kid (1921), The Gold Rush (1925), The Circus (1928), City Lights (1931), Modern Times (1936), and The Great Dictator (1940)—an unassailable collection of work that has enshrined him in the collective consciousness of world culture.
With unrestricted access to his archives, this book offers insight into the process behind the Chaplin genius, from the impromptu spontaneity of his early shorts to the meticulous retakes and reworking of scenes and gags in his classic movies. With 900 images, including stills, memos, storyboards and on-set photos, as well as interviews with Chaplin and his closest collaborators, we see how Chaplin turned his caricature of the Tramp into a living character. The Tramp is the ultimate underdog, an everyman trying to survive economic depression, two World Wars, and the Cold War. Whatever crises life threw at him, the Tramp, and Chaplin, shrugged it off, straightened his shoulders, and walked off into a brighter future.</span>
This book includes:
- The entire Chaplin life history in words and pictures
- 900 images including many previously unseen stills, on-set photos, memos, documents, storyboards, posters, and designs, plus scripts and images for unmade films
- An oral history, told from the point of view of Chaplin himself, drawing upon his extensive writings, many of which have never been reprinted before.
- Supplementary interviews with some of his closest collaborators.
- Material from over 150 books of press clippings in Chaplin’s archives, which range from his early days in music halls to his death
- Chaplin’s short films, from Making a Living (1914) to The Pilgrim (1923), as well as all of his feature-length movies, from The Kid (1921) to A Countess from Hong Kong (1967)
- (In first print editions) a filmstrip from the classic City Lights (1931), cut from a print in Chaplin’s archives
Documents from the Chaplin Archives Property and Copyright of Roy Export Company Establishment, scanned by Cineteca di Bologna
Ce livre inclut:
Toute la vie et l’œuvre de Chaplin en mots et en images. Parmi les 1.200 images, vous découvrirez beaucoup de photos d’exploitation et de tournage inédites, de notes, documents, story-boards, affiches, et dessins, ainsi que des scripts et des images de films jamais réalisés. Une histoire orale, racontée du point de vue de Chaplin lui-même, nourrie de ses nombreux écrits, dont beaucoup n’avaient jusqu’ici jamais été republiés. Des entretiens avec quelques-uns de ses plus proches collaborateurs. Plus de 150 albums de coupures de presse extraits des archives de Chaplin, de ses débuts au music hall, jusqu’à sa mort. Les courts-métrages de Chaplin, de Pour gagner sa vie (1914) au Pèlerin (1923), ainsi que l’ensemble de ses longs-métrages, du Kid (1921) à La Comtesse de Hong Kong (1967). (Dans la première édition de ce livre) un morceau de pellicule des célèbres Lumières de la ville (1931), choisi sur une bobine des archives de Chaplin.