Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Chaplin, (Sir) Charles (Spencer) - Barnet G. Braver-Mann
Chaplin, (Sir) Charles (Spencer) - Barnet G. Braver-Mann
BARNET G. BRAVER-MANN
[The] grotesque figure we call "Charlie" has carried into cinema one of the oldest and most characteristic traditions of pure theatre, that of the Commedia dell'Arte. Chaplin is in direct line from the mimes of Roman comedy, the players of the Italian Commedia dell'Arte of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, and the English pantomime of the eighteenth century…. Like [the] players of other times Chaplin has built certain elementary frailties and foibles of human nature into the framework of a conventional figure known as Charlie, whose shabby costume furnishes the needed mask. (p. 23)
The influence of tradition appears most strongly in the highly individual way in which he makes his own pictures and in the use to which he puts his gift for improvisation when on the set….
Chaplin builds his films altogether on what he calls "feeling," that is, he begins, let us say, with Charlie, and studies the emotional...
[The entire page is 712 words long]
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