Charles Spencer Chaplin was born on April 16, 1889, in Walworth, South London, to Charles Chaplin Sr., a music hall entertainer who died of alcoholism when Charlie was twelve, and Hannah Hall, a music hall singer and actress whose mental illness led to multiple hospitalizations that left Charlie and his half-brother Sydney effectively parentless for extended periods of their childhood. Charlie spent periods in the Reedham Orphanage and in workhouses; the poverty and instability of his childhood โ which he described vividly in his autobiography โ would be transformed into the raw material of his art. The Tramp, the iconic character he created, is precisely the poor man navigating a world that was not built for him, maintaining dignity through style and intelligence rather than material resources.
Chaplin began performing in music halls as a child, appearing professionally by age nine to supplement his family's income. He joined Fred Karno's comedy troupe as a young man, touring Britain and the United States in theatrical performances that developed his physical comedy to an extraordinary degree. It was on a Karno tour of the United States in 1913 that he was spotted by Mack Sennett and offered a contract with Keystone Studios. His first film appearance was in Making a Living (1914); by his twelfth film, Kid Auto Races at Venice (1914), The Tramp costume โ the bowler hat, the cane, the oversized shoes, the tight jacket, the toothbrush moustache โ had made its first appearance.
The Chaplin that emerged from the Keystone period and through his subsequent work at Essanay, Mutual, and then his own United Artists (co-founded with Mary Pickford, Douglas Fairbanks, and D.W. Griffith) was the dominant figure of silent film: The Kid (1921), The Gold Rush (1925), The Circus (1928), City Lights (1931), Modern Times (1936) โ films that used physical comedy of the highest technical refinement in service of genuine social satire and genuine emotional depth. He resisted the transition to sound long after it had become industry standard, maintaining that the Tramp was fundamentally a visual character, and he was right: City Lights and Modern Times are both post-sound in their production contexts but silent in their creative choices.
The Great Dictator (1940) โ Chaplin's first true sound film, in which he played both Adenoid Hynkel (Hitler) and a Jewish barber โ was both his most commercially successful film and his most explicitly political. The film's final speech, in which the barber addresses a crowd directly, remains one of cinema's most moving statements about human dignity and the possibility of a better world. His later years were marked by FBI investigation, his expulsion from the United States in 1952 during the McCarthy era (he was never convicted of any crime), his settlement in Switzerland, and his receipt of an honorary Academy Award in 1972, which brought him back to Hollywood for the first time in twenty years.