Charlie Chaplin's Last Dance

Nonfiction, Entertainment, Film, Performing Arts, Fiction & Literature
Cover of the book Charlie Chaplin's Last Dance by Fabio Stassi, Granta Publications
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Fabio Stassi ISBN: 9781846275296
Publisher: Granta Publications Publication: April 3, 2014
Imprint: Granta Books Language: English
Author: Fabio Stassi
ISBN: 9781846275296
Publisher: Granta Publications
Publication: April 3, 2014
Imprint: Granta Books
Language: English

'A day without laughter is a day wasted.'

It is Christmas Day when Charlie Chaplin receives a visit from Death. The great actor is 82 years old, but not yet ready to face the final curtain. Desperate to see his teenage son grow up, the actor strikes a deal: if he manages to make Death laugh, he will win an extra year of life. As he awaits his final, fatal encounter, Chaplin composes an impassioned letter to his son, in which he attempts to tell him about his past, from his impoverished childhood in England (with an alcoholic father and a mother who went mad) to the heights of success on the silver screen in America, via stints in the circus and vaudeville, and odd jobs as a newspaper hawker, printer, boxer and embalmer.

As well as being the story of the evolution of a comic genius, this is the story of the evolution of cinema and how a beam of light on a white screen fired the imagination of an entire nation. As in his silent films, Charlie's adventures are simultaneously tragic and comic. The narrative flickers at a frenetic clip from false starts and early failures to eventual triumph in the magical moment when - before the eyes of a stupefied film crew - Charlie became the Tramp: with a little moustache, a shuffling slantwise walk, a cane and a dusty bowler hat, one of the most iconic figures of the golden age of cinema was born.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

'A day without laughter is a day wasted.'

It is Christmas Day when Charlie Chaplin receives a visit from Death. The great actor is 82 years old, but not yet ready to face the final curtain. Desperate to see his teenage son grow up, the actor strikes a deal: if he manages to make Death laugh, he will win an extra year of life. As he awaits his final, fatal encounter, Chaplin composes an impassioned letter to his son, in which he attempts to tell him about his past, from his impoverished childhood in England (with an alcoholic father and a mother who went mad) to the heights of success on the silver screen in America, via stints in the circus and vaudeville, and odd jobs as a newspaper hawker, printer, boxer and embalmer.

As well as being the story of the evolution of a comic genius, this is the story of the evolution of cinema and how a beam of light on a white screen fired the imagination of an entire nation. As in his silent films, Charlie's adventures are simultaneously tragic and comic. The narrative flickers at a frenetic clip from false starts and early failures to eventual triumph in the magical moment when - before the eyes of a stupefied film crew - Charlie became the Tramp: with a little moustache, a shuffling slantwise walk, a cane and a dusty bowler hat, one of the most iconic figures of the golden age of cinema was born.

More books from Granta Publications

Cover of the book Last Rites by Fabio Stassi
Cover of the book Granta 81 by Fabio Stassi
Cover of the book The Ego Trick by Fabio Stassi
Cover of the book Granta 135 by Fabio Stassi
Cover of the book Middle Age by Fabio Stassi
Cover of the book The Billy Palmer Chronicles by Fabio Stassi
Cover of the book Underlands by Fabio Stassi
Cover of the book Chattering by Fabio Stassi
Cover of the book What's It All About? by Fabio Stassi
Cover of the book How To Read Plato by Fabio Stassi
Cover of the book The Myth of Wu Tao-tzu by Fabio Stassi
Cover of the book Protestant Boy by Fabio Stassi
Cover of the book Granta 117 by Fabio Stassi
Cover of the book Rodinsky's Room by Fabio Stassi
Cover of the book What Do Zionists Believe? by Fabio Stassi
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy