Editorial Review of Charlie Chaplin at Keystone and Essanay: Dawn of the Tramp by Ted Okuda, David Maska
Charlie Chaplin is universally hailed as the greatest comedic talent in the history of motion pictures. And yet Chaplin’s early efforts – which account for more than half of his total output-are often overlooked in favor of his later films. In 1914 Chaplin appeared in a total of 35 films for the Keystone Film Company; the following year he signed with the Essanay Film Manufacturing Company, where he wrote, directed and starred in more than a dozen short comedies. Though the resulting pictures were frequently crude and erratic, they reveal the emergence of a formidable comic genius. Charlie Chaplin at Keystone and Essanay: Dawn of the Tramp is a film-by-film examination of this period in Chaplin’s career
About the Author
Ted Okuda is the author of The Columbia Comedy Shorts and The Monogram Checklist, and co-author of The Jerry Lewis Films and The Golden Age of Chicago Children’s Television. David Maska is a film collector/historian whose articles have appeared in Classic Images and Filmfax. Ted Okuda is the author of The Columbia Comedy Shorts and The Monogram Checklist, and co-author of The Jerry Lewis Films and The Golden Age of Chicago Children’s Television. David Maska is a film collector/historian whose articles have appeared in Classic Images and Filmfax.