When Charlie Met Joan
The Tragedy of the Chaplin Trials and the Failings of American Law
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- $29.99
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- $29.99
Publisher Description
Charlie Chaplin, the silent screen’s “Little Tramp,” was beloved by millions of movie fans until he starred in a series of salacious, real-life federal courtroom dramas. The 1944 trial was described by ace New York Daily News reporter Florabel Muir as “the best show in town.” The leading lady was a woman under contract to his studio—red-haired ingénue Joan Barry, Chaplin’s protégée and former mistress. Although he beat the federal criminal trial, Chaplin lost a paternity case and had to pay child support despite blood type evidence that proved he was not the child’s father.
A decade later during the Cold War, the U.S. government used the Barry trials as an excuse to bar the left-leaning, sexually adventurous, British-born comic from the country he had called home for forty years. Not only did these trials have a lasting impact on law; they also raise concerns about the power of celebrity, Cold War politics, the media frenzy surrounding high-profile court proceedings, and the sorry history of the casting couch. When Charlie Met Joan examines these trials from the perspective of both parties, asking whether Chaplin was unfairly persecuted by the government because of his left-leaning political beliefs, or if he should have been held more accountable for his cavalier treatment of Barry and other women in his life.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
This fizzy history from Kiesel (She Can Bring Us Home), a retired New York Supreme Court judge, recaps Charlie Chaplin's tumultuous affair with Joan Barry, who was a 21-year-old aspiring actor when she met the 52-year-old director in 1941. Smitten by Barry, Chaplin promised to make her a star, put her on salary at his studio, and ushered her into his bed. After pressuring Barry to abort her two pregnancies with him, Chaplin cooled on their relationship, driving Barry to break into Chaplin's house and threaten to shoot him or herself. (The confrontation probably ended, Kiesel concludes, in sex.) The mess made global headlines and resulted in Chaplin's trial on charges of transporting Barry across state lines for immoral purposes and a paternity suit over Barry's newborn daughter. Chaplin was acquitted of the former, but found liable for child support even though a blood-type test proved he wasn't the father. Kiesel's fine-grained character portraits present Chaplin as a charming rake who hammed up his court testimony with fake tears, and Barry as a troubled wannabe starlet taken advantage of by a powerful man. A meticulous retelling of a choice bit of Tinseltown melodrama, this will change how readers see Chaplin. Photos.