City Lights 1930 1931 1932 next previous
City Lights Clippings 239/387
R. H., Guardian, Manchester, England, February 28, 1931.
Dominion Theatre (...)
To-Night, Friday, Feb. 27th, at 8.30 p. m.
R. H. Gillespie presents
The London Première
of the
Charles Chaplin
Production
„City Lights“
United Artists
Dominion City Lights Program, London, February 27, 1931
R. H. Gillespie is Managing Director of the Dominion.
& Charles Chaplin (left) and Winston
Churchill at the „City Lights“ Party, London 1931
& Charles Chaplin with Winston Churchill
and his family at the Churchill home in Kent, 1931,
vintag.es
„This is indeed a great triumph for me“
Editorial content. „CHAPLIN FIRST NIGHT
Only Man Who Did Not Laugh
„CITY LIGHTS“ TRIUMPH
(From our London Staff.)
FLEET STREET, FRIDAY.
Huge crowds assembled outside the Dominion Theatre for
the first showing of Charlie Chaplin‘s new film. The cars
stretched far up Tottenham Court Road, and the adjacent side
streets were blocked. People in evening clothes trudged
through through the rain, having their cars as far off as Charlotte
Street, and fought their way into the theatre. A battery
of searchlights beat on the entrance, and the scene at the first
night of a silent film was rather like a silent war film as
the crowd broke through the police and the flashlights of the
photographers intermittently lit up the scene.
Charlie Chaplin appeared on the balcony outside the
theatre, and was frantically cheered by the waving
and screaming crowd, who were quite undeterred by the
police. He then came to the front of the theatre
circle where he was seated, and was no less enthusiastically
greeted by the entire audience, half of whom did not
see him. He did not, however, speak till the end of the film,
when he went on to the stage.
A BRIEF SPEECH
During the performance he sat sedately with distinguished
people of the day in a received block of seats. He was
the only man in the theatre who never laughed, though it is true
that he sometimes smiled at this shambling, merrymaking
ghost of himself. ,This is indeed a great triumph for me,‘ he said,
in his speech afterwards.“ (...)
„The picture was rapturously received by an excited
audience, and there was no doubt, of course, that,
odd as a non-talkie seemed, it would have been ridiculous
to make the little tramp speak. Chaplin has done the
next best thing, and synchronized it with grotesque music of his
own composition. Though City Lights may not be as
funny as The Gold Rush, it proves that there is no one as good
as Chaplin but Chaplin. R. H.“
The London Premiere of City Lights takes place
at the Dominion February 27, 1931.
Dominion Theatre, Tottenham Court Road, London.
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City Lights 1930 1931 1932 next previous