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May 11, 2014

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Museum to honor film legend Chaplin

AFTER more than 14 years of discussions and stumbling blocks, work to turn screen legend Charlie Chaplin’s Swiss home into a museum has finally begun, with the opening planned in early 2016.

To show that the project is finally on track, the promoters this week showed off the idyllic site in the village of Corsier-sur-Vevey.

The large, white manor overlooking Lake Geneva, which Chaplin called home for the final 25 years of his life, and surrounding park will over the next two years undergo a transformation expected to cost more than US$45.7 million.

As proof that the project was truly under way, a large, yellow digger rolled across the sprawling property to a spot in sight of the house, named Manoir de Ban, and began scooping up the lawn and the rich, dark soil beneath.

The new museum will aim to have cultural and artistic qualities, curator Yves Durand said.

“We will build something unique: a museum that mixes both culture and entertainment,” he said.

It took seven years to get a building permit, and before that the project organizers had to wait five years to settle a lawsuit brought by a neighbor worried about the implications of the building.

“Now everything is set. We have the financing, the project leader, the architect, the scenographer and the green light from the family,” Durand said with a grin.

On Wednesday, three of the eight children Charlie Chaplin had with his wife Oona were present to help sound the starting shot for the project.

Mickael, who after his father’s death on Christmas day 1977, lived in the manor until 2008, recalled the stories of his father’s unhappy childhood.

Born Charles Spencer Chaplin, the silent film legend was born in London in 1889 to poor parents who struggled to make a living as music hall entertainers.

“He lived in total misery, abandoned by his father and with a mother who was often institutionalized for psychological problems,” said Mickael Chaplin, 68, wearing a silvery beard and black hat.

“This manor was for him — the house of his dreams, as he showed in his film Modern Times,” he said, gesturing towards the building.

His father, he said, had been truly happy at the end of his life, “serving up vegetables from his garden, asparagus, peas, lettuce, not to mention strawberries.”

The museum building will together provide more than 4,000 square meters of exhibition space to showcase Chaplin’s work.




 

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