'Little Tramp' lives on in Chaplin's final home
CHARLIE Chaplin's last home in Switzerland will be turned into a permanent place of pilgrimage for fans of the actor who immortalized the "Little Tramp," one of his sons said yesterday.
The mansion at Corsier-sur-Vevey by the shores of Lake Geneva was chosen over Los Angeles and London as the site of the first museum dedicated to the screen legend, said Michael Chaplin.
The museum has been a decade in the planning and will be finished within two years, he said.
It will feature objects from Chaplin's life and displays chronicling his rise from the music halls of his native London to stardom in Hollywood's silent movie era and beyond.
"He was very happy here because he had a family life," Michael Chaplin said of the vintner's chateau where his father lived for more than 20 years and raised eight children until his death in 1977.
The actor, whose film classics include "The Immigrant," "City Lights" and "The Great Dictator," was barred from the United States in 1952 during the peak of McCarthyism. He returned briefly two decades later to receive an honorary Academy Award for his life's work.
The mansion, with its extensive gardens and woodland area, was home to brothers Michael and Eugene Chaplin and their families for over 10 years.
"All the time we were here we had people coming to the door asking if they could walk around," said Michael, 63, the actor's fifth of 11 children. "Sometimes whole buses would come and we'd open up the gate to let them walk around the park. That put the seed of the idea in our minds that when we left it should become a museum."
The mansion at Corsier-sur-Vevey by the shores of Lake Geneva was chosen over Los Angeles and London as the site of the first museum dedicated to the screen legend, said Michael Chaplin.
The museum has been a decade in the planning and will be finished within two years, he said.
It will feature objects from Chaplin's life and displays chronicling his rise from the music halls of his native London to stardom in Hollywood's silent movie era and beyond.
"He was very happy here because he had a family life," Michael Chaplin said of the vintner's chateau where his father lived for more than 20 years and raised eight children until his death in 1977.
The actor, whose film classics include "The Immigrant," "City Lights" and "The Great Dictator," was barred from the United States in 1952 during the peak of McCarthyism. He returned briefly two decades later to receive an honorary Academy Award for his life's work.
The mansion, with its extensive gardens and woodland area, was home to brothers Michael and Eugene Chaplin and their families for over 10 years.
"All the time we were here we had people coming to the door asking if they could walk around," said Michael, 63, the actor's fifth of 11 children. "Sometimes whole buses would come and we'd open up the gate to let them walk around the park. That put the seed of the idea in our minds that when we left it should become a museum."
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