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Sydney Chaplin

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Sydney Chaplin
Born
Sydney John Hill

(1885-03-16)16 March 1885
London, England
Died16 April 1965(1965-04-16) (aged 80)
Nice, France
OccupationActor
Years active1905–1929
Spouses
  • Minnie
    (m. 1908; died 1936)
  • Henriette
    (m. 1941)
MotherHannah Hill
RelativesSee Chaplin family

Sydney John Chaplin ( Hill; 16 March 1885 – 16 April 1965) was an English actor. Chaplin was the elder half-brother of actor and filmmaker Charlie Chaplin and in later life, served as his business manager.

Through their mother Hannah, they were older half-brothers to the younger Wheeler Dryden, who grew up separately with his father in England and was not told about his half-brothers until 1915. Dryden later immigrated to the United States, joining the Chaplins in Hollywood. Sydney Chaplin was also a half-uncle of actor Sydney Chaplin (1926–2009), who was named after him.

Early life

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Sydney John Hill was born in London to the unmarried 19-year-old Hannah Hill, who was a music hall entertainer. She claimed the boy's father was Sydney Hawkes, but his father's identity was never verified. Hannah was of Romanichal heritage.[1] A year later, his mother married Charles Chaplin Sr., and the latter became his legal guardian. Sydney's surname was changed to Chaplin. Hannah and Charles had a son together called Charlie.

While Syd and half-brother Charlie were in the Cuckoo Schools in Hanwell following their mother's mental collapse, Syd was placed in the programme designed to train young boys to become seamen. He served on the Exmouth training ship docked at Grays, Essex. He followed this training period with several years working on ships, receiving high marks from all of his employers but his ambition was to get into the entertainment business like his parents and brother, and he left his final voyage with that in mind.

In 1905 Charlie and Sydney worked briefly together in one of their first stage appearances, Sherlock Holmes. Syd was briefly cast as a villain in that play. In 1906, however, he landed a contract with Fred Karno, of Karno's London Comedians, and worked hard to bring Charlie into the company two years later. Charlie never achieved the sort of fame Syd did as a principal comedian for that company, but surpassed him later as an actor, director and producer.

After Charlie achieved worldwide fame in 1915, the brothers were contacted by their half-brother Wheeler Dryden, whose father had just told him of the connection. His father had removed Wheeler from their mother as an infant and brought him up separately. Wheeler was also an actor, and the brothers reunited in Hollywood in 1918 after they all immigrated to the United States. They occasionally worked together at Charlie Chaplin's studio through to the 1950s.

Career

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Keystone

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Syd Chaplin at the periscope in a scene still from A Submarine Pirate (Keystone, 1915)

As Charlie was negotiating his Keystone contract in Hollywood, he suggested that Syd should join the studio. Syd and his wife Minnie Chaplin arrived in California in October 1914.

Syd made a few appearances with the Keystone stock company in supporting roles before starring as a new character, Reggie Gussle. Gussle was a brash, mustachioed, happy-go-lucky fellow who enjoyed flirting with women and sneaking drinks, but was usually under the watchful eye of his large, ominous wife (Phyllis Allen). Syd Chaplin was less frantic than the other Keystone comedians, who usually ran around the scene with exaggerated gestures. Syd's antics were slower but quite energetic. His expressive face was also featured in numerous close-ups, unusual for Keystone stars. His improvisational approach sometimes resulted in scenes running very long -- in one case, so long that the finished scenes were divided into two separate comedies, Gussle's Backward Way and Gussle Tied to Trouble.[2]

The Gussle comedies caught on very quickly, and within the year these one-reel, 10-minute comedies were doubled in length. Syd Chaplin made 12 Gussle subjects, and then starred in an extended-length featurette, A Submarine Pirate in 1915. Second to Tillie's Punctured Romance, this was the most financially successful comedy Keystone ever made. Writing in The Smart Set magazine in 1916, critic George Jean Nathan stated that Charlie Chaplin was "not nearly so good a comique as his brother."[3]

Charlie's business affairs

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Following this success, Syd decided to leave the screen to negotiate Charlie a better contract. After getting him a $500,000 contract with Mutual on February 27, 1916, he got him his first million-dollar ($1.25 million) contract on June 17, 1917 with First National Pictures.[4] Soon he was handling the majority of Charlie's business affairs, in addition to further contract negotiations. Their sheet music business failed, but they were successful with a merchandising one.

Sydney also appeared in a few of Charlie's films during the First National era, such as Pay Day and The Pilgrim. Sydney achieved his own million-dollar contract from Famous Players–Lasky in 1919, but a series of problems resulted in his making only one, failed, film, King, Queen, Joker (1921). He disappeared from the screen once again.

Aviation

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During this period, Syd Chaplin's most important contribution may be in the field of aviation. In May 1919, he, along with pilot Emory Herman Rogers Jr.,[5][6][7][8][9][10] developed and launched the first privately owned domestic American airline, the Syd Chaplin Airline Company,[11] based in Santa Monica, California. Although the corporation lasted only a year, in that time it established many "firsts." Syd and partners had the first airplane showroom for their Curtiss airplanes. It offered observation flights for $10 and round-trip flights to San Diego for $150.[7]

On 4 July 1919, the Syd Chaplin Aircraft Corporation began flights to Santa Catalina Island.[12]

Sydney Chaplin Aerodrome (Chaplin Airfield) was south of Wilshire and west of Crescent (now bounded by Wilshire Boulevard, Fairfax Avenue, and San Vincente Boulevard).[13][8][14]

Emery H. Rogers[15] conducted the first roundtrip Los Angeles to San Francisco flight in one 24-hour period. Charlie Chaplin took his first airplane flight in one of Syd's planes, as did many other notable figures of the period. Syd Chaplin got out of the aviation business after governments began to pass legislation regulating pilot licensing and the taxation of planes and flights.

Roger's Field

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On December 29, 1920, Amelia Earhart was booked for a passenger flight, at the-now Emory Roger's Roger's Field which included Chaplin Airfield and DeMille Field No. 2.[14][16][7][17][18] The cost was $10 for a 10 minute flight with Frank Hawks (later gaining fame as an air racer), giving her a ride that would forever change Earhart's life.[18]

Return to acting

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Sydney Chaplin pictured 1920 (Motion Picture Studio Directory and Trade Annual)

He returned to acting, and later films include The Perfect Flapper (1924) with Colleen Moore, and Charley's Aunt (1925). He made five features for Warner Bros. Pictures, including The Man on the Box (1925), Oh, What a Nurse! (1926), The Missing Link (1927), and The Fortune Hunter (1927).

Warner Brothers' The Better 'Ole (1926) is perhaps Syd's best-known film today because of his characterisation of Old Bill, adapted from a World War I character created by cartoonist Bruce Bairnsfather. Also, this was the second Warner Bros. film to have a Vitaphone soundtrack. This film is believed by many to have the first spoken word of dialogue in film, "coffee", although other historians disagree.[19][page needed]

Syd Chaplin returned to England, where he made his first film for British International Pictures (BIP), A Little Bit of Fluff (1928). This proved to be his final film. In 1929, as he was to begin work on a second film for the studio, Mumming Birds, he was accused of sexual assault by actress Molly Wright.[20] BIP settled out of court, which appeared to concede the truth of Wright's claims.[20] Following the scandal, Chaplin left England again and moved to continental Europe, leaving a string of unpaid tax demands.[20] By 1930 he was declared bankrupt.[20]

Personal life and death

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Share of the Chaplin Studios, Inc., issued 15. December 1926, assigned to Syd Chaplin
The tomb of Sydney and Henriette Chaplin.

Chaplin married twice and had no children. He married his first wife, Minnie, in England in 1908.[21]: 36  She was diagnosed with breast cancer and died in France in September 1936 following surgery for the illness.[20] After World War II, Chaplin lived most of his final years in Europe. He married again, to Henriette Leoneanu (nicknamed Gypsy, by Chaplin) c.1941.[21]: 207, 211 

After a long illness, he died one month after his 80th birthday, on his half-brother Charlie's 76th birthday, on 16 April 1965, in Nice, France. Gypsy survived him. Chaplin is buried in Clarens-Montreux Cemetery,[22] near Vevey. After Gypsy died in 1992, she was buried beside him.

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Sydney Chaplin was portrayed as a teenager by actor Nicholas Gatt and as an adult by actor Paul Rhys in Richard Attenborough's Chaplin. The film explored his personal and professional relationship with Charlie.

Selected filmography

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References

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  1. ^ Hopewell, John (23 September 2019). "Carmen Chaplin to Direct 'Charlie Chaplin, a Man of the World' (Exclusive)". Variety. Retrieved 10 October 2021.
  2. ^ Brent Walker, Mack Sennett's Fun Factory, McFarland & Company, 2010, p. 317.
  3. ^ Nathan, George Jean (October 1916). "Myths of Momus". The Smart Set. p. 134. Retrieved 1 March 2024.{{cite magazine}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
  4. ^ "Charlie Chaplin: Hollywood Renegade". www.cobbles.com. Retrieved 8 April 2021.
  5. ^ "Eleanor Lacy Hamlin Rogers Hopper". FamilySearch. Retrieved 30 May 2022. Emory Herman Rogers Jr.
  6. ^ "Aviator flies too close to office buildings" (PDF). Orange County Plain Dealer. 24 (215). Anaheim, California. 11 April 1921. Retrieved 30 May 2022.
  7. ^ a b c "Aviation History of the Miracle Mile". Miracle Mile, Los Angeles Residential Association. 24 July 2013. Retrieved 25 May 2022.
  8. ^ a b Unknown (2012). "Airplane parked at Rogers Airport with Rogers Aircraft Incorporated building in the background, ca.1922". University of Southern California Doheny Memorial Library. doi:10.25549/chs-m13005.
  9. ^ "The Late Emory H. Rogers". Aerial Age Weekly. 14 (22). NYC: Aerial Age Company: 512. 6 February 1922. Retrieved 30 May 2022.
  10. ^ "Emory H. Rogers". U.S. Air Service. 6 (6). Army and Navy Air Service Association: 32. January 1922. Retrieved 30 May 2022.
  11. ^ Stein, Lisa K. (2010). Syd Chaplin: A Biography. McFarland. p. 1. ISBN 978-0-7864-6226-1. Retrieved 4 May 2017.
  12. ^ "CATALINA AIR LINE STARTS JULY FOURTH Film Beauty to Break a Bottle of Orange Juice Over Bowl". San Pedro News Pilot. 1 July 1919. Retrieved 12 May 2023 – via California Digital Newspaper Collection.
  13. ^ Kelly, Shawna (2008). Aviators in Early Hollywood. Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 978-0-7385-5902-5. Actor Syd Chaplin , brother and agent of Charlie Chaplin , co - owned Chaplin Aerodrome . It was south of Wilshire and west of Crescent
  14. ^ a b "Aviation in Early Los Angeles". Water and Power Associates. Retrieved 25 May 2022.
  15. ^ Notes on Los Angeles Society Los Angeles Herald 5 January 1916 "ONE of the prettiest wedding? of the season will be that of this evening when at 8 o'clock Miss Eleanor Hamlin, the attractive young daughter of Mrs. r. c Hamlin of ( North Euclid avenue, Pasadena, becomes the bride of Emory H. Rogers,, non of Mrs. Harry Matson Gorham of Santa Monica. "
  16. ^ Abandoned & Little-Known Airfields: Rogers Airport / Chaplin Airport by Paul Freeman
  17. ^ Harvey, Steve (9 August 1990). "Has Simi Valley become embroiled in the Middle East situation?". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 25 May 2022. Fawn Peck took off on his first airplane flight from Rogers Field, which isn't listed on any current maps. It was at the corner of Wilshire Boulevard and Fairfax Avenue. Soon afterward he took a job as a mechanic at a two-hangar facility called Mines Field. You might know it better by its current name, Los Angeles International Airport. The year was 1928.
  18. ^ a b "Amelia Earhart Story". Forney Museum of Transportation. Retrieved 24 May 2022.
  19. ^ Eyman, Scott. The Speed of Sound: Hollywood and the Talkie Revolution 1926–1930
  20. ^ a b c d e Sweet, Matthew. "A Life in Full:The Other Chaplin". The Independent. Archived from the original on 26 February 2009. Retrieved 31 July 2008.
  21. ^ a b Stein, Lisa K. (10 January 2014). Syd Chaplin: A Biography. McFarland. ISBN 9780786462261. Retrieved 18 October 2023.
  22. ^ Wilson, Scott (2016). Resting Places: The Burial Sites of More Than 14,000 Famous Persons, 3d ed. (2 volume set). McFarland. p. 130. ISBN 978-1-4766-2599-7. Retrieved 4 May 2017.

Further reading

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