Charlie Chaplin — "Let us strive for the impossible."
Let us strive for the impossible.
Let us strive for the impossible.
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"It's not the reality that counts in a film, but what imagination can do with it."
"That's what all we are. Amateurs. We don't live long enough to be anything else."
"I am for people. I can’t help it."
"I am a comedian, and my job is to make people laugh, even if it's at my own expense."
"I am a citizen of the world. I don't belong to any country, to any race, to any religion. I am a human being."
English comic actor and silent-film auteur whose Tramp character defined early Hollywood and whose The Great Dictator (1940) satirized Hitler. Closely associated with Buster Keaton (silent-comedy peer of equal stature) and Harold Lloyd (third silent-comedy giant). For an intellectual contrast, see J. Edgar Hoover, FBI director (1924-1972) — Hoover pursued Chaplin for years on suspected communist sympathies, leading to the 1952 revocation of Chaplin's US re-entry permit and his Swiss exile — Hoover represented the McCarthy-era national-security state that was the institutional opposite of Chaplin's pro-immigrant Tramp humanism.
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