- Born: 1877
- Died: 1917
- Occupation: Actor
- Active: teens
- Major Genres: Comedy
- Career Highlights: The Immigrant, Easy Street, Behind the Screen
- First Major Screen Credit: Behind the Screen (1916)
| Actor: Eric Campbell |
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| Eric Campbell | |
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| Born | Alfred Eric Campbell 26 April 1879 Dunoon, Argyll, Scotland |
| Died | 20 December 1917 (aged 38) Los Angeles, California, United States |
| Years active | 1916 - 1917 |
| Spouse(s) | Fanny Gertrude Robotham (1901-1917) Pearl Gillman (1917) |
Alfred Eric Campbell (April 26, 1879, Dunoon – December 20, 1917, Hollywood) was a Scottish actor.
A silent era star, he was featured in 11 movies starring Charlie Chaplin where he typically played the intimidating large villain of the story.
He began his career as a stage actor in "fit-ups" (local theatres) in Scotland and Wales, playing a number of melodramatic roles. It was in one such role that he was discovered by Fred Karno, the famous English impresario who also discovered Charlie Chaplin and Stan Laurel. Karno, who was impressed by Campbell's enormous size and rich, baritone voice, took him to London and introduced him to the slapstick comedy style of Karno's troupe, the Fun Factory, for which Campbell would later become famous.
Campbell sailed to New York City in 1914, following in the footsteps of Chaplin and Laurel, who had relocated there a year earlier. Campbell soon became established in America as a stage actor. He is said to have appeared in at least one Gilbert and Sullivan musical. In 1916, Chaplin was in New York to sign his contract with Mutual (then the highest sum ever paid to an entertainer). He saw Campbell performing in a play on Broadway, remembered him, and invited him to Hollywood to join the cast of actors in the new films that Chaplin had contracted to make.
Campbell's first film with Chaplin was The Floorwalker (1916). In it, he achieved some recognition for the "escalator scene," in which he chased Chaplin through a department store. It was in their second film together, The Fireman (1916) that Campbell really developed the role that would feature throughout all of his successive work with Chaplin. A towering figure weighing almost 300 pounds (136 kg), he became the villain and comic foil to the "Little Tramp's" antics. His most famous appearance is probably in Chaplin's Easy Street (1917), in which local bully Campbell demonstrates his strength to timid policeman Chaplin by bending a gas lamp-post.
Chaplin was then the most recognised film star in the world, with countless imitators, including his old friend Stan Laurel. It was therefore inevitable that Campbell, who was a key figure in Chaplin's films of this period, would also have imitators. The most famous of these was tall, heavy-set Oliver Hardy, who played second banana to Chaplin impersonator Billy West. Ten years later, Hardy was paired with Stan Laurel to create the Laurel and Hardy comedy team.
While Campbell's career soared, his personal life suffered when he lost his wife in an automobile accident. Within a month, however, he had remarried to Cleda Pearl Gillman, after a romance of just five days. The marriage lasted only months, however, before Gillman divorced him, citing his drunken behavior and use of profanity.
That same year, Chaplin ended his relationship with Mutual to sign a million-dollar contract with First National (again, the highest amount ever paid to an actor). He planned on taking Campbell with him, but in the interim, between films, Chaplin lent Campbell to his friend, Mary Pickford, who cast him in her film Amarilly of Clothes-Line Alley (1918). According to reports, he had been drinking heavily at a cast party held just a few days later, and finally left for home at 4:00 a.m. He was driving drunk when his car spun out of control and crashed, killing him instantly.
Campbell was cremated and his ashes remained unclaimed for over 30 years, until they were finally laid to rest at Rosedale Cemetery. No marker was set on his final resting place, and it is unknown where his remains were placed.
The 1996 documentary, Chaplin's Goliath: In Search of Scotland's Forgotten Star, written and directed by Kevin MacDonald, explored Campbell's life and work.[1] During the making of the film, a cenotaph commemorating Campbell was placed at Rosedale Cemetery[2] and a memorial plaque was added to the Castle House Museum at Castle Gardens, Dunoon.
Campbell had a daughter, born around 1900, from his relationship with his first wife.
| Year | Film | Role | Other notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1916 | The Floorwalker | Store manager | |
| The Fireman | Foreman of the Brigade | ||
| The Vagabond | Gypsy Chieftain | ||
| The Count | A Tailor | ||
| The Pawnshop | Burglar | ||
| Behind the Screen | Goliath (a stagehand) | ||
| The Rink | Mr. Stout, Edna's Admirer | ||
| 1917 | Easy Street | The Bully | |
| The Cure | Baca | ||
| The Immigrant | The head waiter | ||
| The Adventurer | The Suitor |
This entry is from Wikipedia, the leading user-contributed encyclopedia. It may not have been reviewed by professional editors (see full disclaimer)
| Chaplin's Goliath (1996 Film, TV & Radio Film) | |
| The Count (1916 Comedy Film) | |
| The Fireman (1916 Comedy Drama Film) |
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