No. "A Woman of Paris" (1923), "Monsieur Verdoux" and "Limelight"(1952) are some of his movies without Chaplin's little tramp. They are all very good, though.
The first films that featured his character, the Little Tramp. If legend is to be believed, he saw Fatty Arbuckle's trousers hanging up on a peg, and climbed into them. When people said it looked funny, he put on other garments that were all the wrong size, and then made a film about a tramp getting in the way of the cameras at a racetrack.
Charles Chaplin directed 75 films from 1914 through 1967.
Tight frock coatBaggy trousersOver-sized shoesBowler capStraw caneMessy white shirt under jacketAscot? Neckerchief thing (look up pictures).Pencil moustache, black eye liner, white face, black eyebrows.
Straw hat.
His filmography (below) is quite extensive
sons of anarchy. green street hooligans that's all i know :)
Yes, he spoke in The Great Dictator and all of the films that followed it.
All of his films released before 1923 are in the public domain.
I don't want to tramp around these woods all night.
In 1919, Charlie Chaplin formed United Artists with his closest friend Douglas Fairbanks and Fairbanks' wife, screen legend Mary Pickford - in a successful effort to keep the major studios from monopolizing and controlling all aspects of production. charlie-chaplin-reviews.info/biographies/biography-of-charlie-chaplin-the-little-tramp/
The most famous character of Charlie Chaplin was "The Tramp": a Jewish man with a painted white face, loose dress pants, overly large shoes, and a stick-on mustache. It was the way he portrayed immigrants during the early 1900's, and what made his popularity grow. He got his first break in "Hollywood" because of how well he played a drunken man, while being comedic as well.
The cast of All in the Air - 1914 includes: Levine Herman as Dick - 2nd Tramp Raymond McKee as Tom - 1st Tramp Harry Rice as Joe - 3rd Tramp