His filmography (below) is quite extensive
Charles Chaplin directed 75 films from 1914 through 1967.
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.
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.
his childhood and watching Charlie Chaplin silent films. He wrote comedy due to all the funny movies he would watch.
Rodrigo Escobar here: Charlie Chaplin itself wrote it, like all his soundtracks ;)
he did nothing it was all the other people that did it for him
Oona O'Neil, who was the daughter of Pulitzer-Prize winning playwright Eugene O'Neil -- who disapproved of his daughter's marriage to Chaplin, and cut off all communication with her afterward. source: http://charlie-chaplin-reviews.info/biographies/oona-oneil-chaplin-biography-dedicated-wife-to-charlie-chaplin/
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/
Originally slapstick comedies which are still just as entertaining as when they were made, nearly 100 years ago. Later he turned to films with a left-wing message, and these have not weathered so well. In particular, his big communist speech at the end of 'The Great Dictator' sounds like nonsense today, though it may have carried conviction in the particular atmosphere of 1940.
Charlie Chaplin.
"Chaplin" (1992). Directed by Richard Attenborough. Stars Robert Downey Jr., Geraldine Chaplin (playing her own grandmother), Anthony Hopkins, Dan Aykroyd, Marisa Tomei, Kevin Kline, Diane Lane, James Woods. Charles Chaplin wrote his autobiography, called "My Autobiography"in 1964. It is still available.