US blocked 'immoral' Charlie Chaplin from getting a knighthood for 20 years
Your support helps us to tell the story
This election is still a dead heat, according to most polls. In a fight with such wafer-thin margins, we need reporters on the ground talking to the people Trump and Harris are courting. Your support allows us to keep sending journalists to the story.
The Independent is trusted by 27 million Americans from across the entire political spectrum every month. Unlike many other quality news outlets, we choose not to lock you out of our reporting and analysis with paywalls. But quality journalism must still be paid for.
Help us keep bring these critical stories to light. Your support makes all the difference.
His tragicomic persona made him a star around the world, but it failed to win over the American Right, who branded him a communist sympathiser and reviled him for his "immoral" sexual antics.
Newly released papers reveal the extraordinary lengths to which the US establishment went to prevent Charlie Chaplin being knighted.
Born in London, Chaplin went on to become a star of the silent screen in the US but never became an American citizen. Throughout the Fifties and Sixties, he is known to have been kept off the honours list by a series of allegations concerning his private life.
But Chaplin did not fall victim to the smears of a reactionary minority, as has long been supposed. In fact, his knighthood was systematically blocked by America's taxation and immigration authorities, according to documents released by the Public Record Office.
Chaplin was finally knighted in 1975, two years before his death. Yet even then the process was not a smooth one.
One letter reveals how the US tried to persuade the British government to substitute his name with that of Bob Hope, on the pretext that the American comedian, who was born in England, was a keen charity worker.
The full substance of the case against Chaplin is detailed in a memorandum compiled in 1956 by an official in the Foreign Office research department. The unnamed official refers to a raft of "public charges" linking the actor with communism, including his backing for Stalin's Second World War campaigns and a telegram he sent in support of the 1949 Russian-backed World Peace Conference.
The official also lists several "grave moral charges" against Chaplin, notably his two marriages to 16-year-old girls, Mildred Harris and Lita Grey, and his later wedding to Paulette Goddard in China. Of the latter union, he writes: "The suggestion seems to have been that Mr Chaplin and Miss Goddard, who first jointly attracted the attention of the gossip writers by journeying to the Far East together in 1933, were never really married."
Chaplin had also been declared the father of actress Joan Barry's child after a lengthy paternity suit.
Also raised in the memo is the issue of Chaplin's financial affairs. The actor, who left the US after 42 years in 1952 and moved to Switzerland, was at the time being pursued by the US Internal Revenue Office for $1m in unpaid taxes.
The memo concludes: "While there is undeniably still much admiration for Mr Chaplin as an artist, even amongst those Americans who neither agree with his politics nor condone his morals, there has been remarkably little disposition, outside certain left-wing circles, to question the action of the Department of Justice in 1952 in virtually barring his re-entry into the United States."
The matter of Chaplin's suitability for a knighthood reared its head again in July 1971, when the Civil Service Department in London received a recommendation from "highly reputable, indeed distinguished sources". Shortly afterwards, the Queen was sent a letter by Fergus Horsburgh, a Canadian, advocating knighthoods for both Chaplin and PG Wodehouse, whose name had been blackened during the war over allegations that he acted as a Nazi propagandist.
Mr Horsburgh wrote: "No doubt these men have erred, but they are both old now. Why not forgive and forget?"
In a recommendation to the Foreign Office, PS Milner-Barry of the Civil Service Department wrote of the Chaplin application: "What would the Foreign Office say? In the past (1957) they were 'strongly opposed', but a good deal of water has flowed under the bridge since then. There may be a feeling that it is time to let bygones be bygones."
When Chaplin was finally knighted four years later, at the age of 88, he was so frail that he had to be wheeled to the ceremony at Buckingham Palace. PG Wodehouse was knighted the same year, but died 45 days later.
While he lost out on his opportunity to steal Chaplin's thunder in 1975, Bob Hope eventually received an honorary knighthood in May 1998.
Subscribe to Independent Premium to bookmark this article
Want to bookmark your favourite articles and stories to read or reference later? Start your Independent Premium subscription today.
Join our commenting forum
Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies
Comments