Dorothy Ford

Dorothy Ford

  • Born: 1922-4-4
  • Height: 6' 2" (1.88 m)
  • Extended Reading
    • Era 2022-03-12 08:01:02

      best chaplin

      There are many great and famous films of Chaplin, but I think his best work is not his famous silent films, but the film "The Spring and Autumn on the Stage" that he shot in the sunset era of his life.

      Originally published in my personal public account Karmacore

      There are many great and famous films...

    • Austin 2022-03-12 08:01:02

      "Stage Career" Movie Script

      "Stage Career" Movie Script

    • Lucie 2022-03-18 09:01:09

      The Keaton and Chaplin battle may never be concluded, but one thing I can be sure of: the great Keaton has only one, and the great Chaplin has two. One is the morning sun of the first birth, and the other is the sunset of winter. In order to imitate the blood-red sunset, Robert Downey Jr. has been a frustrated actor for more than ten years. But I think he has no regrets, because no one will regret having loved pure life.

    • Josephine 2022-03-25 09:01:22

      Real actors are all born for the audience. Without the audience, everything is empty. As long as the audience can enjoy their performance, everything on stage is worth it. It is very tiring to be such an actor, especially a comedian, who does a humorous thing but is not seen by the audience, or does a very ordinary thing but is regarded as a joke by many people. A mental blow. What's more, after getting old, Jiang Lang's talents are exhausted and forgotten, and this occupational disease will accompany him all his life. This movie reminds me of Birdman. The first hour of the movie is a bit too long, but the back is interesting. Chaplin and Keaton are on the same stage, but that scene is not particularly funny. Instead, it makes me see how old they are, which makes me a little sad. . Although it is a sound film, there is still a silent film routine. Chaplin is actually a master of tragedy, and it has never changed.

    Limelight quotes

    • Terry: Cheer up. Look! The dawn is breaking. Oh, that's a good omen. I know it. It will be. It must be!

    • Calvero: We're just having a little beer, Bach and Beethoven, as it were.

      Terry: Isn't it rather late for music?

      Calvero: Not if we play a nocturne.

      [to the band]

      Calvero: Proceed with the butchery, only make it soft, sentimental, largo.