MikeDunnAuthor,
@MikeDunnAuthor@kolektiva.social avatar

Today in Labor History September 19, 1952: The United States barred Charlie Chaplin from re-entering the country after a trip to England. In 1947, his black comedy, Monsieur Verdoux, was released. In the film, he criticized capitalism and its reliance on wars and weapons of mass destruction. The FBI launched a formal investigation of him 1947, after public accusations that he was a communist. Chaplin denied the charges, calling himself a “peace monger.” Nevertheless, he protested the HUAC hearings and the U.S. trials of Communist Party members. Representative John Rankin called Chaplin's presence in Hollywood “detrimental to the moral fabric of America.” Writer George Orwell prepared list of people he believed were communists, which he gave to British intelligence before he died in 1949. The list included Chaplin and Michael Redgrave, as well as Paul Robeson, Katherine Hepburn, John Steinbeck and Orson Welles.

#WorkingClass #LaborHistory #communism #hollywood #anticommunism #CharlieChaplin #OrsonWelles #Steinbeck #orwell #fbi #huac #actor #writer #fiction @bookstadon

eribosot,
@eribosot@mastodon.social avatar

@MikeDunnAuthor @bookstadon Richard Avedon's portrait of Chaplin's farewell to the US is a classic.

lightrider,
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