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Infos supplémentaires

Acteur dans 24 films

Né(e) le 13 décembre 1882

Lieu de naissance
Birmingham, England

Mort le 17 août 1953 (à 70 ans)

Albert Austin

Acteur dans

1996

  • Chaplin's Goliath

1983

  • Unknown Chaplin

1959

  • The Chaplin Revue

1931

  • Les Lumières de la ville

1925

  • La ruée vers l'or

1922

  • Jour de paye

1921

  • Le Kid

1920

  • Suds

1919

  • The Professor

1918

  • Charlot soldat
  • Les Avatars de Charlot
  • Une vie de chien

1917

  • Charlot s'évade
  • Charlot l'émigrant
  • Charlot fait une cure
  • Charlot policeman

1916

  • Charlot patine
  • Charlot fait du ciné
  • Charlot usurier
  • Charlot et le comte
  • Charlot rentre tard
  • Charlot musicien
  • Charlot pompier
  • Charlot chef de rayon
  • A participé à

    • Les Lumières de la ville
​From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.   Albert Austin (13 December 1881 or 1885 – 17 August 1953) was an actor, film star, director and script writer, noted mainly for his work in Charlie Chaplin films. He was the brother of actor William Austin. He was born in Birmingham, England, and was a music hall performer before coming to the U.S. with Chaplin, both as members of the Fred Karno troupe, in 1910. Noted for his painted handlebar mustache and acerbic manner, he worked for Chaplin's stock company and played supporting roles in many of his films, often as a foil to the star, and working as his assistant director. After the development of sound films, he moved into scriptwriting, directing and acting, chiefly in comedy short subjects. Among other things, he assisted Chaplin in developing the plot of The Adventurer (1917). However, he only received screen credit as a collaborator once, for City Lights. As an actor, he appeared in Chaplin's comedies for the Mutual Film Corporation. Later he had two brief, uncredited roles in one of Chaplin's 'silent' comedies made in the sound era, City Lights (1931). Austin is also seen very briefly (as a cab driver) at the beginning of Chaplin's short film One A.M.. He also appeared in movies starring Jackie Coogan and Mack Sennett. Austin's best known performance may be in Chaplin's short The Pawnshop. Austin enters the shop with an alarm clock, hoping to pawn it. To establish the clock's value, Chaplin dissects it. Austin maintains a deadpan expression as Chaplin progressively destroys his clock, then hands the pieces back to Austin. He had the leading role in Mary Pickford's Suds (1920), where he co-stars as a customer leaving his shirt at her laundry. In that film he appears without his comic mustache. In his final years he worked as a police officer at the Warner Brothers studios, according to a New York Times obituary. Description above from the Wikipedia article Albert Austin licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.





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