cover image Chaplin and Agee

Chaplin and Agee

John Wranovics. Palgrave MacMillan, $24.95 (288pp) ISBN 978-1-4039-6866-1

A historical curio that links two cultural titans, James Agee's 1949 script for Charlie Chaplin's Little Tramp sounds like an American Studies scholar's dream. Set in a post-apocalyptic world, the untitled screenplay (dubbed The Tramp's New World) delves into Agee's atomic-age fears and glorifies a socially radical cinematic hero during an era of conservative politics. However, the document itself-which, in truth, is simply an early film treatment-has less historical significance than the subtitle of this book would suggest. It was quickly passed over by Chaplin and actually had little to do with the duo's eventual friendship, which was more significantly catalyzed by Agee's positive 1947 review of Chaplin's otherwise maligned drama Monsieur Verdeaux-a point that Wranovics, a marketing executive for an electronics and computing manufacturer, fails to clearly elucidate. More a dual biography than a close analysis of a literary document, Wranovics's account is a deft profile of two artists he clearly admires, and he takes care to underscore the surrounding social and political concerns. (HUAC, supplemented by Commie-haters like Ed Sullivan, was just beginning its assault on left-leaning artists in Hollywood at the time.) But while the book is well-researched, it's bogged down by dry prose, out-of-place commentaries (in the final chapter, Wranovics accuses Lost in Translation director Sofia Coppola of ripping off Chaplin's A King in New York), and lengthy asides. More seriously, Wranovics fails to present an illuminating argument about the two men's friendship, admitting, ""to what extent, if any, Agee's ideas served as an influence on Chaplin is impossible to say."" But while the novice historian's thesis could be sharper, there's no denying the cultural significance of his study.