Caught in a Cabaret is a 1914 short comedy film written and directed by Mabel Normand and starring Normand and Charles Chaplin.[1]
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Caught in a Cabaret | |
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Directed by | Mabel Normand |
Written by | Mabel Normand |
Produced by | Mack Sennett |
Starring | Mabel Normand Charles Chaplin Harry McCoy Chester Conklin Edgar Kennedy Minta Durfee Phyllis Allen |
Cinematography | Frank D. Williams |
Distributed by | Keystone Studios |
Release date |
|
Running time | 30 minutes |
Country | United States |
Languages | Silent film English (Original titles) |
Chaplin plays a waiter who fakes being the Prime Minister of Greenland[2] to impress a girl. He then is invited to a garden party where he gets in trouble with the girl's jealous boyfriend. Mabel Normand wrote and directed comedies before Chaplin and mentored her young co-star.
The Moving Picture World's review said, "This is another two-reel comedy manufactured in Mack Sennett's comical factory out in Californy State [sic]. It caused so much laughter you couldn't hear what the actors was talkin'. Charles Chaplin was the leading fun maker."[3]
A reviewer for the New York Dramatic Mirror wrote, "Superlatives are dangerous epithets, especially when dealing with pictures. For that reason it is unwise to call this the funniest picture that has ever been produced, but it comes mighty close to it."[citation needed]
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