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      • Silent comedy is a genre of film that flourished in the early 20th century before spoken dialogue became the norm in cinema. It’s characterized by slapstick, mime, and visual humor, where performers like Charlie Chaplin and Buster Keaton became household names.
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  2. Dec 5, 2021 · Slapstick comedy is derived from intentional or accidental physical feats performed with props or the human body alone. Slapstick comedy techniques can result in violence, awe, pain, confusion, or general trouble, usually in a lighthearted context. The spectrum of slapstick comedy can be quite wide.

  3. Silent comedy is a style of film, related to but distinct from mime, invented to bring comedy into the medium of film in the silent film era (1900s–1920s) before a synchronized soundtrack which could include talking was technologically available for the majority of films.

  4. Silent comedy is a genre of film that flourished in the early 20th century before spoken dialogue became the norm in cinema. It’s characterized by slapstick, mime, and visual humor, where performers like Charlie Chaplin and Buster Keaton became household names.

  5. Silent film had slapstick comedies that included the films starring Buster Keaton, Charlie Chaplin, the Keystone Cops and Harold Lloyd. These comedians often laced their slapstick with social commentary while comedians such as Abbott and Costello, Laurel and Hardy and The Three Stooges did not contain these social messages.

  6. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › SlapstickSlapstick - Wikipedia

    • Origins
    • Early Uses
    • Fred Karno
    • 20th Century Fad
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    The name "slapstick" originates from the Italian batacchio or bataccio—called the "slap stick" in English—a club-like object composed of two wooden slats used in commedia dell'arte. When struck, the Batacchio produces a loud smacking noise, though it is only a little force that is transferred from the object to the person being struck. Actors may t...

    Slapstick comedy's history is measured in centuries. Shakespeare incorporated many chase scenes and beatings into his comedies, such as in his play The Comedy of Errors. In early 19th-century England, pantomime acquired its present form which includes slapstick comedy: its most famous performer, Joseph Grimaldi—the father of modern clowning—would p...

    British comedians who honed their skills at pantomime and music hall sketches include Charlie Chaplin, Stan Laurel, George Formby and Dan Leno. The influential English music hall comedian and theatre impresario Fred Karno developed a form of sketch comedy without dialogue in the 1890s, and Chaplin and Laurel were among the young comedians who worke...

    Use of the slapstick in public places was a fad in the early 20th century.[citation needed] During the 1911 Veiled Prophet Parade in St. Louis, according to the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, An editorial in the Asbury Park Press,New Jersey, said in 1914:

  7. slapstick, a type of physical comedy characterized by broad humour, absurd situations, and vigorous, usually violent action. The slapstick comic, more than a mere funnyman or buffoon, must often be an acrobat, a stunt performer, and something of a magician—a master of uninhibited action and perfect timing. Outrageous make-believe violence has ...

  8. In this dialogue-free slapstick comedy, film director Mel Funn (Mel Brooks) travels to the ailing Big Picture Studios to pitch his comeback film: the first feature-length silent movie in many...

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