Sunday, August 31, 2014

Two revamped playgrounds now open in Minnehaha Park

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New equipment was installed at both Minnehaha Park playgrounds, and they were officially opened on July 31. The Universal Accessible playground at the Wabun Picnic area was paid for, in part, by donations received by a volunteer group, Falls 4 All, a committee of People for Parks, who have been working to raise funds to enhance the accessibility of the Wabun playground since 2010. “It’s not just a handicapped playground. It’s about everyone playing together,” stated Peggy Halvorson of Falls 4 All. “We learn to accept each other when we play together.” While ADA standards call for paths and ramps wheelchairs can traverse, Universal Access playgrounds go further. They are designed so that children with disabilities can access at least 70% of the activities at the playground. According to the 2000 Census, 9.2 percent of American families raising children in 2000 were raising at least one child aged five to 17 with a disability. Over 60 years ago, Minnehaha’s Wabun park provided respite to travelers. Aware of that history, designers fashioned the new playground around an auto camp. (Photos by Tesha M. Christensen)
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The Katie and Ryan Bicek children, James, age 3, Claire, age 6, and Maisie, age 8, live near to the North Plateau Park. In renovating this park, planners sought to preserve the historic nature of the area. Instead of adding a large playground structure, there are smaller pieces scattered through the area, including these stone animals where the Longfellow Gardens Zoo was once. There are also freestanding slides, fulcrum see-saws, merry-go-rounds and a dome climber in the older play area, and balance beams, stepping pods and crawl tunnels are in the younger play area. Sand play includes diggers, a sand table and classic molded metal animal spring rockers. The swings and the climbing structure built by a WPA work crew in the 1940s remain. (Photo by Tesha M. Christensen)

Printed in the September 2014 edition of the Longfellow/Nokomis Messenger. 

Options abound for athletic fields, rec center, beaches, bathhouse and playgrounds at Nokomis-Hiawatha Regional Park


Residents review two plans during an open house; comments will be reviewed by the community advisory council


Project planner Adam Arvidson chats with a neighborhood resident during the open house held on Thursday, Aug. 14, 2014. Residents were able to give their input on the plan in a variety of ways, including rating what was most important to them. (Photo by Tesha M. Christensen)

by Tesha M. Christensen

Changes are coming to Lake Hiawatha and Nokomis parks, and residents got a chance to comment on the proposals during an open house on Thursday, Aug. 14, 2014.
How much of the shoreline should be natural versus turf? Where should a skate park be? How can bikers and walkers cross Cedar Ave. more safely?
Should the athletic fields be fashioned like a pinwheel with a restroom and concessions area in the center? What should be included in a recreation center expansion? Should a new bath house/event center be built with a restaurant inside?
Could Minnehaha creek be rerouted so that it no longer flows into Lake Hiawatha? How can the water quality be improved at both lakes?
These are some of the questions being addressed in the new 25-year master plan being created for the Nokomis-Hiawatha regional park area. Due to funding restrictions, Hiawatha Golf Course is not part of the plan.
The community advisory council will meet twice more to review the plan and make recommendations. These will then be forwarded to the Park Board for approval later this fall. Once that is done, it will go before the Met Council, which has helped fund the planning process.
Work on Triangle Park will take place in 2015, and some trail improvements will be done in 2016. Cost on these is $400,000. No timeline has been created for the rest of the proposals, and no funding has been designated for them. When the plan is complete, the components will be prioritized.

How natural do residents want the park to be? That’s one of the major questions being asked in this planning process. There are two options for the shoreland. The first is a campus style with a manicured lawn that has natural areas within it. This is what most of the city parks currently have. The second option is to have more of a natural area with turf cut in, more like how state parks are set up.
 (Photo by Tesha M. Christensen)

NATURAL AREAS VERSUS MANICURED LAWN
How natural do residents want the shoreline to be? That’s one of the main questions being asked as this plan is developed.
“When you look at the park, it suggests that managed turf isn’t what all the areas want to be,” pointed out Adam Arvidson, project manager. “Even when it isn’t flooding, there are areas that are vey tough to manage.”
There are two options for the shoreland. The first is a campus style with a manicured lawn that has natural areas within it. This is what most of the city parks currently have. The second option is to have more of a natural area with turf cut in, more like how state parks are set up.
Arvidson pointed out that the Park Board will also be soon be creating an Ecological Systems Plan that will look at the whole parks system.
More natural areas will lead to better water quality as the water will be treated before it enters the lakes. Right now, all the city’s stormwater runs directly into its lakes, rivers and streams, and most of it is untreated when it hits those bodies of water, Arvidson observed.
Water quality has been an issue that folks have brought up throughout the planning process.
There are currently some ponds on the south end of Lake Nokomis that help clean the water before it enters that lake. Also, rain gardens and natural plantings have been added in the past few years near the golf course at Lake Hiawatha.
Parks Commissioner Steffanie Musich pointed out that attitudes about natural versus manicured have been changing.
“They think of it as adding, not subtracting, to the park experience,” observed Musich.
Local resident Monica McNaughton isn’t against adding more natural areas, but she is concerned about how it is done. She pointed out that the current plan places manicured areas in the shade and natural areas in the sun. “I know the area on the south side of the lake is used for pick-up games such as kickball, soccer and frisbee,” she pointed out. “There needs to be space to run and play where there aren’t any trees.”
She isn’t confident that the Park Board can maintain natural areas well, and expressed concern about how the natural areas near the lagoon has been cared for.
If there is a switch to more natural areas within the park, it will be done gradually, said Arvidson. It will require training for staff members on how to care for the natural areas.
ATHLETIC FIELDS
There are two very different concepts that have been proposed for the athletic fields.
One would position four ball fields in a pinwheel formation with a concession stand and restrooms in the center. Another two ball fields would be to the south, partially overlapping with two soccer fields.
While that is more efficient, it would cut into the use of the fields for games like ultimate frisbee and rugby.
The second plan would have four overlapping ball fields with two soccer fields, another ball field to the south, and open space.
Both plans would add a new parking lot near the ballfields.
MAIN BEACH AREA
Should there be an event center at Lake Nokomis? One plan for the area replaces the existing bathhouse with a large event center, one that would have a restaurant, rental space and bathhouse space on the lower level and the event space on the upper level.
The second plan merely calls for renovating the existing space.
Both plans reconfigure the parking lot. One plan expands the beach, while the other carves out a space on the north side for a canoe and kayak launch.

Parks commissioner Steffanie Musich chats with Paul Forsline of City of Skate about the skate park in the 25-year park plan proposal. He favors placing it next to the recreation center versus near the bathhouse in order to take advantage of the Minneapolis skyline and Nokomis lake views. He pointed out that it is likely many photos and videos will be shot at this skate park. (Photo by Tesha M. Christensen)
SKATE PARK
A skate park is in both of the proposed options for the new master plan, but it is in two different locations. In one, space would be on the south side of the main beach area. In the other plan, it would occupy the space to the west of the recreation center.
In both, the space would be concrete rather than using the modular design of the past.
Paul Forsline of City Of Skate favors the area by the rec center. It offers nice views of both the downtown skyline and Nokomis Lake. “The skate park can be entertaining for the general public and not just skaters,” he said.
Forsline pointed out that skateboarding appeals to people who aren’t interested in organized sports. It doesn’t require coaches and paying for ice time. “It’s an equity sport,” he said.
RECREATION CENTER
Possible changes at the recreation center include expanded programming and a renovation that would create a double gym with a running track.
Other options are an outdoor performance space and an enhanced plaza.
The small beach on the east side will also be expanded, and restrooms added near the event space where the Monarch Festival is held each September. There are a few possible configurations for that event space.
CEDAR AVE. CROSSINGS
How pedestrians and bikers can cross Cedar Ave. more safely has been an area of concern throughout the planning process.
A long-term option is to add a tunnel for bikers and walkers under Cedar Ave. on the south side.
At the open house on Aug. 14, Minneapolis Public Works employee Don Elwood was also present to ask for input on how to improve the safety of the Cedar/Edgewater/Nokomis Parkway intersection. “Every solution has an impact, so it’s understanding what those are,” he observed.
Musich pointed out that there is a plan to add a biking trail along the north side of Minnehaha in order to accommodate the bicycle commuters. With that, the bicycle trail near the rec center would be modified so that the crossing is not right next to Minnehaha, but instead south near Lake Nokomis Parkway. Other changes being proposed would address bike/pedestrian conflicts on trails.
LAKE HIAWATHA
Plans are to develop a full biking and walking loop around the lake and the outskirts of the golf course. There will also be a seasonal trail that runs around the entire lake that will be open in the winter to walkers and skiers. The trail can’t be open in the summer due to safety concerns about golf balls, noted Arvidson. There will be gates on either side that will open in the winter.

Published in the September 2014 Longfellow/Nokomis Messenger.

Le Town Talk Diner to open in September

New owners to redefine French food by serving up everyday family recipes
 
By TESHA M. CHRISTENSEN
When the Town Talk Diner reopens as Le Town Talk Diner & Drinkery in September, it will redefine what French food is.
“We want people to be welcome here and not be scared because it’s French,” remarked owner Emilie Cellai Johnson who is opening the restaurant at 2707 E. Lake St. with her husband Ben.
“We want families with kids to come in. Couples on a date. Groups of friends,” said Emilie.
They will be serving up French comfort food, the sort that Emilie grew up eating in Marseille, France. There will be bouillabaisse, a fish soup with cod, mussel, shrimp, garlic and saffron. It’s a Marseille specialty.
You’ll also find steak haché a ground beef patty smothered in the sauce of your choice: Peppercorn sauce, caramelized shallot, creamy mushroom or Beurre maître d’hotel. It’s a popular dish at French cafes.
And the croque-monsieur a toasted sandwich with ham, Swiss cheese and béchamel sauce, is worth noting.
The menu of everyday foods from France includes breakfast, small plates, salads, entrees and desserts.
Julien Masson, a culinary school friend of Johnson’s from Marseille, has created a list of champagne cocktails as well as a roster of drinks built using French spirits. Groups of four or more will be able to order cocktails as a “cascade,” served in an absinthe fountain.
FRENCH MOTHER, ITALIAN GRANDMOTHER
Emilie grew up in a household that cooked really good food. Growing up in France, her mother cooked French items and her grandmother on her father’s side cooked Italian.
“My husband always says that when we go to France we eat food, talk about food or plan the next meal,” said Emilie. “We are passionate about food.”
She attended culinary school in Marseille and spent several years working in Paris at a restaurant at the top of the Eiffel Tower. “I had the best view of Paris every day,” Emilie noted.
A friend in Minnesota told her that the Hotel Sofitel was hiring, and a few months later she moved to Minnesota. “A year turned into 12,” said Emilie.
She and her husband live in St. Paul, just across the river with their 2-year-old daughter and dog.
Ben, who works for the Neighborhood Development Center, will keep his full-time job at the Midtown Global Market.
ART DECO GETS A TWIST
The Johnsons had been looking for a site for their new restaurant for two years. The Town Talk Diner space had everything they were looking for. It was the right square footage. There was already a kitchen.
The couple had frequented the diner before it closed three years ago, and loved the concept of craft cocktails and a casual food atmosphere. “It was very welcoming to everyone,” said Emilie. “It felt very comfortable.”
They plan to keep the diner counter as a bar, and are using the old diner chairs. They’re giving the Art Deco the old-world feel of a French cafe.
“We respect what was here, but we’re giving it a twist,” explained Emilie. “We’re not trying to recreate what was, but to create something new.”
They’ve installed a new hardwood floor using reclaimed wood in the dining room, and have added banquettes.
IT’S THE NEW EAT STREET
“All of our neighboring restaurants have been very supportive,” said Emilie. “They’ve made us feel very welcome.”
She’s excited to be on Lake St., pointing out how many different types of restaurants there are. “People are attracted to the area,” said Emilie.
“It’s the new Eat Street.”

Published in the September 2014 Longfellow/Nokomis Messenger. 

Friday, August 15, 2014

Verizon grant enables Hamline Elementary to offer one-on-one instruction using iPads


Over 400 iPads being used by grades 2-5

by Tesha M. Christensen

Using iPads in the classroom has enabled Hamline Elementary School teachers to provide personalized instruction to their students.

And it’s making a difference. Kids are more excited about learning, and teachers report that they are more engaged.
Hamline Elementary (formerly Hancock-Hamline University Collaborative Magnet School) has been able to incorporate iPads thanks to a $50,000 two-year grant from the Verizon Foundation and the International Society for Technology Education (ISTE).
This past year Hamline had over 400 iPads deployed in grades 2-5. “In an end-of-the-year survey students reported increased interest in school work when using the iPad and increased access to information,” pointed out Hamline Principal Craig Anderson. “Teachers reported increased student engagement and ability to meet individual needs with different levels of curriculum when personalized through the use of technology.
All classrooms used the iPads several times during the day.
HOW ARE THE IPADS USED?
Teachers use the mobile devices to present to students, as an independent activity during work time in reading and math, and as a research tool. With the iPad, a teacher can also get instant feedback on lessons, and assess student understanding, noted Anderson.
They record information, make videos for learning, and take photos.
Plus they can collaborate with students and teachers around the world.
They use apps that help reinforce math and reading skills. Apps that motivate and engage. Apps that allow students to create technology projects. They play games and take quizzes.
“With the iPads, I am empowered to individualize lessons more quickly and efficiently,” noted fifth grade teacher Diane Smith, who appreciates seeing results in real time. “It takes so much less time than searching through printed material to find activities appropriate for each student's level. Students have the ability to master skills at their current level and then continue to move higher. They are self-motivated to advance their skills. We use the iPads everyday, pretty much all day in some capacity.”
With the iPads, Smith has begun to front load her classes, which is also known as incorporating a flipped classroom. Students view their lessons at home in the evening and then practice in class the next day.
“They use apps that allow them to show and record their work for me,” noted Smith. “I create interactive lessons. They are able to choose topics to study on the iPads and then create a finished project.”
Last year, Hamline partnered with wonderopolis.com, a web site with multi-disciplinary content that purposefully aligns to Common Core State Standards (CCSS), the STEM Educational Quality Framework, and Bloom’s Digital Taxonomy. Through this partnership each student in grades 3-5 created a science fair virtual poster using gloogster.edu.
“Our students are making better and faster progress — it’s amazing,” Smith stated.
Smith watched one of her students, Shayd, dramatically increase her basic math skills over the course of the last school year by using an iPad. A shy student, Shayd has been more willing to take risks when she is working one-on-one with her iPad. She is also highly motivated to take on the next challenge.

Smith noted that the tutors from Hamline University tell the elementary students how they use technology in their college work. “The tutors help my students find information on the iPads during research projects,” said Smith. “They also show them tips that help them utilize the iPads more effectively. I feel my students know that they are learning to use this tool that will help throughout their educational career.”
FOCUS ON TEACHER TRAINING
The focus of the $50,000 grant is to help students develop the skills to support higher education and careers in science, technology, engineering and math (STEM). The grant provides Hamline staff with two years of on-site and virtual innovative training led by ISTE. The training is designed to prepare teachers to incorporate mobile technology into classroom learning with strategies that support STEM courses.
The Verizon Foundation launched the Verizon Innovative Learning School (VILS) program in 2012 to support 12 underserved STEM schools across the country in their goal to have their students STEM-ready for the future. According to the U.S. Department of Commerce, by 2018 there will be approximately 18 percent growth in careers that require education in STEM fields.
It was such a success that Verizon Foundation doubled the number of grant recipients to 24 schools in 2013, expanding their reach to more than 12,000 students.
“The focus of the Verizon Foundation grant is professional development for teachers implementing a one-to-one technology initiative,” pointed out Anderson.
The grant provided Hamline with the money to have a technology coach and access to a consultant from ISTE, as well as hourly stipends for teachers to collaborate and spend time learning with the tech coach.
Teachers also participated in a full-day virtual conference and attend many webinars. They were also able to attend the ISTE national conference.
“The goal for the professional development was to meet individual teacher needs to customize and personalize the experiences,” observed Anderson.
He added, “The professional development helped teachers to integrate technology into every subject during the school day.”
“I’m so excited to continue the virtual training sessions and learn more that I can share with my students,” Smith said.
WHAT DOES 2014 HOLD?
This next year, Hamline will focus on refining and sharing its learning with each other and the district, according to Anderson.
“SPPS is going to personalize learning for students by implementing a one-to-one environment over the next two years,” Anderson remarked. “I hope the great things we started in year one will be extended in year two -- giving kids the ability to work at their ‘just right’ level during most of the day.”
For more information about the Verizon Foundation’s VILS program, visit http://www.verizonfoundation.org/our-focus/.

Local resident writing book on Charlie Chaplin’s movie ‘The Kid’


Carrie Pomeroy planning trip to Italy to research at the Chaplin Archive for her first book for young adults

by Tesha M. Christensen

Midway-Como resident Carrie Pomeroy has loved Charlie Chaplin and other classic movies since she was a kid. In November 2014, she will spend a week learning more about his life when she visits the Chaplin Archive at the Cineteca di Bologna in Bologna, Italy.


She’s able to take the trip thanks to a Literature Travel and Study grant from the Jerome Foundation.
The information Pomeroy gleans from the archives will be used in the nonfiction book for young adult readers that she’s writing about the making of Charlie Chaplin’s 1921 silent comedy “The Kid.”
The archive is the largest collection of Chaplin-related materials in the world, and in many cases, it’s the only place to access key documents related to her story.  “I’m especially looking forward to digging into the daily production sheets, where studio secretaries recorded the nitty-gritty details of every single day of the film’s production,” said Pomeroy. “I’ll also be able to look at telegrams, hand-written letters, historic photographs and movie stills, and scrapbooks.  
“I anticipate gasping and getting goosebumps on a daily basis while I’m over there.”
Pomeroy has been to Italy only once before. In 1994, she took a backpacking trip with her friend Katrina Vandenberg, a respected local poet who now teaches at Hamline University. This time around she’ll be traveling alone, leaving behind her husband, 11-year-old son and 8-year-old daughter. “I’ll miss them terribly, but I think I’ll get more work done if I go by myself,” Pomeroy explained.
She is most looking forward to getting a clearer sense of the chronology of The Kid’s filming.
“At the archive, I’ll be able to see exactly what days certain key scenes were filmed and answer some questions that have really been bedeviling me,” Pomeroy observed. “I also look forward to being surprised and finding out things I never would have guessed about Chaplin. Many of the materials I’ll be looking at have only been made available to researchers very recently, so it’s incredibly exciting to be able to see them.”

WHY A BOOK ABOUT THE KID?
Two years ago, Pomeroy watched a documentary about the story behind The Kid. “I found out that Chaplin’s first child, a baby boy named Norman, died just a few weeks before Chaplin began work on The Kid. I was fascinated and wanted to know more,” said Pomeroy. “That sent me on a research journey that has lasted ever since.”
There have been many books written about Chaplin, but not very many for young people and none focusing primarily on The Kid, so she saw a gap on the bookshelf that she hoped she could fill.
“The film The Kid was very much inspired by Chaplin’s own childhood, so I think that’s part of what makes the story behind the film a great choice for young readers,” said Pomeroy.
The film co-starred a five-year-old boy named Jackie Coogan as Chaplin’s onscreen son, and Jackie and Chaplin developed a very close friendship during the filming that she explores in detail.  
“I think the idea of being a kid working and playing with one of the most famous clowns in the world is a really appealing one for young readers,” observed Pomeroy.
“Chaplin was a complex person who definitely had a dark side to his life and his personality, but I think ultimately the story I tell in this book is an inspiring one for young people. It shows Chaplin overcoming enormous obstacles and his own deep insecurities to make art that still inspires people and makes them laugh. My hope is that readers will recognize some of their own fears and aspirations in Chaplin.”
WRITING ASPIRATIONS SINCE AGE 8
Pomeroy has wanted to be a writer since she was eight years old, when her second-grade teacher noticed how much she loved to write and turned one of her stories into a book with a fabric-and-cardboard cover.
She studied writing as an undergrad at Southern Illinois University and earned an MFA in fiction at the University of Arkansas. Pomeroy currently writes a blog about local silent movie events for the Twin Cities Daily Planet online newspaper.
“I’ve published essays and short stories in literary magazines and anthologies and worked for several years on a more personal book about my family that I ended up shelving, so I really consider this my first book,” stated Pomeroy.
“For this book, I started out taking notes on index cards, just like I used to do in grade school,” observed Pomeroy. “I keep the cards organized by category in a couple of shoeboxes--it’s all very high-tech!”
Eventually, she realized that she could research endlessly and never find everything that’s out there, so she decided to get to work on writing a draft, which she began in January 2013. “I figured I knew the general outlines of the story and could fill in details and check facts later,” Pomeroy said.
She’s written several drafts since then, and is currently revising her fourth draft.
FASCINATING INTERVIEWS, VISITS & TOURS
Along the way she’s read books, old newspaper and magazine articles.
She’s also had the opportunity to interview David Totheroh, the grandson of Chaplin’s longtime cameraman Rollie Totheroh, and Diana Serra Cary, a child star in the 1920s who knew Jackie Coogan and his family. Pomeroy took a walking tour in Hollywood of filming locations for The Kid with silent-film location expert John Bengtson. One of the most moving experiences for her was visiting the grave of Chaplin’s son.
“My family also visited London last year, and I had a chance to see many of Chaplin’s childhood homes and other important sites in his formative years and talk to Chaplin experts in England,” said Pomeroy.
Throughout this whole process, Pomeroy has found it helpful to have other writers provide feedback on what she’s written.
“My critique partners are helping me bring the story to life with more sensory detail and closer attention to characterization, and they’re helping me make sure I have a clear central theme and purpose and don’t just ramble on about everything I’ve discovered about Chaplin--which I find all too easy to do!” Pomeroy said.
She isn’t yet sure when the book will be complete.
Pomeroy needs to hunt down photos to use for illustrations, and secure copyright permissions. She plans to send queries to agents within the next year, and then solicit a publisher.
BARGAIN-BASEMENT TRIP
Pomeroy was one of 117 who applied for a Literature and Travel Grant from the Jerome Foundation. Seventeen grants were awarded
In Italy, Pomeroy plans to rent a small apartment, which was cheaper than staying in a hotel, and to shop at local markets and cook in her rental apartment rather than eating out. There will be no need to rent a car, because she’ll take the train from the airport to central Bologna and then walk to the archive every day. 
In applying for the grant, Pomeroy said,  “I really pitched kind of a bargain-basement budget to make my application more attractive.” She received $2260 to pay for airfare, lodging, food, and other travel costs.
The Jerome Foundation is a non-profit founded by J. J. Hill’s grandson Jerome Hill, an accomplished artist and filmmaker in his own right. The Foundation has supported artists and arts organizations for 50 years in Minnesota and New York City.
Look in the Monitor later this year for a story on Pomeroy’s journey to Italy.

SIDEBARS
ABOUT THE STORY IN THE AUTHOR’S WORDS
In the summer of 1919, Charlie had hit a crossroads in his career and his personal life. At the age of 30, he was the most famous comedian in the world, but he felt very creatively stuck and worried that he might have forgotten how to be funny. He was also unhappily married to a 17-year-old actress named Mildred Harris who was expecting the couple’s first child. 
That summer, two life-changing events helped Chaplin break through his creative block. The first creative trigger was that Charlie met an amazing young vaudeville performer named Jackie Coogan. The second creative trigger was that Charlie’s son died only three days after he was born. That tragic loss helped inspire the story of Charlie’s Tramp adopting an abandoned baby boy and fighting fiercely to nurture and protect his son. He quickly got to work on a film that recreated many of the most formative moments of his own childhood.
My book recounts the childhood experiences that Charlie drew on as he made The Kid, and shows the many obstacles he and his cast and crew faced during the film’s production. Many so-called Hollywood experts thought the film could never work because it mixed dramatic, tear-jerking scenes with comedy; they figured audiences didn’t want to see Charlie’s Tramp in dramatic scenes and the film would flop. They were wrong--The Kid ended up being one of Chaplin’s biggest triumphs, and it made a huge star of Jackie Coogan.

What are 10 things you’ve discovered about Charlie Chaplin?
1. He was born not far from where the London Eye ferris wheel stands today.
2. From ages 9 to 12, he toured as a clog dancer with a troupe called the Eight Lancashire Lads.
3. He was left-handed.
4. He played the violin and piano and helped compose musical scores for many of his films but never learned to read music.
5. Many of the original buildings at his studio in Hollywood still stand today, and his studio is now the headquarters for the Muppets. A big statue of Kermit the Frog dressed up as the Tramp stands at the front gate.
6. His nephew Spencer Dryden was the drummer in the San Francisco rock band Jefferson Airplane.
7. His mother Hannah Chaplin is buried in the Hollywood Forever Cemetery along with Buster Keaton, Lucille Ball, and Stan Laurel.
8. He once invited his cameraman Rollie Totheroh to kick him in the rear after Charlie had acted like a jerk to Rollie. Rollie took Charlie up on the offer.
9. His granddaughter Oona Chaplin appeared on the TV series Game of Thrones from 2012 to 2013. She is named after Chaplin’s fourth wife Oona.
10. With his fellow stars Mary Pickford, Douglas Fairbanks, and director D. W. Griffith, Charlie helped found United Artists, the first and still the only movie distribution company ever to be run by actor-directors.