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Comic tramp’s a right Charlie

- Does the comic tramp pre-date Charlie Chaplin?

QUESTION

Until the 1870s, the word tramp was an English verb referring to a long walk or march. in the wake of the Panic of 1873 — a financial crisis that triggered an economic depression in Europe and north America that lasted until the late 1870s — it was used to describe unemployed men travelling across the U.S.

tramps featured in variety and vaudeville shows, at first with negative connotatio­ns. they were depicted as drunk, jobless, violent and unable to control their bodies. But soon they took on a heroic or sentimenta­l aspect.

Manchester-born John Wild is thought to be the first comic tramp. He emigrated to the U.S. where he made his name as a performer in minstrel shows in the 1860s before moving into variety.

He was a big draw at the theatre Comique, new York, starring in sketches written by ned Harrigan, one half of a popular comic duo with tony Hart.

Wild starred in three influentia­l sketches: the terrible Example (1874) and Down Broadway (1875) written by Harrigan, and the self-penned One, two, three (1874).

newspapers cheered his ‘marvellous sketch of the bummer, whom we now call a tramp’.

After his death, the new York Dramatic Mirror explained: ‘in the terrible Example he used to convulse audiences by his comicaliti­es as a reckless tramp...Wild’s early tramp impersonat­ions formed the model on which many subsequent characteri­sations of that type were founded in vaudeville and farce comedy.’

He was followed by more complex and sympatheti­c figures, such as lew Bloom and nat M. Wills.

Bloom started out as a circus clown, pugilist and actor. in 1888, he played a

tramp in a play called the Red Spider. His portrayal was so popular that he created a vaudeville act around it which he performed for decades. His Society tramp was a taciturn philosophe­r who was put upon by the world.

nat M.Wills was the most popular U.S. stage tramp at the turn of the 20th century. He was a debonair man whose alter ego, the Happy tramp, was a dishevelle­d, toothless, cigar-smoking rogue. He released some of the first comedy records.

Another popular act was the tramp juggler. Jim Harrigan was a struggling juggler who one day arrived at a show without his stage outfit. He borrowed a hotch potch of clothes from other performers and became an instant hit.

His routine inspired a young William Claude Dukenfield to adopt a similar scruffy beard and shabby tuxedo. He went into vaudeville as a genteel tramp juggler in 1898, using the name W. C. Fields, and went on to become one of America’s greatest comedians.

Charlie Chaplin was building upon a long tradition when he donned his derby (bowler) hat, affixed his toothbrush moustache and stepped into his impossibly large shoes at the Keystone Film Company in 1914.

His first outing as the tramp was in Mabel’s Strange Predicamen­t though Kid Auto Races At Venice, his third film, was the first to be released.

Justine Holden, Bristol.

QUESTION Are Finnish babies given a government issue cot?

Since 1938, expectant Finnish mothers have been given a maternity package of baby grows, a sleeping bag, outdoor wear, Bathing products, nappies and a cardboard box with a small mattress. they have a choice between taking the box or a grant of £144. Most opt for the package because it’s worth more.

the boxes were originally provided to just low-income mothers, but were made universal in 1949. the idea is that no matter what their social background, all children get an equal start in life.

in the 1930s, Finland was a poor country and infant mortality was high — 65 out of 1,000 babies died. it was common for babies to sleep in the same bed as their parents and the boxes were designed to discourage this dangerous practice.

the boxes have been credited with a dramatic cut in infant mortality to two per 1,000 today. However, this is also due to the introducti­on of pre-natal care for all women in the 1940s, followed in the 1960s by national health insurance and a central hospital network.

Celia Grant, Stamford Bridge, E. Yorks.

QUESTION Why does it take three years to get a degree in Britain and four in the U.S.?

in tHE U.S., the first two years of college are devoted to general education. implemente­d by Harvard and other ivy league colleges after World War ii, this was designed to make up for deficienci­es and variation in high school education across the country.

in the U.S., there is fractured authority over schools due to local, state and national interests and regulation.

its college system has retained general education as its baseline. the specialise­d knowledge of the major (core specialisa­tion), sometimes combined with a minor, constitute­s the rest of the curriculum.

Students in England and Wales are expected to be at a higher level at matriculat­ion because A-levels are more rigorous than the last two years of high school. this is because of subject specialisa­tion and the fact 25 per cent of students leave school at 16.

An undergradu­ate honours degree in Scotland takes four years. this is in part because 16 to 18-year-olds usually take five Highers rather than three A-levels. Scottish universiti­es also allow you to try a range of subjects before specialisi­ng.

Nathan Yardley, Little Aston, Staffs.

IS THERE a question to which you want to know the answer? Or do you know the answer to a question here? Write to: Charles Legge, Answers To Correspond­ents, Daily Mail, 2 Derry Street, London W8 5TT; or email charles.legge@dailymail.co.uk. A selection is published, but we’re unable to enter into individual correspond­ence.

 ?? ?? Little Tramp: Charlie Chaplin
Little Tramp: Charlie Chaplin

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