Limelight

The masterpiece of laughter and tears from the master of comedy!

7.9
19522h 17m

A fading music hall comedian tries to help a despondent ballet dancer learn to walk and to again feel confident about life.

Production

Logo for United Artists

Available For Free On

Logo for Kanopy
Logo for Plex
Logo for Plex Channel

Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: Limelight (1952) ORIGINAL TRAILER

Limelight (1952) ORIGINAL TRAILER

Thumbnail for video: Claire Bloom on Charlie Chaplin

Claire Bloom on Charlie Chaplin

Thumbnail for video: Three Reasons: Limelight

Three Reasons: Limelight

Thumbnail for video: Limelight and Cabaret Win Music Awards: 1973 Oscars

Limelight and Cabaret Win Music Awards: 1973 Oscars

Cast

Photo of Claire Bloom

Claire Bloom

Thereza 'Terry' Ambrose

Photo of Buster Keaton

Buster Keaton

Calvero's Partner

Photo of Norman Lloyd

Norman Lloyd

Bodalink

Photo of Andre Eglevsky

Andre Eglevsky

Dancer - Harlequin

Photo of Melissa Hayden

Melissa Hayden

Dancer - Columbine

Photo of Marjorie Bennett

Marjorie Bennett

Mrs. Sybil Alsop

Photo of Wheeler Dryden

Wheeler Dryden

Thereza's Doctor

Photo of Barry Bernard

Barry Bernard

John Redfern

Photo of Leonard Mudie

Leonard Mudie

Dr. Blake - Calvero's Doctor

Photo of Loyal Underwood

Loyal Underwood

Street Musician

Photo of Harry 'Snub' Pollard

Harry 'Snub' Pollard

Street Musician

Photo of Charles Chaplin, Jr.

Charles Chaplin, Jr.

Clown (uncredited)

Photo of Geraldine Chaplin

Geraldine Chaplin

Little Girl on Steps (uncredited)

Photo of Josephine Chaplin

Josephine Chaplin

Child on Steps (uncredited)

Photo of Michael Chaplin

Michael Chaplin

Child on Steps (uncredited)

Photo of Oona O'Neill Chaplin

Oona O'Neill Chaplin

Extra (uncredited)

Photo of Harry Crocker

Harry Crocker

Music Hall Patron (uncredited)

More Like This

Reviews

B

barrymost

10/10

Chaplin's masterpiece about the bittersweet romance between an aging, washed-up comedienne and the suicidal ballet dancer he rescues and takes under his wing is one of the greatest dramas I have ever seen. It's a marvelous turn by Chaplin, who also directed, wrote the story and composed the score. Claire Bloom is simply wonderful as Chaplin's despondent lover. Also notable is the singular teaming of the two Silent Era greats, Chaplin and Buster Keaton, who appears late in the film. The striking backstage story just gets better and better as it goes on, and every moment of the film is utterly worth it. When it comes to its heartbreaking crescendo of love, comedy, drama and one last give-it-your-all chance to shine in the spotlight, only the dourest of viewers could fail to shed a tear.

You've reached the end.