A small, quiet man paid his admission fee and entered the Alhambra theater of Los Angeles where “A Woman of Paris” was 2 being shown to a crowded house. After he had stayed thru three performances an usher made his way to the quiet man’s side and suggested that he had stayed long enough on one spot. Then, and only then, was the identity of the persistent watcher discovered. It was none other than Charlie Chaplin himself —who had come to study the effects of his picture upon an average audience.
The Seattle Star, Seattle, WA, May 3, 1924