Henry Bergman (February 23, 1868 – October 22, 1946) was an American actor of stage and film, known for his long association with Charlie Chaplin. Born in San Francisco, California, he acted in live theater, appearing in Henrietta in 1888 at the Hollis Street Theater in Boston and in the touring production of The Senator in 1892 and 1893. He made his Broadway debut in 1899. He made his first film appearance was with The L-KO Kompany in 1914 at the age of forty-six. In 1916, Bergman started working with Charlie Chaplin, beginning with The Pawnshop. For the rest of his career, Bergman remained as a character actor for Chaplin and worked as a studio assistant, including Assistant Director. He played in many Chaplin shorts and later features, including The Immigrant, The Gold Rush and The Circus. Bergman's last on-screen appearance was in Modern Times as a restaurant manager, and his final off-screen contribution was for The Great Dictator in 1940. Chaplin helped Bergman finance a restau...
A Woman of Paris: A Drama of Fate
1923
The Charlie Chaplin Festival
1941
The Kid
1921
City Lights
1931
The Pilgrim
1923
Modern Times
1936
The Immigrant
1917
The Rink
1916
Kreutzer Sonata
1915
The Gold Rush
1925
Easy Street
1917
Behind the Screen
1916
The Pawnshop
1916
The Count
1916
The Circus
1928
The Vagabond
1916
A Dog's Life
1918
The Adventurer
1917
Birth of the Tramp
2013
Shoulder Arms
1918
Pay Day
1922
Charlie Chaplin, The Genius of Liberty
2020
The Chaplin Revue
1959
Sunnyside
1919
The Cure
1917
The Floorwalker
1916
The Idle Class
1921
Chaplin's Goliath
1996
The Bond
1918
The Professor
1919
100% American
1918
The Melting Pot
1915
The Black Stork
1917
There She Goes
1913