I was struck, when I read this in The Spectator, by the following passage about Charlie Chaplin:
 
"He ordered 342 takes over a two-year period of a single shot in City Lights -- the blind flower-seller handing over a bunch of violets to the Little Tramp. Was this perfectionism? A manifestation of obsessive compulsive disorder? Or was he behaving like a simple power-crazed brute?"
 
The number 342, as we know, plays a mysterious role in Lolita: it is the house number in Lawn Street; the room number in the Enchanted Hunters hotel; and the number of "hotels, motels and tourist homes" Humbert "registered, if not actually stayed at" between July 5 and November 18, while trying to trace his persecutor (Quilty).
 
A "two-year period" is also significant in Lolita.
 
Could Nabokov have known about the repeated takes of the City Lights shot?
 
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In a message dated 22/04/2014 15:15:27 GMT Daylight Time, nabokv-l@HOLYCROSS.EDU writes:
Barrie Karp sends the following reference, spotted in The Spectator:

Charlie Chaplin was a suspicious and angry man. His hubris had no limits, nor his interest in young women. Did he inspire Nabokov’s Lolita?... more»

http://www.spectator.co.uk/books/9179261/charlie-chaplin-by-peter-ackroyd-review/



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