- published: 01 Oct 2013
- views: 519
Mack Swain (February 16, 1876 - August 25, 1935) was an American actor and vaudevillian, prolific throughout the 1910s, 1920s and 1930s.
Born Moroni Swain to Robert Henry Swain and Mary Ingeborg Jensen in Salt Lake City, Utah, he worked in vaudeville before starting in silent film at Keystone Studios under Mack Sennett. While with Keystone, he was teamed up with Chester Conklin to make a series of comedy films. With Swain as "Ambrose" and Conklin as the grand mustachioed "Walrus", they performed these roles in several films including "The Battle of Ambrose and Walrus" and "Love, Speed and Thrills," both made in 1915. Besides these comedies, the two appeared together in a variety of other films, twenty-six all told, and they also appeared separately and/or together in films starring Mabel Normand, Charles Chaplin, Roscoe Arbuckle and most of the rest of the roster of Keystone players.
He later took his Ambrose character with him to the now-obscure L-KO Kompany. Having already worked with Charles Chaplin at Keystone, Swain began working with Chaplin again at First National in 1921, appearing in The Idle Class, Pay Day and The Pilgrim. He is also remembered for his role as Big Jim McKay in the 1925 film The Gold Rush, for United Artists, written by and starring Chaplin.
[Hook: Lil' Wayne]
I Use To Tote a .38; I Tote That AK-47
In My Crack Days; In My Rap Days.
I Use To Tote A .38 Up In My Crack Days.
I Tote That AK-47 In My Rap Days [x2]
I Use To Tote a .38
I Tote That AK-47 In My Rap Days.
I Use To Tote a .38 Up In My crack days.
I Tote That Ak-47
[Verse 1: Lil' Wayne]
I'm Too Fly, I Can't Stay Up In My Bat Cave.
Hello, Say Goodbye When The Gat Wave.
Hold On To Your Surf Board When The Gat Wave.
Homie, You Can Be Deleted Like Backspace.
I'm Coming Threw Like A Fax Page.
I'm Just A Gorilla In A Unlatched Cage.
I Peel Off Like Black Tape.
Weed & Syrup, Good Combination Like A Crack Safe.
Uhmm, Real Nigga In The Building. Where The Cris At?
I Got Them Twins With Me, You Know, Click Clack.
I Got Them M's With Me, You Know, Big Stacks.
I Stay On The Right Side When That Bridge Crack.
Cash Money, Everything Understood.
Everybody Hop On A Lil Wayne That Could.
Haha, Hollygrove, That's My Hood.
Eagle Street Is Where I Stood.
Boy!
[Hook: Lil' Wayne]
I Use To Tote a .38; I Tote That AK-47
In My Crack Days; In My Rap Days.
I Use To Tote A .38 Up In My Crack Days.
I Tote That AK-47 In My Rap Days [x2]
I Use To Tote a .38
I Tote That AK-47 In My Rap Days.
I Use TO Tote a .38 Up In My crack days.
I Tote That Ak-47
[Verse 2: Mack Maine]
See When I Saw My First Murder When I Was Only 7.
4 Years After That, I Did My First 2-11.
A 2-11 That Turned To A 1-87.
The BLock Wad Dialing 9-11 For The 4-11.
We Left The 7-11, Lookin' Like 9-11.
They Skipped The Doctor And Ambulance And They Called The Reverend.
See That Was Then Homie, And This Is Now Breadren.
I'm This Close From Copin' The Porshe 9-11.
The 9-11, That's The Reason For My AR.
The M-14 Is For My Nigga JR.
See I DOn't Feel Too Many Rappers Cause' They Are.
Softer Than Girls In Cathloic School.
Yaw BOyz Rap Like Ya'll Went To Actin' School.
I Thank, My Beef, The Guns Show Em' Gratitude.
Young Money, Wether We're Travlin' Or Not, We Pack A Tool.
WHy N.W.A., Them Niggas With Attitudes.
[Hook: Lil' Wayne]
I Use To Tote a .38; I Tote That AK-47
In My Crack Days; In My Rap Days.
I Use To Tote A .38 Up In My Crack Days.
I Tote That AK-47 In My Rap Days [x2]
I Use To Tote a .38
I Tote That AK-47 In My Rap Days.
I Use TO Tote a .38 Up In My crack days.