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Mark Twain Forum <[log in to unmask]>
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Kevin Mac Donnell <[log in to unmask]>
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Tue, 29 Nov 2011 19:05:19 -0600
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This question comes up from time to time...

Twain's voice was recorded on several occasions, but I've never been able to 
track any of them down, and not for lack of trying. I know where one of them 
was until WW2, but not since. The recordings include one speech, his 
dictations for AC, some routine dictations to a secretary, a brief 
conversation with an opera singer, a recording by a guy who said he and 
another fellow were sent to record his voice, and probably a recording by 
Edison when his film crew visited Stormfield. The Edison Labs burned in 
1913.

I've looked for them in all the right places. A few years ago, while 
exploring the basement of Stormfield (which is the only original part of the 
structure that remains) I saw black voids in the crawl spaces beyond some 
old walls and if I'd had a flashlight I'd have gone crawling after wax 
cylinders that escaped the fire.

While looking for recordings of Twain I've stumbled across original 
recordings of Jack London and O. Henry. The London recording was a badly 
damaged wax cylinder that could not be played. I also discovered that both 
Holmes and Whittier recorded their voices in a phonograph shop fronting the 
Boston Common (but they don't survive). Better known are recordings by Walt 
Whitman, Tennyson, etc.

NB: The recording of the jumping frog story by William Gillette is often 
mistaken for an original Twain recording. Gillette gave that performance 
many times and I know of two versions, with slightly different texts in the 
story itself. Gillette's imitation is no doubt a good one-- on June 5, 1877 
he impersonated Twain in Twain's presence and was praised by Twain.

NMB: So, I catch any performance by Hal Holbrook that I can.

Kevin
@
Mac Donnell Rare Books
9307 Glenlake Drive
Austin TX 78730
512-345-4139
Member: ABAA, ILAB
*************************
You may browse our books at
www.macdonnellrarebooks.com

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Harris, Susan Kumin" <[log in to unmask]>
To: <[log in to unmask]>
Sent: Tuesday, November 29, 2011 5:42 PM
Subject: Twain Recording?


Today a colleague asked me if there were any extant recordings of Twain's v=
oice, and I realized that I have a memory of someone talking about an Ediso=
n recording--but also that it may have been destroyed.  Can someone set me =
straight on this?



Thank you!  --susan harris



Susan K. Harris

Hall Professor of American Literature

University of Kansas

Author of God's Arbiters: Americans and the Philippines, 1898-1902



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