If you ever do come anywhere near Harrisburg or Wilkes-Barre, please let us
know.
Carl
-----Original Message-----
From: Mark Twain Forum [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Alan Kitty
Sent: Sunday, December 4, 2016 7:18 PM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: Brief Movie Review
Carl - I was Princeton-based when I traveled thru 22 states, performing in
t= heaters, clubs, and schools. Originally from Harrisburg (where I started
doi= ng Twain in 1979). I'm now in Sarasota. I do a series of unique shows
here. O= ne is improvisational and interactive. One is a series of imaginary
intervie= ws and debates between MT and his contemporaries. A third is a
one-man show t= hat runs 45-90 minutes depending on the age of the audience.
I'm also workin= g on several adaptations for the stage.=20
And I have given numerous after dinner speeches for corporate audiences
link= ing Twain's perspective to the client topic. It isn't very scholarly
(althou= gh it is an accurate reflection of MT's view on the subject matter)
but it r= econnects people to Twain in ways they had never imagined.
I've done a dozen shows around PA and would do so again if I find the
impetu= s and funding.
Sent from my iPhone
> On Dec 4, 2016, at 5:26 PM, Carl J. Chimi <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
>=20
> Well, when I first saw Hal Holbrook as Mark Twain, in person as
>distinct from on TV) I was 19, and had already been reading anything I
>could find b=
y
> or about Mark Twain for over a decade. I sort of knew he was
> presenting a=
> Mark Twain much older than the lecturing Mark Twain ever was, but it
> didn'=
t
> matter. There was Mark Twain on stage, and I was so excited I almost
> crie=
d
> with happiness. And at 19 you couldn't make me cry in almost any
> other wa=
y.
> Holbrook entirely demanded and deserved the suspension of disbelief.
> Same=
> thing the other times I saw him (all in the 70s, I think).
>=20
> Where do you perform, Alan? I'd be very interested to attend one of
>your presentations. Ever anywhere near Pennsylvania?
>=20
> Carl
>=20
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Mark Twain Forum [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Alan
>Kitty
> Sent: Sunday, December 4, 2016 5:16 PM
> To: [log in to unmask]
> Subject: Re: Brief Movie Review
>=20
> Agree completely. Had I the chops in my 30s and 40s, I would have
>loved to=
> p=3D ortray him as he was when he did tour. I would encourage someone
> in t=
he
> next=3D generation to do just that - but it may take another 50 years
> aft=
er
> Hal han=3D gs up his white suit to dislodge the now firmly entrenched
> imag=
e of
> Twain he=3D has planted in the mind and eye of our generation.=3D20
>=20
> A new approach may be needed. Every time I travel, a number of young
>peopl=
e
> w=3D ho see me before a performance ask if I am Colonel Sanders.=3D20
>=20
> Sent from my iPhone
>=20
>> On Dec 4, 2016, at 4:45 PM, Carl J. Chimi <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
>> =3D20
>> ,,,,,,,,,,,Maybe it's just me, but I've always thought that Hal=20
>> Holbrook's=3D
>=20
>> Mark Twain, while one of the most wonderful stage creations of my=20
>> lifetime=3D
> ,
>> smacked of "fictional". (I leave out "uncomfortably
>> inappropriate"=20 becaus=3D
> e
>> I don't think that phrase remotely applies to Holbrook's presentation.
>> =3D20
>> But Holbrook has consistently presented a Mark Twain on stage who,=20
>> unless I=3D
>=20
>> am badly mistaken, is quite a bit older than any Mark Twain Samuel=20
>> Clemens=3D
>=20
>> ever presented on a stage for a paying audience. Holbrook
>> presents=20 the fiction that - once again, unless I am mistaken - the
>> much older,=20 white suited Mark Twain ever lectured for pay. I
>> don't think he did. =20=
>> I think h=3D
> e
>> was pretty much out of the lecture business years before he ever=20
>> adopted t=3D
> he
>> white suit and before he took on the appearance of age that
>> Holbrook=20 has always presented.=3D20
>> =3D20
>> Personally, I've always wished for a Mark Twain who is not the=20
>> white-haire=3D
> d
>> old philosopher, but rather the guy in his 30s and 40s who was=20
>> learning to=3D
>=20
>> enthrall and captivate audiences with his stories, manners, and
>> killer =20=
>> instincts. I've always found the young Mark Twain much more=20
>> interesting than the old Mark Twain.
>> =3D20
>> That's not a slam against Hal Holbrook, whose creation is a
>> masterful=20 piec=3D
> e
>> of theater I've enjoyed in person at least three times since 1972 or so.
>> And it's not a slam against Kilmer, whose Twain (from what I've
>> seen=20 of it=3D
>=20
>> on YouTube) probably needs to age and mature as an act of theater.
>> =20 But bo=3D
> th
>> are "fictional" in that they present a Mark Twain who never really was.
>> =3D20
>> But it's theater! So what am I talking about? It's like not=20
>> expecting an=3D
>=20
>> autobiography to be fictional.
>> =3D20
>> Regards,
>> =3D20
>> Carl=3D20
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: Mark Twain Forum [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Alan=20
>> Kitty
>> Sent: Sunday, December 4, 2016 3:17 PM
>> To: [log in to unmask]
>> Subject: Re: Brief Movie Review
>> =3D20
>> With due respect for your autobiography-based knowledge of
>> Holbrook,=20 which=3D
>=20
>> i=3D3D s inarguable, you are comparing different art forms. I do
>> not=20 make th=3D
> e
>> asser=3D3D tion based on an autobiography; rather from 50 years of
>> stage=20=
>> and=3D
>=20
>> on-camera e=3D3D xperience. I am also in agreement with the
>> assessment=20=
>> that Kilmer's less-tha=3D3D n a decade of experience as Twain does
>> not=20=
>> hold a can=3D
> dle
>> to Holbrook - and I=3D3D can only go back to his 1967 tour de force
>> -=20=
>> on st=3D
> age
>> and film. By then, th=3D3D e latter had already amassed a lengthy
>> stage=20=
>> reco=3D
> rd
>> as Twain (and others).=3D3D20=3D3D
>> =3D20
>> =3D20
>> I don't know Kilmer's stage credits. I do know that his Christian=20
>> Science pi=3D3D ece would be colored by his affiliation. I also
>> enjoyed=20=
>> Kilmer's var=3D
> ied
>> film=3D3D roles. ( I've watched Tombstone several times only because
>> of=20=
>> his=3D
> Doc
>> Holli=3D3D day. The rest is so bad from so many perspectives, It's=20
>> continuit=3D
> y is
>> so bad=3D3D , it's like finding Waldo.)
>> =3D20
>> Now I'm going out on a limb here by suggesting that Holbrook won't=20
>> live fore=3D3D ver, and Kilmer has said he wants to be the Twain of
>> his=20=
>> generatio=3D
> n.
>> He has a=3D3D long way to go, but he seems committed. I have had=20
>> similar thoughts about m=3D3D y own Twain work, as have
>> others.=3D3D20
>> =3D20
>> I think the important thing is that Twain's work continues to be=20
>> passed alon=3D3D g to new generations in as many ways as the world
>> will=20=
>> tolerate. E=3D
> ven
>> portra=3D3D yals of Twain as troubadour have a place - although
>> many=20 would consider that=3D3D an uncomfortably inappropriate
fictional one.
>> =3D20
>> Think of it as more work for scholars to sort out -- a twisted form
>> of=20=
>> job=3D
>=20
>> s=3D3D
>> ecurity.=3D3D20
>> =3D20
>> Sent from my iPhone
>> =3D20
>>> On Dec 4, 2016, at 1:33 PM, Clay Shannon <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
>>> =3D3D20
>>> I'm reading Holbrook's autobiography now; thus, I differ with
>>> that=3D20=20=
>>> asserti=3D3D
>> o=3D3D3D
>>> n, because Holbrook had years of stage experience before=20
>>> "becoming"=3D20 Mark T=3D3D
>> w=3D3D3D
>>> ain.
>>> If anything, Kilmer is a cub in comparison to Mr.
>>> H.=3D3D3DC2=3D3D3DA0-=20=
>>> B.=3D20=3D
>=20
>>> Clay Sh=3D3D
>> annon
>>> =3D3D20
>>> From: Alan Kitty <[log in to unmask]>
>>> To: [log in to unmask]
>>> Sent: Sunday, December 4, 2016 9:24 AM
>>> Subject: Re: Brief Movie Review
>>> =3D3D3D20
>>> ... or it is an early interpretation of Twain's reported slow=20
>>> drawl=3D20 delive=3D3D
>> r=3D3D3D
>>> y=3D3D3D3D
>>> .
>>> I submit that Holbrook might have had a similar interpretation
>>> in=3D20=20=
>>> 1954. IH=3D3D
>> e=3D3D3D
>>> M=3D3D3D3D
>>> AY NOT HAVE BEEN AS GOOD, since Kilmer's film experience when
>>> he=3D20=20=
>>> started d=3D3D
>> o=3D3D3D
>>> i=3D3D3D3D
>>> ng Twain was deep and Holbrook's was not AK Sent from my iPhone
>>> =3D3D20
>>>> On Dec 2, 2016, at 3:19 PM, Scott Holmes
>>>> <[log in to unmask]>=20 wrote:=3D
>=20
>>>> =3D3D3D3D20
>>>> For whatever it's worth, Kilmer was a great Doc Holliday, in
>>>> an=3D20=20=
>>>> otherwise ridiculous movie.=3D3D3DC2=3D3D3DA0 I've seen a couple
>>>> of=20 clips of=3D
> =3D20
>>>> Kilm=3D3D
>> er a=3D3D3D
>>> s
>>>> Twain and they all seemed to represent Twain as a drunkard.
>>> =3D3D20
>>> =3D3D20
>>> =3D3D3D20
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