The Claymation Adventures of Mark Twain is, I agree a treat, and it is still available in VHS at Amazon: See http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/6301505638/qid=1079108038/sr=8-3/ref=sr_8_xs_ap_i3_xgl27/102-5619358-0515332?v=glance&s=video&n=507846 For that, and many of the other extraordinary things that Will Vinton studios did, I'm holding out for the DVD (closed Mondays, Mountain Music, the Little Prince, etc), and they haven't been at all cooperative so far. However you classify Gray, he was good at what he did, and I, for one, will miss him. Terry Terry Ballard, Automation Librarian Quinnipiac University, Bernhard Library 275 Mt. Carmel Ave. Hamden, CT, 06518 203-582-8945 FAX:203-582-3451 http://faculty.quinnipiac.edu/libraries/tballard "Humor is too important a matter to be left in the hands of a bunch of clowns." -----Original Message----- From: Mark Twain Forum [mailto:[log in to unmask]]On Behalf Of [log in to unmask] Sent: Friday, March 12, 2004 10:53 AM To: [log in to unmask] Subject: Re: TWAIN-L Digest - 29 Feb 2004 to 7 Mar 2004 (#2004-9) Fellow Twainiacs -- The comparisons between Spalding Gray and Sam are a bit off kilter. I met Gray several times during the course of my peripatetic career, and we had wonderful exchanges. There is no question he was brilliant, ferociously articulate yet somehow not completely connected to his many parts and selves. Then again, most writers of any importance aren't. Also, Sam created and sustained a persona distinct from himself (anyone who wants backup on that should check out the Claymation film "The Adventures of Mark Twain," which may be the most dead-on account ever to address the Sam/Mark dichotomy. It was marketed as a kids' film and sank; any help in locating the video would be deeply appreciated), which Spalding did not. Sam was a reporter, an observer; what Spalding saw triggered stuff inside him. While not exactly a narcissist, he owes no debt to Sam. Yours in Twain, Kathy O'Connell Record-Journal Meriden, Conn. [log in to unmask]