Arianne, The PBS angle is a good one, although the request probably would need to come from a station with some special Twain interest. Leading candidates would be a station in a city or state that's home to a Twain research center: say, KQED in San Francisco, Connecticut Public Television (which runs WEDH in Hartford) and (yes, Hal) KCET in St. Louis. Not every station in the Public Broadcast Service system produces much or acquires much in the way of original programming, but these three have and do. PBS isn't a network in the true sense. Its structure is somewhat byzantine, with power wielded by the national offices in Washington, D.C., the heavyweight stations (WNET in New York, WGBH in Boston and WETA in Washington being three of the heaviest) and those corporate sponsors. So this kind of effort works best when it starts at a local level, driven by some compelling local interest. Then, if and when it works there, it's offered to the entire PBS system. Another way to approach this is through a university that's affiliated in some way, perhaps on a consortium basis, with a PBS station. Documentaries developed at a university, for instance, often find an initial home at a PBS station affiliated with the university. Just thinking out loud here, but, if KCET ever plans to rerun the Ken Burns documentary on Twain, this would make a dandy acquisition for them. . . favorite son of Missouri and all. . . with a little original introductory material on either side. . . "and now, ladies and gentlemen, your host for the evening, Hal Bush." Or it would be a good local effort around the time each year that PBS airs the awarding of the Mark Twain Prize. I don't know how many conferences are in my future (I'm certainly planning on attending the 2009 Elmira bash), but, wherever I go, it's a pretty safe bet that a copy of "The Shape of the River" will go with me. I may have even left behind a copy of it somewhere in Elmira (clumsy of me), where I might have been found by the good people at the Center for Mark Twain Studies. And it might be available there for screening by Twain scholars, researchers and academics. It's possible. And, Hal, I hate to shoot down anyone's dream, but Holbrook has turned down every effort by every producer to draft him into a Mark Twain film or television drama (including "The Shape of the River"). He always wants to be responsible for the word choices he makes as Twain, and he'd surrender that power to a producer or screenwriter if he signed on to play Twain in someone else's concept. You can be sure that behind any depiction of Twain on a movie or TV screen is a script with Hal's fingerprints on it. As Jason Robards said when he played Twain in the Disney Channel's "Mark Twain and Me": "I'm glad Hal has that rule. He has made a lot of work for the rest of us." Then again, maybe he'd make an exception for Horton Foote and for this play. So, OK, go ahead and fire up the dream again. Arianne wrote: > Hal and Mark, I saw Hal Holbrook back in the 60s in SF. Pondering that > video in the > CBS archives, I wondered if PBS could talk them into letting it go. Until > Hal' > s production comes to pass, maye we could look forward to Mark bringing it > to other > conferences where we could see it. > > Hoping, > Arianne Laidlaw > > On Thu, Mar 27, 2008 at 12:17 PM, Hal Bush <[log in to unmask]> wrote: > > >> One dream I have is to help put together a feature film of SHAPE OF THE >> RIVER, with Holbrook as the lead. Get a big-time director, and since this >> is all just a dream anyway, I would of course handle the revision of the >> screenplay, using Foote's original (fantasy time). >> >> I just saw INTO THE WILD the other day and was mesmerized by Holbrook's >> performance, which was a highlight of this haunting film. >> >> Any big-time Hollywood honchos out there listening?? >> >> >> >> Dr. Harold K. Bush, Jr., Associate Professor >> Dept. of English >> Saint Louis University >> St. Louis, MO 63108 >> [log in to unmask] >> 314-977-3616 (w); 314-771-6795 (h) 314-495-4094 (cell) >> <www.slu.edu/colleges/AS/ENG/faculty/hbush.html> >> >> Memorable Quote Until Further Notice: >> >> "Educating is always a vocation rooted in hopefulness." >> >> -- bell hooks >> >> > >