_Mark Twain's Notebooks & Journals, Vol. 3_ contains numerous entries related to Gillette. In 1890 when Twain was being sued by Ed House over dramatization rights to _Prince and the Pauper_, Twain gave credit to Will Gillette for coming up with the idea of having one actress/actor play both roles. In a newspaper interview reprinted in the NYT on Jan. 31, 1890, Twain is quoted: "I tried to get Mr. Gillette to dramatize the book for me, giving him full permission to do so. Mr. Gillette entertained this proposition in 1883, and went so far as to draft the plot for the play, making liberal alterations of the text of the book. Mr. Gillette has never retired from the undertaking, and if an undertaking of that kind can remain in force forever, then it is Mr. Gillette that has a claim upon me, and not Mr. House. ...Somewhere between 1883 and 1888 I dramatized the book myself, but was assured by competent authorities that neither the living nor the dead could act the play as I had planned it." Gillette's relationship to the lawsuit is also discussed in _N&J, 3_. Barb