Her words changed the world.

Nook Farm Book Talk - Harold: The Boy Who Became Mark Twain

Nook Farm Book Talk - Harold: The Boy Who Became Mark Twain by Hal Holbrook

Thursday, July 12, At the Mark Twain House Museum Center

5:00 PM Reception; 5:30-6:30 PM Book Discussion


book cover

Nook Farm Book Talks, a collaboration between The Mark Twain House & Museum and the Harriet Beecher Stowe Center, continues with a discussion of actor Hal Holbrook's autobiography.
 
Harold is Holbrook’s affecting memoir of growing up behind disguises, and his lifelong search for himself. Abandoned by his mother and father when he was two, Holbrook and his two sisters each commenced their separate journeys of survival. Raised by his powerful grandfather until his death when Holbrook was twelve, Holbrook spent his childhood at boarding schools, visiting his father in an insane asylum, and hoping his mother would suddenly surface in Hollywood. As the Second World War engulfed Europe, Holbrook began acting almost by accident.

Thereafter, through war, marriage, and the work of honing his craft, his fear of insanity and his fearlessness in the face of risk were channeled into his discovery that the riskiest path of all—success as an actor—would be his birthright. The climb up that tough, tough mountain was going to be a lonely one. And how he achieved it—the cost to his wife and children and to his own conscience—is the dark side of his eventual fame from performing the man his career would forever be most closely associated with, the iconic Mark Twain.
 
Made possible by the Connecticut Humanities Council, the Greater Hartford Arts Council and the Connecticut Commission on Culture and Tourism.


FREE event!

To register, call (860) 522-9258 ext. 317