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"Wonderful
work"
―
Harper's Magazine
"Mark Twain is America’s
beloved author, wit, humorist, curmudgeon,
satirist, and lecturer. Ken Richters’
interpretation is masterful.”
― Washington Magazine
“Ken Richters is a
fine actor with a remarkable vocal range. He is
comfortable as Twain and has him down to the
finest detail. His gestures, facial expressions,
and timing are impeccable.”
― Worcester Sunday
Telegram
“Mark Twain is
without question alive and well, and traveling
the world with Ken Richters.’’
― Los Angeles Times
“Richters could do
no wrong during his two hour performance
last night. The audience laughed until
they cried and rewarded him with a thunderous
ovation.”
― Bozeman Daily Chronicle
“He is a wild,
wonderful, witty old man ... Ken Richters as
‘Mark Twain On Tour’ is a timeless brand of
American humor.”
― New Haven Register
“He brings America’s
most celebrated humorist out of the pages of
books and into the flesh once more.”
― NBC Today Show
“The metamorphosis
from Ken Richters to the great author Mark Twain
takes nearly three hours. Behold the
transformation!”
― San Diego Tribune
San
Francisco Chronicle
‘On Tour’ captures Twain’s spirit
by Pat Donahue
As his readers know, Mark Twain is wonderful
company. He is wise, witty and unrestrained in
his criticism of American life, manners and
morals. It seems that little of what went on in
the 19th and 20th centuries escaped his keen
eye, sharp wit and swift pen.
His observations — many of which found their way
into short stories and tall tales — became grist
for the humor mill he pumped on the lecture
circuit in his later years. Now, [more than] a
century later, these observations are being
repeated, and his readers are being treated to
another Mark Twain.
Offering a glimpse of the “oral” Mark Twain is
actor Ken Richters, who spent three years
researching the life and works of America’s
greatest humorist, Samuel Langhorne Clemens,
before launching “Mark Twain On Tour.” Friday
night’s one night stand at the University of
California Berkeley was a sell out, and comes
near the end of Richters’ own successful tour.
Richters, who has been featured on several
television series, shuffles on stage wearing a
white linen suit and carrying a cup of coffee
and today’s newspaper. A white wig, glass of
whiskey, cigar and three hours of make-up
application complete the characterization of
Twain.
But it’s in the words that we find the real man
even when the words aren’t really his, but only
predicated on what Mark Twain probably would
have said if he were here now.
“God knows God put a lot of idiots in this
world,” he told the audience. Hesitating a
moment, he explained, “Just look at the San
Francisco school board.”
Part of the joy — once you get over the
discomfort - of Richters’ performance — is that
he intersperses Twain’s observations and
criticisms of the past with his own of the
present — usually at the expense of the
audience.
“I wouldn’t tell you fine people of Berkeley
that you’re living at the end of the world,’ he
said. “But you can SEE the end of the world from
Berkeley!”
“I wouldn’t wrap dead fish in the damn thing,”
he said, holding a copy of the San Francisco
Examiner. “Why offend a dead fish?”
Most of the joy, however, comes from Twain’s own
words: his reminiscing about growing up in
Missouri, living on the Mississippi and working
and making friends in the California Gold Rush
days.
Consider his philosophy
“Do everything in this world once,” he says.
“Twice, if they don’t catch you. The worst that
can happen is you’ll go to hell.” After
irreverently describing those on their way to
heaven, he adds, ‘Down there, they’re having a
party.”
“I don’t have anything against ugly people,” he
says, adding after moments of hesitation. “As
long as they don’t touch me, that’s all.”
As Twain, Richters makes immediate contact with
his audience, looking directly into their faces,
looking for someone to talk to. As he spins
yarns, pokes fun at politicians and generally
points out the failings of the human condition,
Mark Twain comes to life.
By the end of the performance, we know Mark
Twain more intimately and understand more fully
the man who loved to point out the shortcomings
of others while caring deeply for them. In “The
War Prayer” he pleaded with the audience to keep
a sense of humor about themselves, or we’ll have
war.
As Twain, Richters explains the choice of
material for the show, a choice that excluded
two of his most notable characters. Tom Sawyer
and Huckleberry Finn, “I wanted you to laugh —
mostly at yourselves and me.”
Worcester Gazette
Mark Twain on Tour is a hit
By Frank E. Magiera
Few American literary personalities have captured and held our
interest to the extent that Mark Twain has.
He is an indisputable American with southern roots and northern
temperament, the adventure of the West under his belt and the
sensibilities of the East in his heart, a man of peculiar
cynicism with a surefire sense of irony, penetrating wit and
certainly enduring charm.
This is the image of Mark Twain that actor Ken Richters
presented last night at Mechanics Hall during his one-man
production of “Mark Twain On Tour.”
Richters, a young, dark-haired man, undergoes a remarkable
transformation for the show. He appears as the crusty
gray-haired author in his advanced years. The white linen suit,
cigar and whiskey, of course, are standard props for the
characterization.
Richters shuffles across the stage, leans on a podium and
relaxes in a chair, all the while speaking, spinning yarns,
dropping Mark Twain’s astute observations upon the audience like
pebbles in a pond and waiting for ripples of laughter to spread
across the hall.
He has a vast repertoire of material from which to chose. Last
night his selections included bits about his attempts to give up
cigars and other bad habits, the idea being that people must
cultivate bad habits in their youth in order to have something
to give up later to prolong their lives; his experiences as a
Board member of a Hartford insurance company; the spare uncle
that is kept around the house for holidays; his interview with a
local newspaper reporter, and his “crippling of the accordion.”
And the frequently preempted tale of “Grandfather’s Old Ram.”
The certain testament to Mark Twain’s appeal and skill is the
morose and cynical subjects on which his humor is focused.
Imagine sparking sidesplitting laughter with topics like these:
He encourages an anarchist friend to blow his brains out with a
revolver. He assists a client of his insurance company to
cripple himself and collect on a policy; he informs a woman that
she has suddenly been widowed by delivering to her a carpet with
the remains of her husband woven into it, a result of an
industrial accident; he even gets laughs by dropping his cigar
and spilling his booze over the stage. And he demonstrates a
calculated dislike for teachers, politicians and journalists.
As in the case with most astute observers of the human
situation, Mark Twain’s brilliance in illustrating human faults
and foibles in attributable to the fact that he possessed many
of them himself.
Vilifying Humanity
The man who made a career of vilifying humanity for its lack of
concern and foolishness was himself inconsiderate of others and
careless in his own relationships.
It is to Richters’ credit that a subtle sense of that comes
through in his performance. His Mark Twain is a man who
acknowledges and accepts his own shortcomings but
characteristically chooses to poke fun at those of others.
Another aspect of Twain’s later years was his tendency to wax
serious from time to time. This came through nicely as Richters
ended his performance with “The War Prayer”, Twain’s rambling
but impassioned plea for humans to resist the temptations of
war.
Another significant aspect of this show is that the real Mark
Twain appeared more than a century ago at Mechanics Hall,
probably much as Richters did last night. Again Richters took
note of that fact, working in several references to his earlier
visit to the hall.
Richters’ performance, which unfortunately was a one-night
stand, made us wish he will return again.
Houston Chronicle
Richters brings life back to Mark Twain
By Shari Fey
Mark Twain stood on an almost bare
stage Thursday night and shared his wisdom with an appreciative
audience.
Episodic television actor Ken Richters wore a white suit, a wig
and held a gold pocket watch to become the legendary author for
an excited audience at the Houston International Festival.
Richters was set up well for “Mark Twain On Tour.” On stage he
had a chair, cigar resting on a nearby table, a podium and an
intelligent audience who knew when to laugh and when to pause
for thought during his performance.
In a strong but aging voice, Twain via Richters told the crowd
how to live life to the fullest.
Among many things, Twain talked about God, cigars, the proper
use of commas, his home in Missouri and old age.
Richters started the program well and used crowd-pleasing
references to the Houston area. He spoke of coming to Texas,
Houston and its leaders. The region’s climate and Texas City. He
made the audience laugh at themselves.
The actor began more than two decades of touring as Mark Twain
in January. Richters’ research and feeling for Twain became
apparent from his performance.
Richters presented a funny, intelligent and thought provoking
night of entertainment. He excelled as he shuffled across the
stage and made the audience laugh at every turn.
It is not easy to put on a one-man show and Richters did it
exceedingly well.
The Oregonian
Actor delights crowd as Mark Twain
By Al Reiss
ASHLAND - “I
came to make you laugh, and you did just that - except for that
fellow who slept.”
Friday night the great American humorist and writer Mark Twain
walked the stage of the Music Recital Hall at Southern Oregon
State University, and for two hours held an audience spellbound
with his views on life and death, God and humanity, youth and
age, and worlds real and imagined.
Twain was reincarnated in the person of actor Ken Richters, who
has been portraying the writer on stage and television for more
than 15 years. Richters’ one-man show is titled ‘Mark Twain On
Tour.’
From his first entry, through his final exit, Richters is
totally within the character of Twain as many people envision
the author: mane of white hair, mustache, white suit and a walk
that slightly drags the right foot. But Richters’ performance
goes deeper than the external features. It is more than assuming
the Missouri accent and somewhat nasal voice. It goes beyond the
creative use of a cigar as a prop. Even though Twain has been
physically dead for [over 90] years, he lived Friday night in
Richters’ performance.
In character, Richters introduces himself as Samuel Clemens, who
wrote under the name Mark Twain.
Richters began researching Twain in 1977. Now he has a reserve
of about five hours worth of material from which he draws two
hours, so each program is different than another.
Richters edits Twain’s writings into local context. Friday night
he turned the pointed flame of Twain’s humor on southern Oregon,
to roast SOSU and its faculty, the cities of Talent and Ashland,
and, at some length, the Mail Tribune.
As Clemens-Twain, Richters said, “It’s a well known fact that
God put a number of idiots in the world. Just look at the
faculty.” And, later in the program, “The average age of
teachers here at the college is dead. Do we have any teachers
here? Now that I know you’re here, I’ll speak slower.” The
audience responded with applause.
He compared Twain’s birthplace, Florida, Mo., a town of 99
people, with Talent.
“God said, ‘Let there be light,’ and He looked down on Talent.”
Richters drew from one of Twain’s most popular books, “The
Adventures of Tom Sawyer,” to elaborate on Clemens’ statement,
“At the age of 9, I found God again.” He talked of pledging to
give up smoking, whiskey and swearing in order to join the
Cadets of Temperance, a boy’s improvement society in Twain’s
home town of Hannibal, Mo. Motivation for joining was to wear a
red sash and march in funeral parades. But he abandoned the
abstemious ordeal after three weeks, during which time there was
not one funeral in town. After Clemens backslid out of the
Cadets of Temperance, he recalls, “There was two, three funerals
a day.”
In the best tradition of Clemens’ monologues, Richters begins a
subject, takes a few turns through side roads of me mores, then
gets back to the punchline of the original statement. Convoluted
anecdotes are sprinkled with one liners, jokes in which a laugh
line is topped with another laugh line.
Twain narrates a long story about being treated for lumbago by
his doctor, who only had two patients. “One was a horse. The
other was a Catholic.” (Baptists, Presbyterians, and Twain
himself also came under the sharp glare of satire.)
After treating him with pills, to no effect, the doctor told
Twain to give up his bad habits. He complied, and as soon as he
felt better, he celebrated with a party. Then, he shared the
doctor’s advice with a woman who was in poor health, telling her
to quit smoking and drinking and eating fancy foods. But, since
she hadn’t any of these habits, she couldn’t give them up, so
she died. He advised young people in the audience:
“Go out and collect as many bad habits as you can. You never
know when you might have to give one or two up to save
yourself.”
Richters closed the first hour of his presentation by, in
Twain’s voice announcing an intermission, saying that when he
returned, he would talk about the Governor and “Possibly the
Mail Tribune. Possibly not.” Following the intermission, he kept
both promises.
Twain spoke of sitting in his room at the Ashland Hills Inn,
which he had already described as not a hotel, but “a hospital
for incurable furniture.” While he was in the room, he heard a
knock on the door. “Nothing in my wildest dreams could compare
to the evil that was on the other side of that door. It was the
editor of the Mail Tribune newspaper. They mail it to you so you
don’t realize how old the news is.” The audience loved it.
Richters used the localized satire as an introduction to Twain’s
famous piece about falling into the clutches of an interviewer
from a regional newspaper, while on a speaking tour. Commenting
on how the reporters take notes during interviews, Twain adds,
“Sometimes they go back to the office and they look at what you
said - and they decide you could have said it better.”
Originally, much of Twain’s anti-newspaper humor was directed
against the New York Times. In Richters’ presentation, Twain
said that, when he placed a page of the Times on the floor in
front of his dog, “I’ve never seen the New York Times put to
better use.”
Throughout the show, Richters’ made us feel that we were sharing
an evening with the great humorist himself. His timing was
excellent. His inflections, posture, walk and mannerisms created
a genuine character. There was no false note. He spoke in many
of Twain’s voices, from oratory to whisper. When the audience
wasn’t laughing or applauding, it was listening in attentive
silence.
Richters himself is much younger than the Mark Twain he
presents. He reportedly spends three hours in applying makeup,
wig and costume for the role.
Near the conclusion of the program, Twain recalls returning, as
an old man, to McDougal’s cave, a location from ‘Tom Sawyer,’ “
to see if he can re-experience his youthful search for buried
treasure, when he and other boys used to play at being pirates.
Remarking that a sense of humor goes with youth, Twain said,
“Stay well, my friends. But most important, stay young.” He
whispered, “Be a pirate. Be a pirate.”
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