Mark Twain in popular culture

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


Mark Twain has appeared in popular culture as a character in books, films and comics:

  • Broadway, television & cinema actor Hal Holbrook has been performing his one-man show Mark Twain Tonight ! annually since 1959, with each show somewhat different in Twain content. During the 60th Tony Awards, Holbrook reported that he was purported to be buried near Twain in Woodlawn Cemetery. Holbrook then repeated one of Twain's famous quotes: "The reports of my death are greatly exaggerated."
  • Twain appeared in a comic strip story featuring The Phantom. The story featured the 16th Phantom meeting Twain in the wild west.
  • Singer/songwriter Jimmy Buffett has written three songs based on Twain's travelog, Following the Equator (That's What Livin' is to Me, Take Another Road, Remittance Man) and has paraphrased Twain in other songs. He also gives Twain a nod in his own literature, most notably by naming a main character's horse Mr. Twain.
  • The webcomic series Achewood features Mark Twain as a character in one of the strip' s story arcs. This arc features a narrative written in an imitation of Mark Twain's style, as Twain journals his encounter with two of the strip's central characters, who time-traveled from the modern day to the late 19th century.
  • Band Belle & Sebastian make a reference in "This is Just A Modern Rock Song." "I'm not as clever as Mark Twain/I'll only buy a book for the way it looks/And then I stick it on the shelf again"

[edit] See also