Harpo Marx quit school at 7 years old and never looked back. He started work, yes work, doing a series of odd jobs, some legal and some not, before reluctantly joining the family act, The Marx Brothers.
Harpo Speaks is a remarkably well-written memoir. The reader learns about the brother, whose voice we never heard, and gets a front-row seat to a fascinating time in history. Born in 1888, Harpo describes the filth of living in a tenement in New York City, with dirt roads and horses dotting the streets with the remnants of their organic waste. The story weaves through the introduction of automobiles and life on the road for a vaudeville act (sleeping in maggot-filled beds, eating moldy food when the innkeeper provided it), dodging criminal activity, creating means of making a living when there seemed to be none, and a family home filled with love and laughter. Areas where we may only have an academic perspective are brought to life in full technicolor: the Roaring 20s, Hollywood's golden age, The Great Depression, and WWII. Through Harpo's unlikely high-society connections, he was the first American performer to entertain in the Soviet Union. A devout bachelor in his 40s, Harpo finally reluctantly married a starlet, Susan Fleming. While Harpo was afraid of marriage, he loved a big family; he and his wife adopted three boys and a girl, creating a houseful of playmates for the creative couple. The book flows easily through many stories and experiences. I enjoyed every minute.
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AuthorAlicia Dale is a strategic thinking Creative that understands the power of words to influence, change and build new infrastructures. This Blog is to capture ideas that have no where else to go at this very moment. Who knows how they will be developed? Or where they will go? For now they are sparkles of light easily stored where I can search and find them when they call my name again. Archives
January 2025
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