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About The Book
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Facsimile of 1961 Edition. Adolph Marx [Harpo] squashed his formal education at the age of eight when he was dumped out of the 2nd grade window at P.S. 86 for the last time by two Irish classmates. He never went back. But his informal education blossomed on the streets of New Yorks Upper East Side; as a piano player in the Happy Times Tavern on the vaudeville circuit of the early 1900s at all-night poker games in the Algonquin Hotel. This is a racy autobiography by the mute Marx Brother with the rolling eyes oversized pants and red wig who could send a glissando reeling over his harp. From the financial embarrassment of his childhood generally due to his predatory gambler-brother Chico he rose to the free-swinging free-spending game-loving gang of the twenties headed articulately by Alec Woollcott. There was croquet at the Woollcotts Vermont retreat poker at the Algonquin roulette on the Rivera and backgammon at the Garden of Allah in Hollywood. At 41 he finally married and dutifully tells the reader in scenario style the conversation and events of his first dates with his wife. It is a chatty colorful story designed for shockeroos and honks and only gets dull when there are no more pranks to play on anybody. The most appealing parts of Harpos tale deal with his tour of Russia and his description of his family particularly his mother Minnie with her Master Plan and Father Frenchie peddling the lappas (tailors remnants). It is enjoyable reading and polished writing. Kirkus 1961