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  1. Nov 2, 2004 · Books. A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court. Mark Twain. Penguin, Nov 2, 2004 - Fiction - 384 pages. Mark Twain moves from broad comedy to biting social satire in this literary classic. Cracked on the head by a crowbar in nineteenth-century Connecticut, Hank Morgan wakes to find himself in King Arthur’s England.

  2. New York opening: 7 Apr 1949. Production Company. Paramount Pictures, Inc. Distribution Company. Paramount Pictures, Inc. Country. United States. Screenplay Information. Based on the novel A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court by Mark Twain (New York, 1889).

  3. A narrator identified as “ M.T. ” (pointing to the book’s author, Mark Twain) encounters a strange tourist ( Hank Morgan) at Warwick Castle in England. It turns out that both men are at the same hotel, and later that night, Hank begins to tell M.T. his life story. He was born and raised in 19th-century Hartford, Connecticut.

  4. A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court: Directed by Franklin J. Schaffner. With Thomas Mitchell, Boris Karloff, Berry Kroeger, Salem Ludwig. A modern New England man travels back to the days of King Arthur and battles Merlin the Magician.

  5. Mar 30, 2011 · I think A Connecticut Yankee was probably my favorite Mark Twain work. I was familiar by that time with King Arthur, mostly in the form of T.H. White's The Once and Future King. A Connecticut Yankee was something different -- it confronted Arthurian legend with modernity. Arthur's court as presented in A Connecticut Yankee is a squalid band of ...

  6. A Connecticut Yankee is a musical based on the 1889 novel A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court by American writer Mark Twain. Like most adaptations of the Twain novel, it focuses on the lighter aspects of the story. The music was written by Richard Rodgers, the lyrics by Lorenz Hart, and the book by Herbert Fields.

  7. Books. A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court. Mark Twain. University of California Press, Jan 1, 1983 - Literary Criticism - 479 pages. Daniel Beard's original illustrations accompany the story of a Connecticut workman who finds himself transported back to medieval England. Preview this book ».

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