John Haase (author)

Not to be confused with the criminal John Haase

Dr. John Haase (August 21, 1923 August 3, 2006) was a dentist and author, whose most well known novel was adapted into the 1968 Richard Lester film "Petulia", starring George C. Scott and Julie Christie.

Life

Haase was born in Frankfurt, the only son of a Lutheran father and Jewish mother. The growing threat of Nazi power forced the family to migrate to San Francisco in 1936.

He graduated from the University of California, Los Angeles, and then studied at the Dental School of the University of San Francisco. He enlisted during World War II, and served in the Army in Texas.

Haase practised in the Westwood section of Los Angeles, with many celebrities, including Conrad Hilton, for clients, for nearly forty years.

He married Jean Rosenblatt in 1948. They had 4 children, but the marriage ended in divorce. In 1975, he wed Janis.

He died in Montecito, of complications arising out of Emphysema.

Haase as Author

His first novel, The Young Who Sin, appeared in 1958.

Me and the Arch Kook Petulia takes a searingly satirical look at the America of the 1960s. It is the story of an affair between a middle aged doctor, in the midst of a divorce, and a self described kook who wants to have an affair because she has been married for six months and has not had one yet. Haase was not happy with the adaptation for screen. However the release of Lester's film was greeted with acclaim. The New York Times, commenting in July 2006 on a DVD collection of comedies from the 1960s and 70s, called Petulia the most notable of a group of groundbreaking films from the 60's recently released on DVD.

Erasmus with Freckles features Erasmus Leaf, who nurses a crush for Brigitte Bardot, and his father, an absent minded poet with a distaste for science, who has to deal with the mathematical genius that his son demonstrates.

Big Red, a historical novel, describes the construction of Hoover Dam in the early 1930s. The title refers to the Colorado River, although the appellation is not well recognized among locales. Haase had in mind, from personal chats, to produce a book that compared to Steinbeck's Grapes of Wrath; unfortunately, the novel was not so received. Much of its local geography is based upon the research of a geographer, who also engaged in fieldwork in Haase's behalf.[1]

Haase was a prolific travel writer too, with several articles appearing in magazines and newspapers.

He also wrote an episode of the Richard Boone Show on Television in 1963, called The Wall to Wall War.

Bibliography

Trivia

References

  1. Sutton, I. (1968). "Geographical Aspects of Construction Planning: Hoover Dam Revisited," Journal of the West, 7(3): 301–344.
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