Robert Nathan

Robert Nathan
Born (1894-01-02)January 2, 1894
New York City, U.S.
Died May 25, 1985(1985-05-25) (aged 91)
Los Angeles, California, U.S.
Occupation Novelist, Poet
Nationality American
Notable works The Bishop's Wife
Portrait of Jennie
Spouse Anna Lee (7th)
Relatives Maud Nathan (aunt)
Annie Nathan Meyer (aunt)
Emma Lazarus (cousin)
Benjamin Cardozo (cousin)
Website
www.robertnathanlibrary.com

Robert Gruntal Nathan (January 2, 1894 – May 25, 1985) was an American novelist and poet.

Biography

Nathan was born into a prominent New York Sephardic family. He was educated in the United States and Switzerland and attended Harvard University for several years beginning in 1912. It was there that he began writing short fiction and poetry. However, he never graduated, choosing instead to drop out and take a job at an advertising firm to support his family (he married while a junior at Harvard). It was while working in 1919 that he wrote his first novel—the semi-autobiographical work Peter Kindred—which was a critical failure. But his luck soon changed during the 1920s, when he wrote seven more novels, including The Bishop's Wife, which was later made into a successful film starring Cary Grant, David Niven, and Loretta Young.

During the 1930s, his success continued with more works, including fictional pieces and poetry. In 1940, he wrote his most successful book, Portrait of Jennie, about a Depression-era artist and the woman he is painting, who is slipping through time. Portrait of Jennie is considered a modern masterpiece of fantasy fiction and was made into a film, starring Jennifer Jones and Joseph Cotten.

In January 1956 the author wrote, as well as narrated, an episode of the CBS Radio Workshop, called "A Pride of Carrots, or Venus Well-Served".

Nathan's seventh wife was the British actress Anna Lee, to whom he was married from 1970 until his death. He came from a talented family—the activist Maud Nathan and author Annie Nathan Meyer were his aunts, and the poet Emma Lazarus and Supreme Court Justice Benjamin Cardozo his cousins.

Works

Novels

  • Peter Kindred, 1919
  • Autumn, 1921
  • The Puppet Master, 1923
  • Jonah, 1925
  • The Fiddler in Barly, 1926
  • The Woodcutter's House, 1927
  • The Bishop's Wife, 1928 (filmed in 1947)
  • There Is Another Heaven, 1929
  • The Orchid, 1931
  • One More Spring, 1933 (filmed in 1935)
  • Road of Ages, 1935[1]
  • The Enchanted Voyage, 1936 (filmed in 1946)
  • Winter in April, 1938
  • Portrait of Jennie, 1940 (filmed in 1948)
  • They Went On Together, 1941
  • The Sea-Gull Cry, 1942
  • But Gently Day, 1943
  • Mr. Whittle and the Morning Star, 1947
  • Long After Summer, 1948 (televised on The Alcoa Hour in 1956)
  • The River Journey, 1949
  • The Married Look, 1950
  • The Innocent Eve, 1951
  • The Train in the Meadow, 1953
  • Sir Henry, 1955
  • The Rancho of the Little Loves, 1956
  • So Love Returns, 1958
  • The Color of the Evening, 1960
  • The Weans, 1960,
  • The Wilderness-Stone, 1961
  • A Star in the Wind, 1962
  • The Devil with Love, 1963
  • The Fair, 1964
  • The Mallott Diaries, 1965
  • Stonecliff, 1967
  • Mia, 1970
  • The Elixir, 1971
  • The Summer Meadows, 1973
  • Heaven and Hell and the Megas Factor, 1975

Novel collections

Plays

Children's books

Screenplays

Nonfiction

Poetry

  • Youth Grows Old, 1922
  • A Cedar Box, 1929
  • Selected Poems, 1935
  • A Winter Tide: Sonnets and Poems, 1940
  • Dunkirk: A Ballad, 1942
  • Morning in Iowa, 1944
  • The Darkening Meadows, 1945
  • The Green Leaf, 1950
  • The Married Man, 1962
  • Evening Song: Selected Poems 1950-1973, 1973

Radio programs

Television programs

Miscellaneous

References

  1. Warren, Jill (May 1953). "What's New from Coast to Coast" (PDF). Radio-TV Mirror. 39 (6): 20. Retrieved 29 November 2014.
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