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Robert Nathan

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

This article is about the American novelist and poet. For other uses, see Robert Nathan (disambiguation).

Robert Nathan

(1894-01-02)January 2, 1894
New York City, U.S.

May 25, 1985(1985-05-25) (aged 91)
Los Angeles, California, U.S.

Novelist, poet

American

The Bishop's Wife
Portrait of Jennie

Anna Lee (7th)

Biography[edit]

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 in 1947.


During the 1930s, his success continued with more works, including fictional pieces and poetry. His 1933 novel One More Spring was filmed in 1935. 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 1942 Nathan wrote a poem "Dunkirk: A Ballad", then became a screenwriter for MGM, where he added additional poetry to update Alice Duer Miller's poem for the film The White Cliffs of Dover (1944). He then wrote the screenplay of The Clock (1945), in which he had a cameo role. His screenplay for 3 Godfathers (1948) was rejected,[1] but he made contributions to the screenplay of Pagan Love Song (1950).


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.

, 1938 (collection containing The Fiddler in Barly, The Woodcutter's House, The Bishop's Wife, The Orchid, and There Is Another Heaven). Introduction by Stephen Vincent Benét.

The Barly Fields

, 1946 Armed Services Edition, published by the Council on Books in Wartime (shortened version of The Barly Fields, containing The Bishop's Wife, The Orchid, There Is Another Heaven, and Benét's introduction)

The Bishop's Wife and Two Other Novels

The Married Look, Robert Nathan. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1950 (author bibliography)

– "the official library"

Robert Nathan Library

at Project Gutenberg

Works by Robert Nathan

at Internet Archive

Works by or about Robert Nathan

"", MP3 file at the "CBS Radio Workshop" section of Internet Archive

A Pride of Carrots (Venus Well Served)

at Library of Congress, with 88 library catalog records

Robert Nathan

. Yale Collection of American Literature, Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library.

Robert Nathan Papers