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

Key Information

Biography

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Nathan was born into a prominent New York Sephardic Jewish family. He was educated privately in Switzerland and attended Philips Exeter Academy,[1] then entered Harvard University in 1912. It was there that his short fiction and poetry was first published, in the prestigious literary magazine, the Harvard Monthly, where he also became an editor.[2] 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 under the same title 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[citation needed] 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,[3] 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.

Works

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Novels

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Novel collections

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Plays

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Children's books

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Screenplays

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Nonfiction

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Poetry

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Radio programs

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  • CBS Radio Workshop, "A Pride of Carrots or Venus Well-Served," 1956
  • CBS Radio Workshop, "Report on the We'Uns," 1956

Television programs

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  • The Mark Twain Television Theatre, 1953.[5]

Miscellaneous

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  • Two Robert Nathan Pieces, 1950 (book containing an interview with Mr. Nathan by Harvey Breit and the poem: Advice To My Son)
  • "Robert Nathan Reading His Poems with Comment at His Home in Los Angeles, Calif., in April 1962", 1962 (tape reel sound recording)

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Robert Nathan (January 2, 1894 – May 25, 1985) was an American novelist, poet, and renowned for his lyrical fantasies and romantic narratives, authoring over fifty books that blended whimsy, , and . Born in to a prominent Jewish family—his father, Harold Nathan, was a , and his mother, Sarah Gruntal Nathan, came from a line of financiers—Nathan grew up in an intellectually stimulating environment that fostered his early interest in literature. He attended , graduating in 1912, and later studied at , where he edited The Harvard Monthly and published his initial works, though he left without a degree in 1915 to support his family amid financial difficulties. Nathan's literary career spanned seven decades, beginning with his debut novel Peter Kindred in 1919, a tale of youthful that reflected his own introspective style. His breakthrough came with (1928), a charming fantasy about an angel aiding a harried cleric, which became a bestseller and was adapted into the 1947 Academy Award-winning film starring and . Similarly, (1940) captivated readers with its story of a painter and a time-transcending girl, selling over a million copies and inspiring a 1948 film directed by , featuring . Other notable works include Mr. Whittle and the Morning Star (1950) and Stonecliff (1963), which showcased his signature blend of gentle humor and philosophical depth, earning him the moniker "The Dean of American Authors" in his later years. Throughout his prolific output, Nathan explored themes of love, loss, and the , often drawing from personal experiences marked by seven marriages and a peripatetic life between New York, , and . In addition to writing, Nathan contributed to Hollywood as a screenwriter for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer during the 1940s, adapting his own stories and others for the screen. He held influential roles in literary circles, serving as president of the American PEN Center from 1940 to 1942 and chancellor of the , while also being elected to the National Institute of Arts and Letters in 1935, where he remained a member for fifty years. Nathan mentored emerging writers, including and , and his enduring legacy lies in his ability to infuse everyday struggles with poetic wonder, influencing generations of fantasy and romantic literature. He spent his final fifteen years married to actress , passing away in from complications of kidney failure at age 91.

Biography

Early Life and Family

Robert Nathan was born on January 2, 1894, in to a prominent Sephardic Jewish with deep colonial roots in the United States. His father, Harold Nathan, was a prominent lawyer, and his mother was Sara Gruntal Nathan. The belonged to New York's established Sephardic Jewish aristocracy, descending from figures like Rabbi Gershom Mendes Seixas, and was part of a close-knit community distinct from later Eastern European Jewish immigrants. Nathan's extended family included notable relatives such as his paternal aunts Maud Nathan, a leading suffragist and social reformer, and Annie Nathan Meyer, a writer, playwright, and founder of . His cousins included the poet and Supreme Court Justice . He spent his childhood in , surrounded by family discussions on , intellectual pursuits, and social reform, shaped by his aunts' and the city's dynamic urban environment. This heritage fostered Nathan's early interest in writing, influenced by familial storytelling traditions and exposure to books through relatives like his father and aunt Annie Nathan Meyer.

Education and Early Influences

Nathan attended Phillips Exeter Academy in New Hampshire, graduating in 1912 after receiving a preparatory education that emphasized classical studies and discipline, before enrolling at Harvard University in 1912. During his time at Harvard, Nathan immersed himself in the university's vibrant literary community, contributing early poems and short stories to the Harvard Monthly, a prestigious student publication where he also served as an editor. These contributions represented his first published works and provided a platform to experiment with narrative forms and poetic expression, fostering his emerging voice as a writer. Although initially engaged in academic life, Nathan departed Harvard during his junior year without completing his degree, driven by a desire for greater in his pursuits and the practical need to support his family after marrying in ; he took a position in to make ends meet. This interruption in formal education allowed him to prioritize self-directed creative exploration over structured coursework, profoundly influencing his later introspective and fantastical literary style, as evidenced by his Peter Kindred (1919), which drew directly from his experiences as a reserved student at and Harvard.

Personal Life and Marriages

Robert Nathan's personal life was marked by a series of seven marriages, each ending in divorce except for his final union with British actress , to whom he was wed from 1970 until his death in 1985. His first marriage was to Dorothy Michaels in 1915, which lasted until 1922 and produced a daughter, Joan. The second, to Nancy Wilson from 1930 to 1936, followed a period of separation after his initial divorce. These early unions reflected the turbulence of his young adulthood, as he balanced emerging literary ambitions with domestic commitments in . Subsequent marriages included Lucie-Lee Hall Skelding from 1936 to 1939, Janet Bingham from 1940 to 1951, Clara May Burns from 1951 to 1955, and Shirley Keeland from 1955 to 1969, all concluding in divorce. Nathan's peripatetic personal circumstances paralleled shifts in his residences; after years in New York, he spent time on , where he wrote several notable works, and later moved to in the 1940s amid screenwriting opportunities at Studios. Brief travels to in the mid-1920s, including time gathering material for writings on the , influenced his perspectives on and displacement, themes that echoed in his fiction without direct professional ties. In his later years, Nathan enjoyed a stable companionship with , sharing a home in until his death from kidney failure on May 25, 1985, at age 91. He maintained enduring friendships with literary contemporaries, including Harvard classmate and poet , through whom he sustained connections in New York's intellectual circles. These relationships provided personal support amid his evolving domestic life, though Nathan had no additional children from his marriages.

Literary Career

Early Publications and Struggles

Robert Nathan's literary career began with the publication of his debut novel, Peter Kindred, in 1919 by Duffield & Company. This semi-autobiographical work, drawing on his experiences as a shy at Harvard, depicted the inner life of a lonely young man navigating intellectual and . Despite its personal resonance, the novel met with critical dismissal for its introspective style and lack of broader appeal, achieving neither commercial success nor widespread recognition. To sustain himself amid these early setbacks, Nathan took a position in shortly after Harvard, working through the 1919–1920s while continuing to write. This practical employment provided financial support for his literary pursuits, during which he also published his first collection of poetry, Youth Grows Old, in 1922 with Robert M. McBride & Company. The volume featured verses exploring themes of youth, transience, and emotional growth, reflecting Nathan's evolving voice in a more lyrical form. Nathan's initial years as a were marked by financial precarity and repeated challenges in gaining publisher interest, prompting a gradual pivot from stark realism toward lighter, more imaginative narratives infused with fantasy. This stylistic evolution became evident in his 1926 novel The Fiddler in Barly, also published by McBride, which introduced whimsical elements like talking animals and a wandering fiddler disrupting a sleepy town. Blending humor with underlying pathos, the book highlighted themes of joy amid , signaling Nathan's emerging romantic-fantasy mode that would define his later successes.

Major Novels and Successes

Robert Nathan's transition to publisher Alfred A. Knopf in 1933 marked a turning point in his career, coinciding with increased commercial success and critical acclaim for his novels during the 1930s and 1940s. Earlier works had garnered modest attention, but Knopf's promotion elevated Nathan's visibility, with titles like One More Spring boosting sales of his backlist and earning prominent reviews in The New York Times. This period showcased Nathan's maturation as a writer of whimsical fantasy blended with social commentary, reflecting the era's economic and wartime anxieties while achieving bestseller status and film adaptations. Although published just before this shift, (1928) established Nathan's reputation for gentle and elements. The follows Henry Brougham, whose obsession with funding a grand neglects his family, prompting him to pray for divine assistance; an angel named arrives but soon develops a tender affection for the bishop's wife, Julia, highlighting tensions in their passionless marriage. Themes of versus critique 1920s America's spiritual emptiness, with the angel's influence restoring joy and intimacy to the household before his departure on . Critics praised its whimsical fantasy and emotional depth, noting the charming interplay between the angel and Julia as the story's highlight, which contributed to its enduring appeal. One More Spring (1933), Nathan's first Knopf title, captured the Great Depression's hardships through a fable of unlikely companionship. An antique dealer, evicted from his shop, reassembles a four-poster bed in a city park, where it shelters a destitute Jewish violinist and a compassionate prostitute, forming a makeshift family amid economic ruin. Exploring themes of hunger, class exploitation, and human tenderness, the narrative underscores compassion as a bulwark against despair without resorting to overt politics. It became a bestseller, holding a spot on Publishers Weekly's list for twelve weeks and ranking among Life magazine's top 100 novels from 1924 to 1944, with its hopeful tone resonating during the crisis; the 1935 film adaptation, directed by Henry King and starring Janet Gaynor, further amplified its reach. Portrait of Jennie (1940) solidified Nathan's fame as a master of , becoming one of his most widely read works. Struggling Eben Adams encounters Jennie Appleton, a girl from 1910 who appears to age rapidly across their meetings in New York, inspiring his breakthrough paintings while their bond deepens into timeless . Themes of love transcending mortality and art's power to capture fleeting moments evoke the era's uncertainties, culminating in Jennie's tragic death in a storm that immortalizes her in Eben's final portrait. Its bestseller success and lyrical prose earned acclaim for blending mystery with emotional resonance, leading to a 1948 produced by and starring and . During , But Gently Day (1943) reflected Nathan's personal wartime experiences through a poignant time-travel romance. A young soldier, Henry Arkbester, on with a , finds himself inexplicably transported to his family's past, where he falls in love with a revealed to be connected to his lineage, exploring the war's disruptions against historical continuity. Themes of , valor, and spiritual rebellion amid temporal displacement offer subtle commentary on human resilience, with the articulating the era's technological marvels juxtaposed against enduring emotional truths. lauded Nathan's deft handling of the premise's possibilities, affirming its place among his wartime successes that blended fantasy with contemporary reflection.

Later Writings and Themes

Following the commercial success of his 1940s novels, such as Portrait of Jennie, Robert Nathan ventured into more experimental forms of fantasy and romance in his later works, blending speculative elements with introspective narratives. In Mr. Whittle and the Morning Star (1947), Nathan incorporated utopian science fiction motifs set in a post-World War II world where fears of technological dominance and atomic advancements lead to predictions of ruin, reflecting post-war optimism tempered by warnings about humanity's failure to achieve peace. By the 1960s, Nathan's output shifted toward whimsical fantasy with social undertones, as seen in The Weans (1960), a satirical tale of future African archaeologists unearthing the remnants of an extinct Western , employing gentle humor to critique contemporary society through an inverted lens of discovery and obsolescence. His 1970s novels further emphasized mystical romances intertwined with existential reflections, particularly on aging and human connection. In Mia (1970) and (1971), Nathan explored timeless love through protagonists encountering enigmatic, otherworldly women—one a dual-natured figure embodying and maturity, the other a sorceress tied to ancient sites like —infusing the stories with mystical tones that ponder the passage of time and emotional renewal. Throughout these later writings, Nathan maintained recurring themes of timeless love transcending mortality, alternate realities challenging everyday existence, and gentle humor that subtly critiques societal norms, often drawing from his personal experiences with romance. His seven marriages, culminating in a happy union with Nathan, informed the romantic motifs, portraying women as complex, transformative figures central to male protagonists' emotional awakenings. Nathan's productivity waned after 1975, with Heaven and Hell and the Megas Factor marking his final novel, a fantastical exploration of cosmic envoys mediating earthly conflicts; advancing age contributed to this reduced output until his death in 1985.

Hollywood and Adaptations

Screenwriting Career

In the early 1940s, during , Robert Nathan relocated from the East Coast to , , to pursue opportunities in the film industry. He secured a contract as a with (MGM), where he worked for nearly a decade, marking a significant shift from his established career as a and to the collaborative demands of Hollywood scriptwriting. Nathan's initial contributions at included adding poetic elements to the screenplay for The White Cliffs of Dover (1944), a war drama based on Alice Duer Miller's of the same name. Directed by and starring , the film traces an American woman's life in across two world wars, with Nathan's additional helping to update and enhance the lyrical quality of Miller's original work amid contemporary wartime themes. His most prominent original screenplay at was for The Clock (1945), co-written with Schrank and adapted from a by Paul and Pauline Gallico. Directed by , the film depicts a wartime romance between a soldier on a 48-hour leave in (played by Robert Walker) and a secretary (), capturing the urgency and tenderness of fleeting love against the backdrop of . Nathan himself made an uncredited in the film as a man smoking a pipe in a hotel lobby scene. Later in the decade, Nathan wrote a screenplay for John Ford's (1948), a Western retelling of the story starring , but it was ultimately rejected by the studio in favor of revisions by other writers. He rebounded with contributions to Pagan Love Song (1950), a musical romance set in , where he co-wrote the screenplay with Jerry Davis, adapting William S. Stone's novel and helping craft its song-and-dance sequences featuring and . Directed by Robert Alton under producer , the film highlighted Nathan's versatility in blending narrative with MGM's signature musical style. Throughout his time at , Nathan faced challenges inherent to the , including frequent script revisions and the transition from solitary novel-writing to team-based under executive oversight. These experiences, exemplified by the rejection of his draft and the collaborative rewrites on projects like The Clock, underscored the tensions between artistic independence and Hollywood's production constraints.

Film and Media Adaptations

Several of Robert Nathan's novels were adapted into films during the mid-20th century, contributing to his reputation in popular culture. His 1928 novella was adapted into a 1947 directed by , starring as the angel Dudley, as the bishop's wife Julia, and as Bishop Henry Brougham. The , produced by , emphasized themes of faith and family during the holiday season and became a enduring Christmas classic, praised for its whimsical tone and strong ensemble performances. It was remade in 1996 as , directed by , with as the angel, as the preacher's wife, and as the preacher, updating the story to a gospel-infused African American church setting and achieving commercial success with its soundtrack. Another notable adaptation was Portrait of Jennie, Nathan's 1940 fantasy novel, which became a 1948 film directed by , starring in the title role opposite as struggling artist Eben Adams. The production, filmed , is renowned for its innovative surreal , including a climactic storm sequence and ethereal imagery that captured the story's time-bending romance between the painter and the enigmatic Jennie Appleton. These effects, achieved through practical techniques and early work, influenced subsequent fantasy cinema and helped the film earn two Academy Award nominations for cinematography and . Nathan's 1933 novel One More Spring was adapted into a 1935 film directed by Henry King, featuring , , and Walter Woolf King in a Depression-era tale of three down-and-out individuals sharing shelter in a maintenance shed. The adaptation, produced by Corporation, highlighted themes of resilience and camaraderie amid economic hardship, reflecting the era's social concerns through its stylized setting. In radio, Nathan's short stories were adapted for the Workshop anthology series in 1956. The episode "A Pride of Carrots: or, Well Served," based on his satirical tale, aired on September 16 and explored humorous elements with Nathan narrating. Later that year, on November 11, "Report on the We'uns" adapted another of his pieces, depicting archaeologists in the future examining 20th-century ruins, and was noted for its witty commentary on human society. Television adaptations of Nathan's works were limited but included episodes on early . In , Nathan was commissioned to write scripts for the planned Mark Twain Television Theatre series, which was to feature adaptations of 's works as part of its focus on , though the program faced production challenges and did not air. Other minor adaptations include the 1946 musical fantasy film Wake Up and Dream, directed by Lloyd Bacon and based on Nathan's 1936 novel The Enchanted Voyage, starring John Payne and in a whimsical story of a boy searching for his brother using a land-bound . This production, while not a major hit, showcased Nathan's penchant for fanciful narratives in a format.

Works

Novels

Robert Nathan authored more than 40 novels over his career, primarily published by from the 1930s onward, with his early works leaning toward realistic portrayals of personal and spiritual struggles before evolving into fantastical narratives dominated by fantasy elements from the 1930s onward. His debut novel, Peter Kindred (1919), follows an orphan's spiritual quest for meaning and connection in a harsh world. Published by Duffield and Company, it marked Nathan's entry into with introspective themes. Autumn (1921), published by Robert M. McBride & Company, portrays seasonal metaphors for fleeting youth and loss in a lyrical . The Puppet Master (1923) explores themes of control and fate in a dramatic tale. Jonah (1925) reimagines the biblical story with personal introspection. The Fiddler in Barly (1926) blends music and fantasy in a whimsical narrative. The Woodcutter's House (1927) depicts rural life and human connections. The Bishop's Wife (1928), published by , depicts an angel's gentle intervention in a bishop's life, blending domestic with warmth. There Is Another Heaven (1929), also published by The , explores a poignant romance set in the , examining love's endurance beyond death. The Orchid (1931) delves into exotic themes of beauty and transience. One More Spring (1933) portrays the lives of displaced people during the , finding solace in . Road of Ages (1935), Nathan's first Knopf publication, imagines a fantastical Jewish in modern times, blending historical with adventure. The Enchanted Voyage (1936, Knopf) recounts a man's shrink to miniature size for an adventurous journey through a hidden world, satirizing everyday mundanity. Winter in April (1938) examines love and renewal amid hardship. Portrait of Jennie (1940, Knopf) centers on a time-defying love story between a painter and a mysterious woman who ages backward, weaving romance with temporal mystery. But Gently Day (1943, Knopf) offers a gentle wartime tale of quiet resilience and human bonds amid global conflict. Mr. Whittle and the Morning Star (1947, Knopf) features a utopian inventor whose discoveries challenge societal norms and family dynamics. The River Journey (1949, Knopf) traces a mystical travel narrative along waterways, symbolizing inner exploration and transformation. The Innocent Eve (1951, Knopf) reimagines the biblical Eden story through a modern lens, focusing on innocence and temptation. Sir Henry (1955, Knopf) places a medieval in the contemporary world, highlighting clashes between and modernity. The Weans (1960, Knopf) satirizes a hidden society of tiny beings navigating human-like dilemmas in a microcosmic world. The Devil with Love (1963, Knopf) portrays a romantic entangled in earthly affections, mixing humor with romance. Stonecliff (1963, Knopf) unfolds as a gothic mystery in a secluded estate, probing secrets and psychological depths. Mia (1970, Knopf) depicts an Italian romance infused with lyrical introspection and cultural nostalgia. The Elixir (1971, Knopf) follows a quest for immortality through alchemical means, questioning the value of eternal life. The Summer Meadows (1973, Knopf) evokes a fantasy of idyllic landscapes and fleeting joys in rural settings. Heaven and Hell and the Megas Factor (1975, Knopf) delivers a cosmic on , bureaucracy in the , and human folly.

Poetry

Robert Nathan's poetry career spanned several decades, beginning with his debut collection in and encompassing approximately ten major volumes, characterized by a lyrical and romantic style often infused with elements of fantasy and . His verses frequently explored themes of love, nature, and human transience, mirroring motifs found in his works but distilled into more concise, evocative forms. Nathan's poems appeared in prestigious magazines such as , where his work "Advice to My Son" was first published in 1938, offering paternal wisdom on embracing life's joys amid uncertainty. His early poetry, such as Youth Grows Old (1922), presented a sequence of romantic verses tracing the emotional and spiritual growth of youth, establishing Nathan as a of intimate, autobiographical reflection. This was followed by The Cedar Box (1929), a collection of intimate that delved into personal and domestic themes with delicate imagery. In 1935, Selected Poems compiled highlights from his prior works, showcasing his evolving mastery of form and sentiment. By the , Nathan's turned toward broader historical and seasonal concerns, as seen in A Winter Tide: Sonnets and Poems (1940), which evoked the quiet beauty and melancholy of winter landscapes through structured sequences and . World War II profoundly influenced Nathan's wartime contributions, blending heroism with poignant reflection. Dunkirk: A Ballad (1942) captured the resilience of soldiers during the evacuation in a rhythmic, narrative poem that honored collective sacrifice. This theme continued in Morning in Iowa (1944), a pastoral narrative poem contrasting rural American serenity with global turmoil, and The Darkening Meadows (1945), a collection of war-infused verses including an expanded version of "Dunkirk," emphasizing loss and endurance amid encroaching shadows. Postwar, Nathan's work returned to nature and legacy, as in The Green Leaf (1950), a comprehensive anthology of his poetry featuring nature-inspired pieces alongside earlier narratives like "Morning in Iowa" and "Dunkirk." The standalone poem "Advice to My Son," republished in collections around 1950, stood out for its tender, advisory tone on living fully in the face of impermanence. Nathan's poetic style, marked by musicality and subtle fantasy, occasionally intersected with his , where verses enhanced emotional depth in adaptations like the 1944 film The , incorporating lyrical elements to underscore themes of love and endurance. Overall, his poetry collections prioritized emotional resonance over experimentation, and earned praise for their accessibility and heartfelt .

Plays and Drama

Robert Nathan's contributions to drama were modest compared to his prolific output in novels and , with only a handful of plays written over his career, often incorporating fantastical or satirical elements drawn from biblical tales, fairy tales, and Shakespearean lore. These works typically explored themes of love, , and human , mirroring the whimsical and romantic motifs prevalent in his . While Nathan's plays received limited theatrical staging, primarily in regional or venues, they demonstrated his versatility as a capable of adapting fantasy to the stage format. Approximately four known plays exist, some unpublished or unproduced on a major scale, and several appear to derive from shorter fictional ideas rather than original stage concepts. One of Nathan's earliest dramatic efforts in publication was the 1953 collection Jezebel's Husband & The Sleeping Beauty, comprising two one-act plays that showcase his satirical bent. Jezebel's Husband, a witty reinterpretation of the biblical story, portrays the prophet grappling with personal despair and inadequacy in a modern-inflected , blending humor with poignant commentary on and relationships. The play premiered at the Westport Country Playhouse in in 1952, starring and Judith Parrish, with plans for a Broadway run in mid-October of that year, though it did not materialize beyond pre-Broadway preparations. The Sleeping Beauty, the companion piece, offers a contemporary twist on the classic , infusing it with Nathan's signature fantasy elements to critique societal expectations of romance and awakening. Both plays were praised for their skillful dialogue and pungent scenes but saw no further major productions, highlighting the challenges Nathan faced in transitioning from page to stage. In 1966, Nathan released Juliet in Mantua, a full-length serving as a sequel to Shakespeare's . The play imagines the star-crossed lovers surviving their feigned deaths and retreating to seclusion in , where their initial passion has soured into domestic bickering amid 14th-century Italian village life; it ultimately charts the evolution toward a more mature, . Infused with fantasy through its premise of hidden survival and illusory bliss, the work echoes Nathan's recurring interest in love's transformative illusions. Despite its imaginative appeal, Juliet in Mantua received limited staging, confined to or experimental theaters, and remained more prominent in print than performance. Among Nathan's lesser-known dramatic writings is the unpublished play The Master of the Revels, drafted in the , which reportedly delved into theatrical illusion and revelry but never reached production. Additionally, during the , Nathan contributed sketches to various Broadway revues, though these were minor and uncredited in major records. Overall, his plays' sparse staging—mostly regional or preparatory—reflected the niche audience for his blend of fantasy and , yet they underscored his enduring exploration of love's ephemeral nature across genres.

Legacy

Critical Reception and Influence

During the 1930s and 1940s, Robert Nathan's works received praise for their gentle fantasy and lyrical prose, often blending sentiment with subtle irony to evoke in everyday life. Critics highlighted his ability to infuse ordinary settings with whimsical elements, such as talking animals or metaphysical encounters, creating an accessible yet poignant amid the era's economic and social upheavals. For instance, in a 1941 New York Times interview, Nathan reflected on his reputation as a "gentle" , noting that reviewers frequently described his style as tender and milk-toasty, emphasizing its emotional warmth over stark realism. His 1940 novel , a tale of an encountering a time-slipping girl, became his most acclaimed and commercially successful work, solidifying his status as a key figure in American . By the mid-20th century, however, Nathan's sentimental approach drew criticism for seeming overly soft in an age increasingly favoring gritty realism and social critique. Post-World War II literary trends shifted toward raw depictions of human struggle, rendering his whimsical fantasies less fashionable among critics and readers who prioritized psychological depth over ethereal charm. A 1985 Los Angeles Times reflection on his career noted that Nathan had "outlived his celebrity," as tastes evolved away from the delicate irony that defined his oeuvre, leading to a gradual decline in mainstream attention. Despite this, his influence persisted in subtler ways, particularly through film adaptations like Portrait of Jennie (1948) and The Bishop's Wife (1947), which popularized gentle fantasy tropes in Hollywood, contributing to the genre's in romantic and cinema. Nathan's blending of the fantastical with the mundane prefigured elements of magical realism, as seen in his impact on later authors. , a pioneer of the genre, listed Portrait of Jennie among his 24 most formative books in his autobiography Living to Tell the Tale, crediting it as part of the literary influences that shaped his fusion of reality and enchantment. This connection underscores how Nathan's early experiments in temporal and emotional wonder anticipated the Latin American boom's narrative innovations. In the 1980s, amid renewed interest in overlooked fantasy writers, Nathan's works saw reprints and inclusion in major criticism anthologies, such as the Chelsea House Twentieth-Century series, sparking a modest rediscovery. Today, Nathan maintains a among readers drawn to his themes of wonder, loss, and human connection, often rediscovered through his enduring film legacies and thematic resonance in . Literary enthusiasts appreciate his humane sensibility and ironic metaphysical touches, viewing him as an underappreciated bridge between early 20th-century whimsy and modern .

Awards, Honors, and Posthumous Recognition

Robert Nathan received recognition for his literary and screenwriting contributions, though he did not garner major literary prizes during his lifetime. In 1945, he earned the MGM Box Office Blue Ribbon Award for his screenplay for The Clock, a wartime romance that highlighted his ability to blend emotional depth with narrative economy. His adaptations of novels into films, such as The Bishop's Wife (1947) and Portrait of Jennie (1948), contributed to seven Academy Award nominations collectively, including a win for Best Special Effects for Portrait of Jennie, elevating his profile in Hollywood despite the absence of personal screenplay accolades. Nathan was elected to the National Institute of Arts and Letters in 1935, serving as vice president and maintaining membership for fifty years, a testament to his standing among American writers. He also held positions as chancellor of the and charter member of International P.E.N., reflecting praise in literary circles, though no honorary degrees were conferred upon him. In 1982, the National Film Society awarded him an Achievement in Cinema Award for his screenwriting legacy. Following his death in 1985, Nathan's work experienced renewed interest through posthumous initiatives. His New York Times highlighted his prolific output of more than fifty books of and over six decades. The official Robert Nathan Library website, launched in the , has digitized and promoted his oeuvre, facilitating access to his novels, , and plays. Reprints of appeared in the 2000s, including editions that sustained its status as a fantasy classic. As of November 2025, no new awards have been bestowed, but increased ebook availability on platforms like Amazon has broadened readership for titles such as and Stonecliff.

References

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