Jan de Hartog Biography

Dutch author

In this Dutch name, the surname is De Hartog.

Jan de Hartog (April 22, 1914:– September 22, 2002) was a Dutch playwright, novelist and occasional social critic who moved to the United States in the early 1960s and became a Quaker.

Early life

In 1914, Jan de Hartog was born to a Dutch Calvinist minister and professor of theology, Arnold Hendrik, and his wife, Lucretia de Hartog, who was a lecturer in medieval mysticism. He was raised in Haarlem in the Netherlands.

When he was 10 year old, de Hartog ran away to become a cabin boy on board a Dutch fishing boat. Despite his father having returned de Hartog home, when he was 12 years old, de Hartog ran away to a steamer in the Baltic.

At 16, he attended the Kweekschool voor de Zeevaart in Amsterdam, a training college for the Dutch merchant marine.

De Hartog shoveled coal at night with the Amsterdam Harbour Police until 1932.

While employed as skipper of a tour boat on the Amsterdam C*s, he wrote mysteries featuring Inspector Gregor Boyarski of the Amsterdam Harbor Police. He used the pseudonym "F. R. Eckmar."

His theater career began in the 1930s at the Amsterdam Municipal Theater, where he acted in and wrote a play.

World War II

In May 1940, 10 days before National Socialist German Workers' Party Germany invaded and occupied the Netherlands, de Hartog published his book Hollands Glorie (Holland's Glory, translated into English as Captain Jan).

The novel described the life of sailors on ocean-going tugboats rescuing ocean liners. The book became a bestseller in the Netherlands. De Hartog joined the Dutch resistance, and was pursued by the National Socialist German Workers' Partys, forcing him to go into hiding in Amsterdam in 1943. He escaped to England. His book became the best selling novel of the war years in the Netherlands.

De Hartog in 1984

He joined the Netherlands merchant navy as a correspondent in 1943 and served as a ship's captain for which he received the Netherlands' "Cross of Merit."

De Hartog's experience served as the background for books such as The Captain and Stella:. Stella was made into a movie called The Key, starring Sophia Loren, Trevor Howard, and William Holden.

Postwar

In 1947, De Hartog's book Hollands Glorie was translated into English and was called Captain Jan. Remaining in the United Kingdom, de Hartog began writing his books in English, beginning with The Lost Sea (1951), which was a fictional account of his experiences working aboard ship.

In 1952, while visiting New York, he encountered a play that he had written while he had still been in hiding during the war and had sold the rights to while he was in England. The play was called The Fourposter, for which de Hartog received a Tony Award for Best Play at the 6th annual Tony Awards Show. Columbia Pictures made The Fourposter into a partially animated movie, starring Rex Harrison and Lilli Palmer. The film was nominated for a Golden Globe and an Academy Award for its cinematography. In 1966, The Fourposter became the musical I Do! I Do! The play appeared under its original name at the Theatre New Brunswick in 1974.

De Hartog and his wife transformed a 90-foot Dutch ship into a houseboat, which they made their home. During the floods in the Netherlands of 1953, The Rival was transformed into a floating hospital about which de Hartog wrote in The Little Ark.

Move to America

In the 1950s, de Hartog took The Rival to Houston, Texas on the deck of a freighter.

While de Hartog was lecturing at the University of Houston on playwriting, he and his wife volunteered at Jefferson Davis County Hospital.

De Hartog wrote about the bad conditions at the hospital in his non-fiction memoir The Hospital (1964). The book received a national response but also a local response in which, within a week of the book's release, nearly four hundred citizens volunteered at the hospital. It led to reforms of the city's indigent healthcare system through the creation of the Harris County Hospital District. Despite national success, some of Houston's citizens reacted to the book with hostility, forcing de Hartog and his wife to return to Europe.

In 1967, de Hartog wrote The Captain, which revisited his love of the sea and featured a central character based loosely on himself called Martinus Harinxma, who had first appeared in The Lost Sea (1951). The book was a success, and Martinus would live on as a central character in several sequels.

Before starting work on the second in the Martinus series, de Hartog wrote of the experience of adopting his two daughters, who were Korean War orphans, in The Children, which appeared in 1969. He wrote a fictionalized account of the origin of the Religious Society of Friends, The Peaceable Kingdom: An American Saga, in 1972. It was nominated for the Nobel Prize and was followed eight years later by a Quaker novel, The Lamb's War (1980).

In 1985, de Hartog was awarded an honorary Doctor of Humane Letters (L.H.D.) degree from Whittier College.

He published the next book in the Martinus series, The Commodore, in 1986 while he was living in The Walled Garden in East Coker, Somerset, England, and it was followed by The Centurion (1989), which explored an interest in which he and his wife had become involved, dowsing.

In 1993, de Hartog and his wife returned to Houston. He returned to the Quaker theme to write the last in the series, The Peculiar People, in 1992.

De Hartog's last fully completed novel was The Outer Buoy: A Story of the Ultimate Voyage in 1994.

In 1996, de Hartog was honored as the annual "Special Guest" at the Netherlands Film Festival.

In 2002, de Hartog died at the age of 88. His ashes were taken to sea on a tugboat, the SMITWIJS SINGAPORE, and were scattered on the surface of the sea at position 52.02.5 N – 04.05.0 E at 13.10 hrs LT by his wife, Marjorie, and his son, Nick, while other family members spread flowers at the site.

In 2007, Marjorie de Hartog edited a short story that her husband had begun, A View of the Ocean.

Media

Books

Fiction

  • Hollands Glorie, roman van de zeesleepvaart (in Dutch). Amsterdam: Elsevier. 1940. ISBN:978-9089180100. LCCN:44020919. OCLC:21744141. OL:6471401M.The Lost Sea (1st:ed.). New York: Harper & Brothers. 1951. ISBN:978-0848809829. LCCN:51012214. OCLC:1578246. OL:6094530M.
  • The Distant S*: A Story of The Sea (1st:ed.). New York: Harper & Brothers. 1951. ISBN:978-0689103735. LCCN:52005443. OCLC:1152924887. OL:6109582M. (also published as Stella and The Key)
  • The Little Ark. Illustrated by Joseph Low (1st:ed.). New York: Harper & Brothers. 1954. ISBN:978-0689103735. LCCN:53011959. OCLC:436092774. OL:14449919M.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  • Pea*, Carlos, ed. (1954). Captain Jan: A Story of Ocean Tugboats (1st:ed.). Cleaver-Hume Press. ASIN:B0000CIC9A. OCLC:31766673. OL:17389365M – via Internet Archive.
  • The Spiral Road (1st:ed.). Harper & Brothers. 1957. ISBN:978-0892440924. OCLC:355524. OL:6202446M – via Internet Archive.
  • The Inspector (1960) ISBN:0-88411-069-9
  • The Artist (1963)
  • The Captain. New York: Atheneum. 1 January 1966. ISBN:978-0933852839. LCCN:66016358. OCLC:18383264. OL:5986408M – via Internet Archive.
  • The Call of the Sea; including The Lost Sea, The Distant S*, A Sailor's Life (1966)
  • The Peaceable Kingdom: An American Saga (1971) ISBN:0-449-21773-6
  • The Lamb's War (1st:ed.). New York: Harper & Row. 1979. ISBN:978-0060109950. LCCN:78020201. OCLC:1145733594. OL:4731678M.
  • The Trail of the Serpent (1983) ISBN:0-06-039018-2 also translated as The Flight of the Henny
  • Star of Peace (1983) ISBN:0-06-039029-8
  • Het Helig Experiment (1983)
  • The Commodore: A Novel of the Sea (1st:ed.). New York: Harper & Row. 1 May 1986. ISBN:978-0060390419. LCCN:84048591. OCLC:12023922. OL:2869502M.
  • The Centurion: A Novel (1989) ISBN:0-06-039094-8
  • The Peculiar People (1992) ISBN:0-679-41636-6
  • The Outer Buoy: A Story of the Ultimate Voyage (1st:ed.). New York: Pantheon Books. 1 November 1994. ISBN:978-0679436041. LCCN:94009780. OCLC:1036812867. OL:1085881M.
Stories
  • Mission to Borneo in Volume 30 - Summer 1957
  • Duel with a Witch Doctor in Volume 31 - Autumn 1957
  • "The Artist". Reader's Digest Condensed Books - Summer Selections. Vol.:3 (1st:ed.). Pleasantville, New York: Reader's Digest *ociation. 1 January 1963. pp.:11–77. ASIN:B003U0X78Y. OCLC:4553306. OL:24401987M – via Internet Archive.
  • "The Captain". Reader's Digest Condensed Books - Winter Selections. Vol.:1 (1st:ed.). Pleasantville, New York: Reader's Digest *ociation. 1967. pp.:135–287. ASIN:B000GSMB3U. OCLC:8902706. OL:24217930M – via Internet Archive.

Non-fiction

  • A Sailor's Life (1st:ed.). New York: Harper. 1 June 1956. ISBN:978-9997500595. LCCN:55008991. OCLC:948813805. OL:6177232M.
  • Waters of the New World: Houston to Nantucket. Drawings by Jo Spier. (1st:ed.). New York: Atheneum. 1961. ASIN:B000HKM02O. LCCN:61013559. OCLC:1646142. OL:14726953M.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  • The Hospital (1st:ed.). New York: Atheneum. 1 January 1964. ISBN:978-0971832206. LCCN:64023633. OCLC:391640. OL:5919861M.
  • The Sailing Ship. The Odyssey library. Vol.:2. Drawings by Jo Spier. (1st:ed.). Odyssey Press. 1961. ASIN:B0007DUGOK. LCCN:64012885. OCLC:1012409. OL:5911248M.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  • The Children: A Personal Record For the Use of Adoptive Parents (1st:ed.). New York: Hamilton. 1969. ISBN:978-0241016220. LCCN:73426700. OCLC:28911. OL:5513517M.
  • A View of the Ocean (1st:ed.). New York: Pantheon Books. 27 November 2007. ISBN:978-0375424700. LCCN:2006102683. OCLC:255792171. OL:2869502M. (released posthumously)

Adaptations

Movies

The Four Poster (1952) – 1hr 43min – Directed by Irving G. Reis

  • Based on the play The Fourposter.
  • Won Venice International Film Festival:— Volpi Cup for Best Actress (Lilli Palmer)
  • Nominated for a Golden Globe for Best Cinematography:— Black and white (Hal Mohr)
  • Nominated – Best Cinematography (Black-and-White) at the 26th Academy Awards (Hal Mohr)

The Key (1958) – 2hrs 1 min – Directed by Carol Reed

  • Based on the novel Stella:
  • with William Holden and Sophia Loren
  • Won a British Academy Award for Best British Actor (Trevor Howard)

The Spiral Road (1962) – 2hrs 25min – Directed by Robert Mulligan

  • Based on the novel of the same name.
  • starring Rock Hudson and Burl Ives

Lisa (1962) – 1hr 52min – Directed by Philip Dunne

  • Based on the novel, The Inspector
  • Released as The Inspector in the United Kingdom
  • starring Dolores Hart, Stephen Boyd and Donald Pleasence
  • Nominated for a Golden Globe for "Best Picture – Drama"

The Little Ark (1972) – 1hr 40min – Directed by James B. Clark

  • Based on the novel of the same name.
  • Nominated – Best Original Song ("Come Follow, Follow Me") at the 45th Academy Awards (Marsha Karlin and Fred Karlin)

Television

  • The Fourposter (Play on TV) (1955) – 1hr 30min – Directed by Clark Jones and aired on NBC, July 25, 1955, as an episode of the 'Producers' Showcase Series' whose tagline reads "Bringing the best of Broadway to the 21-inch screen".
  • The Four Poster, 1964 Australian TV play directed by James Upshaw

References

    External links

    Wikimedia Commons has media related to Jan de Hartog.
    • Biography of Jan de Hartog in the Daily Shipping Newsletter
    • "The Looniverse", by Harrie Verstappen, whose sources include on-going collaborations with Marjorie de Hartog. It covers more in-depth articles regarding details of Mr. De Hartog's books. It is a source for some of the material found on this page.
    • The Quaker Liar, An article by Ann Walton Sieber, which was originally published in the "Houston Press". It's a good source of information gleaned through personal contact with the De Hartogs.
    • An abridged version of "Jan de Hartog: A Captain on the Ocean of Light and Love", also by Ann Sieber, includes historic photographs of Jan De Hartog provided by his wife.
    • Writers Info website (in Dutch)
    • Jan de Hartog at IMDb
    • Summary of his book: "The Hospital" which also adds to the author biography
    • WeberStudies Volume 4.1 - Spring 1987 Archived 2012-02-12 at the Wayback Machine This is a transcript of a talk Jan de Hartog gave at Weber State College on November 17, 1986. It discusses his involvement with the Dutch Underground Theatre, along with notes regarding The Fourposter. While this is arguably not a proper biographical reference per Wikipedia guidelines, it should stand as a temporary one until conflicting or supporting references can be uncovered.
    • Ron Slate's review of A View of the Ocean includes de Hartog biography.
    • Jan de Hartog - Schoorl (Plaats van Herinnering) on YouTube -A video, possibly of interest, (though narrated entirely in Dutch) includes old filmstock of Jan.
    Jan de Hartog