- Source: Nathaniel Benchley
Nathaniel Goddard Benchley (November 13, 1915 – December 14, 1981) was an American author from Massachusetts.
Early life
Born in Newton, Massachusetts to a literary family, he was the son of Robert Benchley (1889–1945), a noted American writer, humorist, critic, and actor and one founder of the Algonquin Round Table in New York City, and Gertrude Darling. He graduated from Phillips Exeter Academy and Harvard College.
Benchley enlisted in the U.S. Navy prior to the attack on Pearl Harbor. He served as a public relations officer, and on destroyers and patrol craft for North Atlantic convoy duty during the Battle of the Atlantic, and was transferred to the Pacific Theater in 1945.
Career
After the war Benchley worked for the weekly magazine Newsweek as an assistant drama editor. Harcourt, Brace published Benchley's first book in 1950, Side Street, a novel featuring "hilarious activities of two New York City families living in the East Sixties"—that is, living on the East Side of Manhattan near 60th Street.
He wrote a biography of his father Robert that McGraw-Hill published in 1955.
In 1960 Harper & Row published his second novel, Sail A Crooked Ship, and Random House his first children's book, retold from Sindbad the Sailor with illustrations by Tom O'Sullivan.
Benchley was the respected author of much children's fiction that provides readers an experience of certain animal species, historical settings, and so on (Oscar Otter, Sam The Minuteman, etc). He presented diverse locales and topics: for instance, Bright Candles recounts the experiences of a 16-year-old Danish boy during the German occupation of Denmark in World War II; Small Wolf features a Native American boy who meets white men on the island of Manhattan and learns that their ideas about land are different from those of his own people.
Sail A Crooked Ship was adapted as a comedy feature movie of the same name by Columbia Pictures in 1961. His 1961 novel The Off-Islanders was made into comedy feature The Russians Are Coming, the Russians Are Coming by director/producer Norman Jewison in 1965. The Visitors (1965) was adapted as a horror/comedy feature The Spirit Is Willing by Paramount Pictures in 1967. In October 1975, ABC showed the made-for-television drama Sweet Hostage, based on Benchley's 1968 novel Welcome To Xanadu.
Benchley was a friend of the actor Humphrey Bogart and wrote a biography of Bogart published in 1975.
Personal life
Benchley and Margaret Bradford were married not long after his college years. They settled in New York City and had two sons, one before and one after World War II.
Elder son Peter Benchley (1940–2006) was a writer, known best for the novel Jaws and the screenplay for its Steven Spielberg movie, 1975's Jaws. Younger son Nat Benchley is a writer and actor who has portrayed his grandfather, Robert Benchley, in a one-man, semi-biographical stage show, Benchley Despite Himself. The show was a compilation of Robert Benchley's best monologues, short movies, radio rantings, and pithy pieces as recalled, edited, and acted by grandson Nat, combined with family reminiscences and friends' perspectives.
Nathaniel Benchley died 1981 in Boston and was interred in the family plot at Prospect Hill Cemetery in Nantucket.
Bibliography
= Novels
=Side Street (Harcourt, Brace, 1950)
A Firm Word or Two (1958)
Sail a crooked ship. New York: McGraw-Hill. 1960.
The off-islanders. New York: McGraw-Hill. 1961.
Catch a Falling Spy (1964)
A Winter's Tale (1964)
The Visitors (1965)
The Monument : A Satiric Novel (1966)
Welcome to Xanadu (1968)
The Wake of the Icarus (1969)
Lassiter's Folly (1971)
The Hunters Moon (1972)
A Necessary End: A Novel of World War II (1976)
Sweet Anarchy (1979)
Portrait of a Scoundrel (1979)
All Over Again (1981)
Speakeasy (1982)
= Non-fiction
=The Benchley Roundup: A Selection by Nathaniel Benchley of His Favorites (1954), by Robert Benchley, LCCN 54--8937
Robert Benchley, a biography. New York: McGraw-Hill. 1955.
Humphrey Bogart (1975)
= Essays and reporting
="Introduction", Twentieth Century Parody, American and British, ed. Burling Lowrey (1960), OCLC 338183
Benchley, Nathaniel (1953). "Are husbands helpless?". In Birmingham, Frederic A. (ed.). The girls from Esquire. London: Arthur Barker. pp. 214–218.
= Short fiction
== Plays
=The frogs of spring, a comedy in three acts (1954) https://lccn.loc.gov/54036696
= Children's books
=Sinbad, the sailor. Illustrated by Tom O'Sullivan. New York: Random House. 1960.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
Welcome to Xanadu (1968)
The Flying Lesson of Gerald Pelican (1970), illus. Mamoru Funai
Feldman Fieldmouse: A Fable (1971), illus. Hilary Knight
Gone and Back (1971) – Oklahoma "pioneer adventure of Obediah Taylor, a boy reaching manhood" OCLC 129030
The Magic Sled (1972), illus. Mel Furukawa; UK title, The Magic Sledge
Only Earth and Sky Last Forever (1972) – "Although recognizing the end of the Indians' freedom is near, a young Cheyenne still chooses to fight with Crazy Horse", OCLC 584020
The Deep Dives of Stanley Whale (1973), illus. Mischa Richter
Bright Candles: A Novel of the Danish Resistance (1974) – features "a sixteen-year-old Danish boy during the German occupation", OCLC 852747
Beyond the Mists: A Novel (1975) – features "an adventurous youth who travels to Vinland with Leif Eriksson", OCLC 1728948
Kilroy and the Gull (1977), illus. John Schoenherr – a Marineland killer whale "escapes to life on the open sea with his friend Morris the sea gull", OCLC 2372722
Demo and the Dolphin (1981), illus. Stephen Gammell
Snip (1981), illus. Irene Trivas
Walter, the Homing Pigeon (1981), illus. Whitney Darrow
I Can Read series
Red Fox and His Canoe (1964), illustrated by Arnold Lobel
Oscar Otter (1966), illus. Lobel
The Strange Disappearance of Arthur Cluck (1967), illus. Lobel
A Ghost Named Fred (1968), illus. Ben Shecter
Sam, the Minuteman (1969), illus. Lobel
The Several Tricks of Edgar Dolphin (1970), illus. Mamoru Funai
Small Wolf (1972), illus. Joan Sandin
Snorri and the Strangers (1976), illus. Don Bolognese
George, the Drummer Boy (1977), illus. Bolognese
Running Owl the Hunter (1979), illus. Funai
References
External links
Nathaniel Benchley at IMDb
Nathaniel Benchley at Find a Grave
Nathaniel Benchley at Library of Congress, with 52 library catalog records
Works by or about Nathaniel Benchley at the Internet Archive
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Peter Benchley
- Sail a Crooked Ship
- The Russians Are Coming, the Russians Are Coming
- Christian X dari Denmark
- Phillips Exeter Academy
- Skenario Terburuk (Razzie)
- Nathaniel Benchley
- Robert Benchley
- Peter Benchley
- Nat Benchley
- Dark Magic (film)
- Arnold Lobel bibliography
- Sweet Hostage
- Benchley
- Humphrey Bogart
- The Deep (1977 film)