The Historical Dictionary of the American Theater

NATHAN, GEORGE JEAN

Nathan, George Jean: translation

(1882-1958)
Born in Fort Wayne, Indiana, the son of wealthy parents, he graduated from Cornell University in 1904, then spent a year studying at the University of Bologna. As a reporter for theNew York Herald, he published his first theatre reviews in 1906. After stints reviewing forOutingandThe Bohemian, Nathan became drama critic ofThe Smart Setin 1909, working closely withH. L. Mencken. They coedited the publication for a decade, from 1914-1924, and cofoundedThe American Mercury, for which Nathan wrote dramatic criticism until 1932. Nathan and Mencken also wrote two unsuccessful plays,The Artist(1912) andHeliogabulus(1920), but more importantly Nathan championed modernist theatre in his writings, emphasizing the significance of the plays of Henrik Ibsen, George Bernard Shaw, and August Strindberg.He assailed the quality of American theatre prior to the emergence of Eugene O'Neill, whose plays Nathan actively promoted.
In 1932, Nathan foundedThe American Spectatorwith the aid of O'Neill and others, and he edited it until 1935, after which he wrote criticism for an array of publications, includingPuck, Judge, Vanity Fair, The Saturday Review of Literature, Newsweek, THEATRE ARTS, andEsquire. Nathan's many books, some of which collected his criticisms, includeMr. George Jean Nathan Presents(1917),The Popular Theatre(1918),Comedians All(1919),The Theatre, The Drama, The Girls(1921),The Critic and the Drama(1922),The Testament of the Critic(1931),Since Ibsen(1933),The Theatre of the Moment(1936), andEncyclopedia of the Theatre(1940). Beginning in 1943, he published an annual,The Theatre Book of the Year, which ended with his death. Nathan married actress Julie Haydon* in 1955 and endowed an annual George Jean Nathan Award for Dramatic Criticism. After World War II, his influence declined.