Merton Hodge

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Merton Hodge
Born
Merton Emerton Hodge

(1903-03-28)28 March 1903
, Poverty Bay, New Zealand
Died9 October 1958(1958-10-09) (aged 55)
Dunedin, New Zealand
Nationality New Zealand
Occupationactor, medical practitioner, playwright

Merton Emerton Hodge (28 March 1903 – 9 October 1958) was a playwright, actor and medical practitioner.

Born in , Poverty Bay, New Zealand, he studied at Kings College in Auckland, Otago Medical School in 1925, graduated in 1928 (M.B., Ch.B), completed post-graduate studies at Edinburgh University.

As well as continuing his medical studies Hodge pursued his lifelong interest in theatre and continued to write plays throughout his working medical life.

Plays[]

Hodge is best known for his comedy The Wind and the Rain, which was performed 1,001 times, from 1933, at St. Martin's Theatre in London's West End, and six months in 1934 at the Ritz Theatre on New York's Broadway,[1] toured the world and was translated into nine languages. Plays produced in London:

  • The Wind and the rain, St Martin's Theatre, 1933–1935;
  • Grief goes over, Globe Theatre, 1935;
  • Men in white (anglicised form), Lyric Theatre, 1935;
  • The Orchard walls, St James Theatre, 1937;
  • The Island, Comedy Theatre, 1938;
  • Story of an African farm, New Theatre (from Olive Schreiner's novel), 1938;
  • To Whom we belong, Q Theatre, 1939;
  • Once there was music, Q Theatre, 1942;

Recordings[]

  • My Life in the Theatre, series for overseas broadcast for British Broadcasting Service.

His suicide by drowning came in Dunedin in 1958.

Publications[]

The plays The Wind and the rain, Grief goes over, Men in white, The Island, Story of an African farm and a novelised version of The Wind and the rain, 1936.

References[]

  1. ^ "The Wind and the Rain", IBDB, accessed 16 August 2021

External links[]

  • Hodge's personal papers are held by the Alexander Turnbull Library [1], Wellington, New Zealand
  • Merton Hodge at IMDb
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