Skipper Next to God (play)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Written byJan de Hartog
Directed byJan de Hartog (UK)
Irene Mitchell (AU)
Lee Strasberg (US)
Date premieredJuly 23, 1945 (UK)
April 19, 1947 (AU)
January 4, 1948 (US)
Skipper Next to God
John Garfield in Broadway production
Written byJan de Hartog
Directed byJan de Hartog (UK)
Irene Mitchell (AU)
Lee Strasberg (US)
Date premieredJuly 23, 1945 (UK)
April 19, 1947 (AU)
January 4, 1948 (US)
Place premieredTheatre Royal, Windsor (UK)
Melbourne Little Theatre (AU)
Maxine Elliott's Theatre (US)
Original languageDutch
SubjectShip's captain struggles to safely land refugees
GenreMelodrama
SettingCaptain's cabin on The Young Nelly

Skipper Next to God is a 1940s play written by Dutch author Jan de Hartog. It is a melodrama with three acts, a single setting, and fifteen characters. The action of the play spans two months time during 1938. The story concerns the captain of a Dutch merchant ship who has taken on 146 Jewish refugee passengers from Hamburg, and struggles to find a port in the New World that will accept them.

The play was first performed for underground audiences during the German occupation of the Netherlands. Its first public and English-language performance was at Windsor, England during July 1945. It was revived in London by Anthony Hawtrey during November 1945, and had its Australian premiere in Melbourne during April 1947.

Cheryl Crawford then sponsored the play in Manhattan in early January 1948 as a non-commercial production for The Experimental Theatre. The play was staged by Lee Strasberg with the single setting by Boris Aronson. The star was John Garfield, who took on the role for the same pay as the other actors. Originally meant for a one-week engagement, Skipper Next to God proved so popular with audiences that it was extended three weeks then converted to a commercial Broadway production, where it ran until the end of March 1948. Critical reception was mostly positive, with the New York Daily News including Skipper Next to God among the ten best plays of the 1947-1948 season.

Characters are listed in order of appearance within their scope.

Lead

  • Joris Kuiper is captain of his family's merchant ship, a repentant sinner of deep Christian faith.

Supporting

  • Richters is the conscientious and overworked ship's doctor for The Young Nelly.
  • Rabbi is the compassionate liaison between the passengers and the ship's officers.
  • Chief Davelaar is the rough-edged, blunt-spoken first engineer of The Young Nelly.
  • Bruinsma is captain of the Amsterdam, another Dutch ship in South America.
  • American Officer is a US Navy officer who boards The Young Nelly off Long Island.
  • Dutch Officer is a dry, bureaucratic Royal Netherlands Navy officer.
  • The Clergyman is a hypocritical cynic who quotes scripture to counter the Skipper's conscience.

Featured

  • Henky is a messroom boy on The Young Nelly.
  • Willemse is the ship's doctor for the Amsterdam.
  • Officer is a South American military police officer.
  • Meyer is the first mate on The Young Nelly.
  • Consul is the sympathetic but unhelpful Dutch Consul in the South American port city.
  • First Jew is a passenger on The Young Nelly.
  • Second Jew is another passenger on The Young Nelly.

Voice Only

  • Passengers, six male and four female.

Synopsis

This synopsis is compiled from contemporary newspaper and magazine reviews.

Act I (Interior of Captain Kuiper's cabin, while docked in a South American port.) Captain Kuiper has taken aboard 146 Jewish emigrants at Hamburg on a merchant ship not designed for so many passengers. Their papers are in order, but the authorities in this South American port have sent a military police officer to prevent their disembarking. Richters is concerned for the health of passengers and crew in such crowded conditions. He is being aided by Willemse, who has been sent to the Young Nelly by Bruinsma. Chief Davelaar and Meyer argue with Captain Kuiper about continuing the voyage, and trying to find a safe port for the passengers. The Dutch Consul comes aboard to advise Kuiper on how the passengers might be smuggled ashore, which Kuiper rejects, as it will leave them exposed to arrest and immediate deportation. (Curtain)

Act II (Same as Act I, but while laying offshore of Long Island, New York.) Kuiper has tried three times to enter US ports, but has been blocked by the US Navy and Coast Guard. A US Naval officer boards the Young Nelly to express admiration for Kuiper's cause, but advises him not to try grounding his ship on American soil. Kuiper appeals to his own government, but a Dutch Navel Officer quotes regulations that prohibit such help. A religious man, Kuiper next asks a minister from his own faith for advice. The clergyman matches Kuiper scriptural quote for quote in disclaiming church involvement in the refugee question. (Curtain)

Act III (Same as Act II.) With his officers and crew overwhelmed and rebellious, and the passengers themselves despairing and ready to give up, Kuiper decides on a drastic course of action. An international yacht regatta is occurring in nearby waters. Kuiper will put all his crew and passengers into lifeboats and scuttle his family's ship, forcing the yachts to pick them up. As distressed mariners, they will then automatically be given free entry to the nearest port, succor denied them as refugees. (Curtain)

First productions

The play was written by Jan de Hartog while living under German occupation in the Netherlands.[1] He also wrote Death of a Rat at that time, which would later be known in America as This Time Tomorrow. Both plays were performed for underground audiences during the occupation; on one occasion, de Hartog himself played all fifteen parts in Skipper Next to God.[1]

Its first public and English-language production was for a week-long engagement at the Theatre Royal, Windsor, starting July 23, 1945.[2] Jan de Hartog himself performed, along with Abraham Sofaer, Frederick Piper, Finlay Currie, Reginald Jarman, Julian Somers, and members of the Windsor Repertory Company.[1]

Skipper Next to God was then revived by Anthony Hawtrey at the Embassy Theatre (London), starting November 27, 1945.[3] Jan de Hartog played the title role, while Abraham Sofaer was the Rabbi;[4] others in the cast were Frederick Piper and Michael Clarke. W. A. Darlington thought the play had a fine idea and the skipper was a potentially rewarding part, but that de Hartog lacked the skill and experience to get the most out of either. He conceded that "All the same, I have spent many less rewarding evenings in the company of better plays and better players".[5] Though he knew Skipper Next to God concerned refugees voluntarily fleeing persecution in 1938, Ivor Brown chiefly considered the play from the viewpoint of postwar politics, particularly the settlement of Jewish displaced persons in the Palestinian Mandate. He did give grudging praise to de Hartog's biblical skipper, but thought Abraham Sofaer was excellent "in a part insufficient for his quality".[6]

The Melbourne Little Theatre produced Skipper Next to God in Australia starting April 19, 1947. Frank Thring played Captain Kuiper and Ben Sainken the Rabbi,[7] with Ken Burgess as Bruinsma, Max Bruch as the Dutch Naval Officer, and Lewis Tegart as Chief Davelaar.[8] Irene Mitchell directed, with Stewart Ginn and Barry Gordon also in the cast.[9] This production ran through May 10, 1947.[8]

Broadway production

Notes

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI