Merton Hodge
Horace Emerton Hodge, known as Merton Hodge was a playwright, actor and medical practitioner.
Life
Hodge was born in Taruheru, Poverty Bay, New Zealand. His father was a farmer named Alfred Hodge. He studied at Kings College in Auckland and later attended The University of Otago to study medicine in 1925. During his time at university, Hodge developed an interest in performing arts and was a member of the University Dramatic Society. He wrote a play for the society that later became The Wind and the Rain.Hodge graduated from the University of Otago in 1928. He briefly worked at Wellington Public Hospital as a casualty officer and also as a doctor aboard the 'Port Pirie' ship. In 1931, Hodge arrived in the United Kingdom and underwent postgraduate studies at the University of Edinburgh.
After a stint in New York working in theatre, Hodge returned to London in 1939 and worked for Camberwell Hospital for Nervous Diseases. He later toured with ENSA before resuming medicine in 1948. Hodge relocated from London to Dunedin, New Zealand in 1952.
Hodge is believed to have married Kathleen Rutherford. However, some sources dispute this.
Hodge ended his life by drowning on 9 October 1958, aged 54.
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, 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 which starred Sybil Thorndike, Globe Theatre, 1935;
- Men in White, Lyric Theatre, 1935;
- The Orchard Walls, St James Theatre, 1937;
- The Island, written with actor Godfrey Tearle, Comedy Theatre, 1938;
- The Story of An African Farm, New Theatre, 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.
Publications