| Jack Hemingway | |
|---|---|
| Born | John Hadley Nicanor Hemingway October 10, 1923 Toronto, Ontario, Canada |
| Died | December 1, 2000 (aged 77) New York City, New York, United States |
| Occupation | Writer |
| Spouse(s) | Byra Whittlesey (1949–1988) Angela Holvey |
| Children | Joan Hemingway (born 1950) Margaux Louise Hemingway(1955–1996) Mariel Hadley Hemingway (born 1961) |
John "Jack" Hadley Nicanor Hemingway (October 10, 1923 – December 1, 2000) was an American writer and conservationist.
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He was born in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, the only child of American writer Ernest Hemingway's marriage to his first wife Hadley Richardson. He would later gain two half-brothers from Hemingway's second marriage. Jack was named for his mother and a noted Spanish matador Nicanor Villalta y Serris, whom his father had grown to particularly admire in the year of Jack's birth.[1]
Nicknamed "Bumby", Hemingway spent his early years in Paris, France, and the Austrian Alps. Gertrude Stein and her partner, Alice B. Toklas, were his godparents.[2]
He served in World War II as a member of the Office of Strategic Services (OSS), a United States wartime intelligence agency formed during World War II — and the predecessor of the Central Intelligence Agency — working specifically with the French Resistance. In October 1944 he was wounded and captured by the German Nazis behind their lines in the Vosges, France.[3]
Following World War II he was stationed in West Berlin, Germany.
He helped finish his father's autobiography, A Moveable Feast (1964) — his father's set of memoirs of his life in 1920s Paris — which was published three years after his father's death in 1961.
Hemingway also wrote an autobiography Misadventures of a Fly Fisherman: My life with and without Papa.
Hemingway married Byra L. "Puck" Whittlesey on June 25, 1949, in Paris.[4] The couple had three children: Joan "Muffet" Hemingway (born 1950), Margaux Louise Hemingway (1955—1996), an actress and model, and Mariel Hadley Hemingway (born 1961), an actress, entrepreneur and writer.
Puck died in 1988. Margaux died of a barbiturate overdose at age 41.
Throughout his life, Jack Hemingway was an avid fly fisherman. He visited several of the world's best salmon rivers, like the famous Norwegian Lærdalselva River.
He died on December 1, 2000, at age 77, after suffering complications of heart surgery, at Weill Cornell Medical Center in New York City, New York.[2]