Jan van Dommelen(1878-1942)
- Actor
- Director
As one of the first actors in Dutch movies, Jan van Dommelen was born
with the blood to be an actor. His father Charles was a prolific stage
actor. Of Charles' nine children, four followed their father's
footsteps. Apart from Caroline van Dommelen and Louis van Dommelen, Jan's older brother Frits
also made a living out of acting. Van Dommelen gained his love for
acting while doing minor stage roles. In 1891, he enrolled at the
Toneelschool (Academy of Dramatic Arts). He graduated in 1895 and
became member of Koninklijke Vereeniging Het Nederlandsch Tooneel, a
Dutch theatrical company. He worked there for 14 years and got
increasingly more important roles. In 1911, Van Dommelen encountered a
new medium: film. Dutch producer F.A. Nöggerath Jr. opened a film studio and
contracted three of the Van Dommelen's. Jan van Dommelen became an
actor in the first known Dutch movies: De bannelingen (1911) and Ontrouw (1911), which was
produced by Nöggerath. Nöggerath quit his production company in 1913,
but Van Dommelen had already found shelter with Filmfabriek Hollandia,
under charge of Maurits Binger. Director Louis Chrispijn Jr. brought Van Dommelen with him
when he took over the artistic direction of the company. The change for
Van Dommelen wasn't a bad one, as he shined in Op hoop van zegen (1918) and Schakels (1920).
When his cooperation with Hollandia ended after a conflict over makeup
with the new chief director B.E. Doxat-Pratt, he played only minor roles until
1927. In that year, he funded an experimental sound film out of his own
pocket, 'Het heksenlied'. The idea was to let an orchestra play, while
Van Dommelen recited his text from behind the curtains, while the film
images rolled. The experiment failed because in the mean time, ordinary
sound films were already produced. The sound film meant virtually the
end for the career of Jan van Dommelen. Van Dommelen was thereafter
only asked to play very minor roles.