Jacob Truedson Demitz

Jacob Truedson Demitz (born Lars-Erik Jacob Ridderstedt on August 13, 1948) is a Swedish-American writer and entertainment director known for his 1996 book AbOUT Scandinavian kings and, as Lars Jacob, for hundreds of cabaret shows in the United States and Europe from 1972 to 2004. He grew up in Illinois, returned to Sweden and later lived for extended periods in Florida and California.

Origin and names

Demitz was born in Örebro, Sweden, the son of singer Birgit Ridderstedt and C. Erik Ridderstedt, and first arrived in the United States as an infant, then living in and near Chicago until the age of 13. Through his father's crafts-and-gifts import business and his mother’s entertainment ventures he was inspired early in an inter-cultural environment.

Not wanting to be mistaken for a cleric uncle also called Lars Ridderstedt, who had gained notoriety in Sweden, he decided in 1969 to use Jacob as his first name of address. After noticing for many years the problems Americans had in using his parents' last name, he adopted the surname of Demitz in 1980, the original name from 1693 of the extinct House of Ridderstedt before nobility, and he was the first in 300 years to change his name back.

His patronymic Truedson added in 1990, stems from a Scanian great-great-grandfather Trued Abrehamsson, whose lineage has been traced back to the 1640s when the area and the family were Danish, and whose descendants outside of Europe inhabit many of the United States today.

Writer's career

Throne of a Thousand Years had more than 30 years of research by Demitz before it was published in 1996, appreciated particularly for its English-language name forms for Swedish royalty and a lack of nationalism. The book fulfilled collection requirements as a reference work and was included as such at more that 180 libraries, including the national libraries of 73 countries. It has been out of print since 2001.

Demitz's 500-volume historical library was accepted in advance for posthumous donation to the Folke Bernadotte Memorial Library at Gustavus Adolphus College, making him a member, as of 2005, of the college's Gustavus Heritage Partnership, named for Gustav II Adolph of Sweden.

An STIM member since 1970, Demitz has scripted and directed Max von Sydow for television in English and written special lyrics for major corporations. He has also done a regular half-page editorial column in 1996-1997 for Nya Ludvika Tidning (NLT) plus numerous other articles for selected press and information websites like Find A Grave, where 72 of his biographies (2008) have been approved by administrators for "Famous" status.

Demitz's published song lyrics started with a record album for EMI in 1970 which had good reviews, and a single for Odeon the following year, that both included his Swedish version of Burt Bacharach's "Close to You". Other adaptations include "Santa Baby", "Swing Low, Sweet Chariot" (both in Swedish), and an original company song in English for SAS Group called "Flying Time".

He also writes as a human rights activist, and his complaints led to the censure of one of the Sweden’s top judges in 1993, over erased trial tapes of testimony, and in 1995 to a nationally publicized debate over the use of young children to sell lottery tickets, commented on by a Cultural Minister in agreement.

In recent years, Demitz has reviewed and rewritten English text for Swedish individuals and organizations, including Karolinska Institutet in 2005.

Entertainment

Demitz debuted as a solo singer at the age of nine in one of his mother's programs on WTTW, was active in music and drama in school and began mainstream stage performances in a short-lived Swedish musical in 1968.

Having graduated Studentexamen that year at Mörby Läroverk (a junior college) in Danderyd, Sweden, specializing in languages and the musical arts, he desired within two years to cross the Atlantic again and moved to Florida. Attracting interest as a model of free-spirited European youth, he appeared in Tampa Bay area press and in 1972 as a featured guest on the talk shows of Herb Hunt and George Michelle.

A Stockholm disc jockey and dance leader in the early 1970’s, Demitz choreographed disco scenes in an avant-garde motion picture More from the Language of Love.

Returning there from Florida, he soon was Director of Entertainment for Sweden’s nightclub queen Alexandra Charles and in 1975-1976 put on celebrated shows for her and in Gothenburg that he had created earlier in Miami Beach. Fans of his decadent cabarets included the members of ABBA and tennis champion Björn Borg, who saw rambunctious new ground broken in domestic Swedish entertainment.

Lars Jacob’s mimical spoof Wild Side Story ran more than 500 times (1973-2004) in Florida, Sweden, California and Spain.

Demitz hosted a formal celebrity dinner at Berns on the Mae West Centennial in 1993. A month later his intended show extravaganza was cancelled there because of new demands from the restaurant due to insufficient sales of the SEK 1,000 tickets.

That same year and in 1995 he did some of his most appreciated performances as the "Preacher" in an outdoor musical event called Farmer's Wedding performed in his mother's native town of Ludvika and at the Stockholm Water Festival in the royal Kungsträdgården park. For a youth project called Läckerhetsvakten (a pun on 'security guard' for youthful health and attraction), the F.U.S.I.A. cabaret school (1998-2005) where Demitz was the creative director, got one of Skandia's "Ideas for Life" grants in 2001.

He has also lived in Salzburg, Austria where his voice was schooled in 1968-1969 by Grete Menzel, has English and Swedish as primary languages and speaks fluent German, French and Spanish plus dialects and phrases of a number of other tongues. Being multilingual, and his entertainment background, worked for Demitz in 1999-2000 at the 5-star Palm Oasis resort (belonging to Interval International) on Grand Canary, where he became a successful timeshare agent and defended ethical practices only in that field. The work drew severe criticism anyway from press in Sweden, where all forms of timeshare have had bad publicity and have been frowned upon.

Since 2005 he is Chairman of nonprofit foundation Southerly Clubs and since 2006 Deputy Chairman of FamSAC, an international society of some 5,000 relatives, among them Mattias Klum. Demitz has arranged and hosted international family reunions and commemorations, some of them large, in the Swedish capital and provinces of Sudermania, Scania and Dalecarlia as well as in New York City, New Jersey, Michigan, Minnesota, Nebraska and Wyoming.

Today he has retired from entertainment, aside from accepting an occasional assignment to direct, write or perform something of a less extensive nature. He works as a freelance inter-cultural communicator, usually based in Stockholm, and contributes charitably as a consultant to the business of a well known Swedish recruitment firm specializing in ethnicity and ethics.

Awards

Formally, Jacob Truedson Demitz wears The Beverly Hills Hotel’s five-year gold pin, from work 1976-1984 as Front Desk Manager and Duty Manager there, and a small decoration awarded in 1993 for various deeds in his Dalecarlian motherland by Sveriges Hembygdsförbund. The latter is the Association of Swedish Homelands and has over 1,900 homeland societies from all parts of that country as member organizations.

sv:Jacob Truedson Demitz