Wendy Wasserstein Biography

Occup.Playwright
FromUSA
BornOctober 18, 1950
DiedJanuary 30, 2006
Aged55 years
Wendy Wasserstein, a remarkable American playwright and humorist, was born on October 18, 1950, in Brooklyn, New York, to Morris and Lola Wasserstein. A true New Yorker, Wasserstein spent her entire life in the city despite her trips around the world for job as well as pleasure. Growing up in a Jewish middle-class household along with her 4 brother or sisters, she was rooted in her heritage, which took place to play a considerable duty in her writing.

Wasserstein attended the prominent Calhoun School in Manhattan before registering in Mount Holyoke College, a highly-regarded women's college, where she graduated in 1971 with a level in background. Her enthusiasm for theatre developed at Mount Holyoke, where she started writing as well as acting in the school's manufacturings. After getting her level, Wasserstein continued her education in theatre, earning an MFA from the Yale School of Drama in 1976.

Her breakthrough can be found in 1977 when her play "Uncommon Women and Others" was produced off-Broadway at the Phoenix Theatre. The play dealt with the lives as well as desires of a group of girls that had attended a women's college not as well dissimilar to Mount Holyoke. The play garnered vital recognition and recognized Wasserstein as a distinctive, insightful voice in American theater.

Wendy Wasserstein then went on to compose several notable plays, consisting of "The Heidi Chronicles" (1988), which made her a Tony Award and the Pulitzer Prize for Drama. The play, which chronicled the coming-of-age trip of a woman called Heidi from the 1960s to the 1980s, greatly resembled Wasserstein's own experiences and the evolving function of women in society. Various other significant plays in her oeuvre consisted of "Isn't It Romantic" (1983), "The Sisters Rosensweig" (1992), as well as "An American Daughter" (1997).

Throughout her career, Wasserstein was an eager viewer of the transpositions of females's lives in contemporary America, as well as her plays represented the struggle of females in the contemporary world. Along with her operate in the theatre, she was a prolific author that contributed to publications such as The New Yorker, The New York Times, as well as Harper's Bazaar.

Wasserstein was known for her signature wit as well as empathy, that made her a favorite among the literary and theatre-loving areas, gaining her numerous honorary levels, as well as prominent settings on arts-related boards.

Although Wendy Wasserstein had an online reputation for being guarded regarding her personal life, she came to be a single mommy at the age of 48, bring to life her daughter, Lucy Jane, in 1999. This experience inspired greatly different stories from her previous job, consisting of the youngsters's book "Pamela's First Musical" and the play "Third" (2005), which analyzed intergenerational relationships.

On January 30, 2006, Wasserstein caught lymphoma at the age of 55. Her death noted the end of an era, with her works remaining to be celebrated for their genuineness, humor, and also insightful representation of the female experience in America. Wendy Wasserstein's legacy as an artist and also feminist trailblazer withstands, inspiring a brand-new generation of playwrights as well as theater lovers.

Our collection contains 5 quotes who is written / told by Wendy.

Related authors: Lawrence Taylor (Athlete)

Wendy Wasserstein Famous Works:

5 Famous quotes by Wendy Wasserstein

Small: Because of Mozart, its all over after the age of seven
"Because of Mozart, it's all over after the age of seven"
Small: Dont live down to expectations. Go out there and do something remarkable
"Don't live down to expectations. Go out there and do something remarkable"
Small: Being a grownup means assuming responsibility for yourself, for your children, and - heres the big curv
"Being a grownup means assuming responsibility for yourself, for your children, and - here's the big curve - for your parents"
Small: The real reason for comedy is to hide the pain
"The real reason for comedy is to hide the pain"
Small: Sometimes I want to clean up my desk and go out and say, respect me, Im a respectable grown-up, and oth
"Sometimes I want to clean up my desk and go out and say, respect me, I'm a respectable grown-up, and other times I just want to jump into a paper bag and shake and bake myself to death"