Heather McDonald (playwright)
American dramatist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American dramatist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Heather McDonald (born 1959) is an American playwright, director, librettist, and professor.[1][2]
Mcdonald is originally a Canadian citizen. She graduated from the University of Florida with a BFA in English. She is an MFA graduate of New York University's Tisch School of the Arts.
Heather McDonald has published eight plays, two screenplays, and a libretto. Her plays have been performed nationally and all over the world.[3]
She has attended the Sundance Institute twice, first as a director, and most recently as a playwright for the 2010 Playwrights Retreat at Ucross.[4]
McDonald has been a regular teacher at the Kennedy Center Intensive at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington, D.C. The program is a two-week session of writing workshops and discussions about the business of playwriting.[5]
McDonald is a full-time professor at George Mason University. Her courses include playwriting workshop, advanced playwriting, the screenplay, and advanced playwriting workshop.[6]
McDonald pioneered the Ten-Minute Play Festival, where students produce, direct, and act in ten-minute plays written by students.[7]
Heather McDonald was an artistic associate of the Theater of the First Amendment.[8]
"Since 1990, TFA has produced 44 full productions and numerous staged readings of new work. Our productions have won 12 Helen Hayes Awards (DC’s equivalent of the Tony Awards) out of 37 nominations. Many plays originating at TFA have been published, produced nationally and internationally, televised and broadcast, or recorded as award-winning original soundtrack CDs".[9]
In June 2011, TFA hosted Playwrights in Mind: A National Conversation,[10] a playwrights conference. It was sponsored by the Dramatists Guild and featured many celebrated playwrights, including David Ives, Stephen Schwartz, Mame Hunt, Molly Smith, Christopher Durang, Emily Mann, and Julia Jordon.
She resides in Baltimore.
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