Jacqueline_Goldfinger

Jacqueline Goldfinger

Jacqueline Goldfinger

American playwright


Jacqueline Goldfinger (she/they) is an American playwright, librettist, and dramaturg who is known for her plays Bottle Fly and Backwards Forward Back. She grew up in rural North Florida with a love of music and storytelling. Today, she is a playwright-librettist who seeks out unique collaborations, working across disciplines to create singular works of theater and opera. She works nationally and internationally on performative texts which speak to our shared humanity while honoring the nuanced identities of each character and culture.

Quick Facts Born, Language ...

She also teaches, mentors, and is the Director of Creative Affairs for the Sledgehammer imprint of Tripwire Harlot Press which publishes plays and play anthologies by under recognized playwrights.

Career

Writing for the stage

Goldfinger began her career in fringe theater in 2007 by creating site-specific work with the San Diego Playwrights Collective and touring a one-act version of The Terrible Girls to the New York International Fringe Festival.[1]

Her full-length original plays include:

Her full-length adaptations include:

Her libretti include:

  • A Bright Mornin Dawns (choral): Composer Dominick DiOrio[18]
  • Twa (opera): Composer Justine F. Chen [19]
  • Alice Tierney (opera): Composer Melissa Dunphy [20]
  • Ascension (short opera): Composer Melissa Dunphy [21]
  • Halcyon Days (choral): Composer Melissa Dunphy,[22][23][24] 2021[25]
  • Letter to Our Children (short opera): Composer Justine F. Chen,[26] 2021
  • Set Myself Free (choral): Composer Melissa Dunphy, 2019[27]

Her works have been developed and produced nationally [28] and internationally,[29] including with the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, BBC 3 Radio (UK), Perseverance Theatre, Hangar Theatre, Contemporary American Theatre Festival, Voces8 (UK), Disquiet (Portugal), Gate Theatre (New Zealand), New Georges, Oberlin Opera, St. Martin in the Fields (UK), McCarter Theatre, Hangar Theatre, Theatre Exile, Unicorn Theatre, Resonance Works, Capitol Stage, Azuka Theatre, Wilma Theatre, Arden Theatre, The National Theater (UK), Philadelphia Theatre Company, People's Light and Theatre Company, Amuse Singers, Vortex Rep, Women's Theatre Festival, NYC International Fringe, and others.

Goldfinger has also written short plays and monologues.[30]

Goldfinger's work has been supported by Yaddo, Opera America, National Endowment for the Arts, Millay Colony, The Orchard Project, The Lark's Playwrights Week, New Georges’ Audrey Residency, Drama League's First Stage Residency, Granada Artist Residency at UC Davis, Emerson Stage's Playwright Residency, Playwrights Collective at Florida Studio Theatre, Sewanee Writers Conference Dakin and Williams Fellowships, Mid Atlantic Arts Foundation, Independence Foundation Fellowship in the Arts, among others.

Major creative publications

  • Halcyon Days (choral): “A beautifully concordant and consoling prayer.” -Opera Today
  • Bottle Fly (play): “Jacqueline Goldfinger is that rarity in American theatre--a poet-playwright. Bottle Fly is a gorgeous play, roaring with the sacred and the profane and--for all its passion--delicately conveyed.”—Dan O’Brien, playwright, The Body of an American and The House in Scarsdale, Guggenheim Fellow in Drama & Performance Art (USA)
  • The Arsonists (play): "Jacqueline Goldfinger’s spellbinding new play...The Arsonists, put me in mind of a kind of gender-reversed Sam Shepard—especially Shepard’s early collaborative work with Patti Smith...As in Shepard, there is a sense that love, loss, and betrayal are inseparable...What makes The Arsonists so extraordinary is in part its contradictory oddness. It’s realistic and gritty, but also beautifully poetic; epic in scale, but it runs only 70 minutes. There’s very little plot, but every line tells a story. By the time we reach the finale, the tone has shifted considerably. There is a sense here that the playwright honors a history of theater (the Greeks, Shepard, also Eugene O’Neill’s Mourning Becomes Electra), but it’s also contemporary. Best of all, Goldfinger’s voice is distinctly, wonderfully her own." -Philadelphia Magazine
  • The Terrible Girls (play): “3 Women comes to mind…Sharp comic timing brings a vital levity to the cutting plot twists and nightmarish revelations. It’s an interesting examination of need for authority, whether real or imagined, that keeps us in the most precarious situations. Emotional needs beat logic to the truth in this pressure-cooker drama.” -CityPaper

Major academic publications

  • She is the Guest Editor of the Spring Issue of the Journal of American Drama and Theatre, with the theme of "Revolutions in New Work Development"[31]
  • Goldfinger, Jacqueline; Horsley, Allison (2022). Writing Adaptations and Translations for the Stage: A Guide and Workbook for New and Experienced Writers. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 978-1-000-63705-2.
  • Goldfinger, Jacqueline (2021). Playwriting with Purpose: A Guide and Workbook for New Playwrights. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-000-42506-2.
  • Goldfinger, Jacqueline (2020). "Contemporary Women Stage Directors: Conversations on Craft by Paulette Marty (review)". Journal of Dramatic Theory and Criticism. 35 (1): 164–166. doi:10.1353/dtc.2020.0028. S2CID 235065274. Project MUSE 781037.
  • Goldfinger, Jacqueline (17 February 2020). "Stage Review of Jitney at Arena Stage". August Wilson Journal. 2. doi:10.5195/awj.2020.53. S2CID 213965170.

Teaching and mentoring

Goldfinger co-founded The Foundry with playwrights Michael Hollinger and Quinn Eli in 2012. The programme provides a free three-year mentorship and professional development program for emerging playwrights in Philadelphia.[32] It continues as part of the PlayPenn New Play Conference Education Department. She has also taught playwriting workshops in the United States and internationally, including University of Pennsylvania (undergrad), University of California, Davis (graduate) and Disquiet Literary Conference, Portugal (adults).[33]


References

  1. Comer, Ronald (24 March 2011). ""the terrible girls": A Southern Gothic Drama". Stage Magazine. Retrieved 2021-09-27.
  2. BWW News Desk. "Seattle Public Theater to Present Jacqueline Goldfinger's SLIP/SHOT, 9/25-10/12". BroadwayWorld.com. Retrieved 2021-05-22.
  3. Rosenberg, Amy S. (10 April 2012). "Trayvon Martin shooting has parallels with new play 'Slip/Shot,' premiering in Philadelphia". www.inquirer.com. Retrieved 2021-05-21.
  4. "Yale Drama Series Winners". Yale University Press. Retrieved December 3, 2021.
  5. Tran, Diep (2019-06-18). "The Kilroys Release Newest List of Noteworthy Plays by Women". AMERICAN THEATRE. Retrieved 2021-05-21.
  6. "The List 2019 | The Kilroys". 2019-06-12. Retrieved 2021-07-04.
  7. "The Arsonists". Concord Theatricals. Retrieved 2021-05-21.
  8. "the terrible girls by Jacqueline Goldfinger | Playscripts Inc". www.playscripts.com. Retrieved 2021-05-21.
  9. Bernstein, Jesse (2019-03-26). "'Click' Explores Collision of Tech, Identity". Jewish Exponent. Retrieved 2021-05-21.
  10. "BACKWARDS FORWARDS BACK | March 24 - April 23, 2023". urbanitetheatre. Retrieved 2022-12-04.
  11. Homer, Dara. "BWW Review: A WIND IN THE DOOR at the Kennedy Center". BroadwayWorld.com. Retrieved 2021-09-10.
  12. Mostafavi, Kendall (2021-09-08). "Kennedy Center opens a fantastic 'Wind in the Door' for kids". DC Metro Theater Arts. Retrieved 2021-09-10.
  13. "The Little Mermaid". Hangar - Ithaca, NY. Retrieved 2021-07-15.
  14. "Dominick DiOrio | home". dominickdiorio.com. Retrieved 2022-12-04.
  15. "Solstice: VOCES8 & The Aeolians". Opera Today. 2020-12-08. Retrieved 2021-07-04.
  16. "Upon your heart". St Martin's Digital. Retrieved 2021-07-04.
  17. "Letter to Our Children". FilmFreeway. Retrieved 2022-12-04.
  18. Editors, American Theatre (2020-03-11). "Contemporary American Theater Festival Announces 2020 Season". AMERICAN THEATRE. Retrieved 2021-05-24. {{cite web}}: |last= has generic name (help)
  19. "The Arsonists". The Court Theatre. Retrieved 2021-05-24.
  20. Harbison, Lawrence (2019). The Best Women's Monologues from New Plays, 2019. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 978-1-4930-5332-2.[page needed]
  21. "Publications". Jacqueline Goldfinger. Retrieved 2022-12-04.
  22. "Jacqueline Goldfinger". Disquiet International. Retrieved 2021-05-22.

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