“The biggest stories are written
about the things which draw human beings closer together.” – Susan
Glaspell
Born on July 1, 1876 Glaspell was
a Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright as well as an actress, novelist and
journalist who joined with her husband George Cram Cook to found the
Provincetown Players, America’s first modern American theater company.
She also served in the Works Progress Administration (WPA) as Midwest Bureau
Director of the Federal Theater Project, created during the Great Depression as
a relief measure for artists, writers, directors and theater workers to help keep regional theater alive.
A prolific writer, Glaspell wrote 9 novels, 15 plays, more than 50 short stories, and a biography, a leading writer on issues of gender, ethics, and dissent. She has been recognized as a pioneering feminist writer and America’s first important modern female playwright. Her one-act play Trifles, written in 1916, is frequently cited among the greatest works of American theater. It also was adapted as a short story and 50 years later as a popular movie A Jury of Her Peers.
Inspired by the great investigative journalist Nellie Bly, she worked as a school newspaper reporter at Drake University where she got her first taste of “being on-stage” as a leading member of the school's debate team. She simultaneously worked at the Des Moines Daily News and became the paper's first full-time female reporter after graduation.
“I am glad I worked on a newspaper,” she said of that experience. “It
made me know I had to write . . . whether I felt like it or
not. And I loved it!”
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