Wendy MacLeod

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Wendy MacLeod (born 1959) is an American playwright.

MacLeod received a BA from Kenyon College in Gambier, Ohio, where she now teaches and is a playwright-in-Residence.[1] She received a MFA from the Yale School of Drama.

Her works include the plays Sin and Schoolgirl Figure, both of which premiered at Chicago's Goodman Theatre and were directed by David Petrarca. The House of Yes, which premiered in San Francisco at the Magic Theatre and was the theatre's second-longest running show,[2] became an award-winning film starring Parker Posey and earned a Special Jury Award at the Sundance Film Festival. Other works include Things Being What They Are, and a musical How to Make an Apple Pie and See the World, which is based on Marjorie Priceman's book.

Her play Juvenilia premiered off-Broadway at Playwrights Horizons, as did her play The Water Children, both directed by long time collaborator David Petrarca, which has also been seen at L.A.’s Matrix Theater where it was cited as “the most challenging political play of 1998" by the L.A. Weekly and earned six L.A. Drama Critics Circle nominations. Things Being What They Are premiered at the Seattle Repertory Theatre and was then seen at Steppenwolf in Chicago in 2003 where its sold-out run was extended twice. The House of Yes has been done at Soho Repertory Theatre, at the Maxim Gorki Theater in Berlin and at The Gate Theater in London, where it was published in Plays International. Her play THRASH, about skateboarding, was invited to the 2005 National Playwrights Conference. She has been a guest professor at Northwestern University’s film and theater departments. Her prose appeared in Poetry magazine’s 2006 humor issue.

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