Jeanmarie Simpson is an American theatre artist whose work follows people whose lives exceed the stories told about them. Her plays are drawn to figures who have been simplified by history, myth, faith, reputation, violence, or silence: saints, heretics, mothers, witnesses, workers, actors, soldiers, rebels, and the dead who have not finished speaking.
Her plays often begin where the official record fails. She writes about memory, conscience, consequence, and the cost of telling the truth. Her work is frequently spare in staging and rich in theatrical language, moving through direct address, ritual, humor, grief, absurdity, and the body as a keeper of truth.
Simpson is best known for A Single Woman, a two-hander about Jeannette Rankin that premiered Off-Broadway at The Culture Project...
Jeanmarie Simpson is an American theatre artist whose work follows people whose lives exceed the stories told about them. Her plays are drawn to figures who have been simplified by history, myth, faith, reputation, violence, or silence: saints, heretics, mothers, witnesses, workers, actors, soldiers, rebels, and the dead who have not finished speaking.
Her plays often begin where the official record fails. She writes about memory, conscience, consequence, and the cost of telling the truth. Her work is frequently spare in staging and rich in theatrical language, moving through direct address, ritual, humor, grief, absurdity, and the body as a keeper of truth.
Simpson is best known for A Single Woman, a two-hander about Jeannette Rankin that premiered Off-Broadway at The Culture Project, was filmed with Judd Nelson and the voices of Martin Sheen and Patricia Arquette, featured music by Joni Mitchell, and toured to 53 countries across five continents. The piece earned “Best Theatrical Surprise” from Sacramento News & Review and was presented at CalArts, where Simpson was a Surdna Distinguished Guest Artist.
Her original works include Coming In Hot, in which she portrayed 19 military women; HERETIC – The Mary Dyer Story; The Jewish Question, which received Honorable Mention from the Jewish Plays Project; Even Unto Death; Ghosts of the Gilded Stage; Lear: A Solo Adaptation; Mackers; When Churchyards Yawn; and On Track, based on the life and memoirs of S. Brian Willson.
Her performance highlights include The Road to Mecca, directed by Zakes Mokae, and Shakespeare’s Will by Vern Thiessen, directed by Leonard Nimoy. Her work has been supported by six Sierra Arts Foundation grants, twelve Nevada Arts Council grants, multiple National Endowment for the Arts Theatre grants, and a Living History Foundation grant for Bambino Mio – Bright Little Flame, about Maria Montessori. She served as a panelist for the NEA’s 2023 Theatre Grants for Arts Projects.
Simpson is the Founding Artistic Director of Arizona Theatre Matters, a member of the Dramatists Guild of America, and retired from the Stage Directors and Choreographers Society, Actors’ Equity Association, and SAG-AFTRA.
Her current work is built for reach. Narration, spoken action, recorded performance, Deaf Artistic Sign Language, captioning, and translation are part of the play’s path to the audience. The question is always practical: how will this story be received?