Jolie London Glickman

Jolie London Glickman

Jolie London Glickman is an actress-turned-playwright originally from New York. Jolie writes dramatic explorations of what she knows, or thinks she knows: about womanhood and queer identity, Jews in diaspora and whiteness, sexualization and healing, and illness and addiction. Her first play, GIRLS WILL BE GIRLS, premiered at The New York International Fringe Festival to sold out audiences and won the FringeFave...
Jolie London Glickman is an actress-turned-playwright originally from New York. Jolie writes dramatic explorations of what she knows, or thinks she knows: about womanhood and queer identity, Jews in diaspora and whiteness, sexualization and healing, and illness and addiction. Her first play, GIRLS WILL BE GIRLS, premiered at The New York International Fringe Festival to sold out audiences and won the FringeFave award.
BFA: NYU/Tisch School of the Arts, MFA Playwriting Candidate: Temple University

Plays

  • LIKE AND SUBSCRIBE
    If you've ever watched a makeup video on YouTube, you know Beauty by Breauna. Bre’s success allows her to live lavishly, and she’s more than happy to take her boyfriend and her now-sober older sister, Seren, along for the ride. When Seren's childhood friend is released from prison, Bre opens her mansion doors to the additional houseguest, but the line of who-deserves-what is less obvious than she had thought.
  • PLEASERS
    Eleanor is gay, she says. Alma isn’t, she says. And Maria, Alma’s recently divorced mother, is crashing at their apartment. Alma’s boyfriend asks the wrong questions about Eleanor’s stripping career; Maria asks the rights ones. And since Alma has already heard all of Eleanor’s theories on love and sexuality, it’s nice to have a new set of ears.
  • GIRLS WILL BE GIRLS
    Turns out, high school boys aren't the only ones trying to get laid.
    Filthy, funny, and relentlessly honest, this provocative new play follows four New York teens as they stumble towards the brink of womanhood. Together they do their best to navigate their newfound sexuality, autonomy, and all that it means to grow up girl in the digital age. This is unapologetic girlhood... and it isn't always pretty.