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  1. Susan Keating Glaspell (July 1, 1876 – July 28, 1948) was an American playwright, novelist, journalist and actress. With her husband George Cram Cook, she founded the Provincetown Players, [1] the first modern American theatre company. [2]

  2. Susan Glaspell (born July 1, 1876, Davenport, Iowa, U.S.—died July 27, 1948, Provincetown, Mass.) was an American dramatist and novelist who, with her husband, George Cram Cook, founded the influential Provincetown Players in 1915.

  3. Nov 1, 2019 · Susan Glaspell was the playwright famous for plays with feminist themes, such as "Trifles." Learn about her life and career with this brief biography.

  4. To most readers Susan Glaspell (1876-1948) is still known primarily as the author of Trifles, the frequently anthologized classic feminist play about two women’s secret discovery of a wife’s murder of her husband, or the short-story “A Jury of Her Peers,” a re-writing of that piece.

  5. Jul 6, 2019 · Susan Glaspell (July 1, 1876 – July 28, 1948) was an American playwright and fiction writer. Glaspell and her husband George Cram Cook founded the Provincetown Players, considered the first modern American theater company.

  6. Susan Glaspell (1876 - 1948) co-founded the first modern American theater company, the Provincetown Players, and was a Pulitzer prize-winning playwright, actress, novelist, and journalist. Most of her nine novels, fourteen plays and over fifty short stories are set in Iowa, where she was raised.

  7. Susan Glaspell (b. 1876–d. 1948) was among the most celebrated writers of the first half of the twentieth century. Cofounder of the Provincetown Players, the Greenwich Village little theater that revolutionized US drama in the 1910s and 1920s, she wrote fifteen plays and achieved critical acclaim as a dramatist of ideas.

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