JANE WAGNER
Writer/Director

Biography

         Jane Wagner, one of America’s most distinguished playwrights, has won numerous, awards, including several Emmys,  a Writer’s Guild Award for her work in television.  Wagner has also won a New York Drama Critics’ Circle Special Award and a New York Drama Desk Award  for her broadway success The Search for Signs of Intelligent Life in the Universe, a CableAce Award for Executive Producing the film adaptation of The Search; three Grammy nominations for comedy albums she wrote with Lily Tomlin, Modern Scream, And That's the Truth,  and On Stage; and two Peabody Awards--the first for the CBS television special, J.T., and the second for the ABC television special, Edith Ann’s Christmas: Just Say Noel

         Wagner was born and raised in Morristown, Tennessee, where she enjoyed writing at an early age; by the time she was in high school, she was also drawn to the theater.  At the young age of seventeen, Wagner moved to New York City where she auditioned for acting roles in the New York theater, studied painting and sculpture at the School for Visual Arts, and played the piano to pay the rent.   Early in her professional career, Wagner toured as a leading actress with the famed Barter Theatre of Abingdon, Virginia.  She later established herself as a designer for such firms as Kimberly-Clark and Fieldcrest, and her most creative designs included the innovative “Teach Me, Read Me” children’s bed sheets.  These creations, along with other textile designs of hers, have been exhibited at the Brooklyn Museum of Art.

              Wagner made her writing debut with the highly acclaimed CBS teleplay entitled J.T (1969), a special for which she won the coveted Peabody Award.  Her book of the same title was published in both soft and hardcover editions. It was J.T. that brought Wagner to the attention of Lily Tomlin, who was seeking the help of a writer for her television character, the precocious Edith Ann.  Tomlin was impressed with the humanity and depth of Wagner’s writing and felt that Wagner would bring similar depth to Tomlin’s comedic characters.   At the same time, Wagner was interested in expanding her writing to include comedy; they began working together on an Edith Ann album, Edith Ann: And That’s the Truth (1971), which began an award-winning, creative alliance that has lasted for over thirty years.  They went on to co-write and produce two more Grammy nominated albums, Modern Scream (1975) and On Stage (1977).  

                From that time on, Wagner ventured further into television productions with Tomlin, writing much of the material with which Tomlin is identified in her television and stage career.   Together, they produced six comedy television specials: The Lily Tomlin Show (1973), Lily (1973), Lily (1974), Lily Tomlin (1975), Lily: SoldOut (1981), and Lily for President? (1982), for which they won three Emmy Awards and a Writer’s Guild of America Award.  Wagner then wrote and executive produced two animated television specials starring the precocious six year old, Edith Ann, whom Tomlin made famous on the hit television show, Laugh In.  The first special, Edith Ann:  A Few Pieces of the Puzzle (1994), aired on ABC to critical raves and excellent ratings.  This was followed by Edith Ann:  Homeless Go Home (1996) and Edith Ann’sChristmas: Just Say Noel (1996).   For this special, Wagner was honored with her second Peabody Award.  In addition, her book, Edith Ann:  My Life, So Far, was released by Hyperion Press in both hardcover and in paperback.

           Wagner’s television success was almost out-shadowed by the phenomenal acclaim she received for her theater and movie productions.  In 1977, Wagner wrote and directed Appearing Nitely, a one-woman show in which Tomlin made her Broadway debut. In Appearing Nitely, Wagner included favorites such as Ernestine, Edith Ann, and Judith Beasley, the Calumet City housewife, and also introduced Trudy, the bag lady; Crystal, the hang-gliding quadriplegic; Rick, the singles bar cruiser; Glenna, a child of the sixties; and Sister Boogie Woman, a 77-year-old blues revivalist. Wagner subsequently adapted Appearing Nitely as both an album (1977) and an HBO Special (1977).  The following year, Wagner wrote and directed Moment by Moment (1978), a movie starring Tomlin as a bored housewife involved in a romantic dalliance with John Travolta. In 1981, Wagner wrote the screenplay and executive produced the movie, The Incredible Shrinking Woman, a rollicking, dark commentary on our environmental concerns, in which Tomlin starred as a suburban mother “shrinking” as a result of her exposure to the ubiquitous toxic chemicals of our world.  

          In 1985, Wagner brought her extraordinary play, The Search for Signs of Intelligent Life in the Universe, to Broadway, where it became one of the most critically acclaimed plays of the 1985-86 Broadway season.  With her scintillating script, Wagner established herself as a unique artistic voice in the literary world.  She was honored by the New York Drama Critics’ Circle with a rarely given Special Award for the SRO hit and was similarly lauded by the New York Drama Desk for a "Unique Theatrical Experience”.   The hardcover edition of The Search earned the distinction of being the first play in twenty years to appear on The New York Times bestseller list where it remained for several weeks.  Wagner also adapted the screenplay of The Search for an HBO film for which Wagner also wrote the haunting title song, We Are The Ones (1992).  The Broadway theatrical success of the play was followed by a coast-to-coast, fourteen city tour that spanned four and a half years.  Wagner extended this extraordinary run with a cross-country, twenty-nine city tour of The Search (1999), a new production of The Search on Broadway (2000), a record-breaking six months in San Francisco (2001-2002), and a highly praised, eight week in Los Angeles (2003).   Wagner’s play continues to be performed in the United States as well as other countries, such as Greece, France, and Austria by a myriad of artists.  Lily Tomlin is also performing many of Wagner’s classic characters every year in hundreds of venues across the States, as well as Australia in August 2006.

              In 2003 and 2004, Wagner was the Creative Consultant on the commercials featuring Ernestine as a global communications visionary for WebEx. Wagner is currently working on new television projects with Tomlin, involving two of their most beloved characters, Ernestine and Edith Ann.   A collaboration between Jane Wagner, Lily Tomlin,  Allee Willis, and the zany and creative, BUBBLES the artist has produced the magical Lily Tomlin website:   Wagner and Tomlin’s entire careers in art, text, photos and videos can be found there at www.lilytomlin.com.

August 2006