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Jean Rosenthal

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Name
  
Jean Rosenthal

Role
  
Lighting Designer


Died
  
May 1, 1969

Education
  
Yale University

Jean Rosenthal wwwmanumitschoolcomwpcontentuploadsJeanRosen

Awards
  
Outer Critics Circle Award for Other Awards

Books
  
Hotel Pastis, Collecting Plastic Jewelry, Wings of Refuge, Les Plumes du pigeon, Le Diamant noir

Similar People
  
Peter Mayle, John Updike, Margaret Forster, Margaret Wild, Karl May

Jean Rosenthal (born Eugenia Rosenthal; March 16, 1912 - May 1, 1969) is considered a pioneer in the field of theatrical lighting design. She was born in New York City to Romanian-Jewish immigrants.

Jean Rosenthal Genius Passion and The Magic of Light Susan Scharfman

In the early part of the 20th century, the lighting designer was not a formalized position. Rather the set designer or electrician handled the lighting of a production. Rosenthal helped make the lighting designer an integral member of the design team. She also said that lighting "was a career in itself". As well as particular lighting innovations, she created an atmosphere specific to the production, and she was in demand as a Broadway lighting designer.

Jean Rosenthal Jean Rosenthal

In 1929, she was introduced to Martha Graham at the Neighborhood Playhouse School of the Theatre. She became Graham's technical assistant, which led to a lifelong collaboration with Graham. She worked with Graham on 36 productions. Rosenthal studied lighting design at the Yale School of Drama from 1931 to 1934 with Stanley McCandless.

Jean Rosenthal The Lighting Archive legacythelightingarchiveorg

She returned to New York City, where she joined the Federal Theatre Project in 1935. This led to collaborations with Orson Welles and John Houseman. She would later follow Welles to the Mercury Theatre, where she was credited as a member of the board in addition to production and lighting manager, although not as lighting designer.

Jean Rosenthal 7 Women of Theatre History You Should Know Part Three THE INTERVAL

Some of her major contributions were the elimination of shadows by using floods of upstage lighting and controlling angles and mass of illumination to create contrasts without shadows. "Some of the signature lighting she did for Balanchine and the diagonal shaft of light she created for Graham (lovingly referred to by her as "Martha's Finger of God"), are now in such widespread use by dance companies of every style that they have become standards of the lighting repertoire."

Jean Rosenthal Jean Rosenthal

She was light designer for hundreds of productions, including Broadway, Martha Graham's dances, the New York City Ballet, and the Metropolitan Opera. On Broadway she lit musicals such as West Side Story (1957), The Sound of Music (1959), Take Me Along (1959), A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum (1962), Fiddler on the Roof (1964), Hello, Dolly! (1964), Cabaret (1966), and The Happy Time (1968).

Death

On May 1, 1969, she died of cancer at the age of 57. Her book, Magic of Light: The Craft and Career of Jean Rosenthal, Pioneer in Lighting for the Modern Stage, (Little Brown & Co, ISBN 0-316-93120-9) was published posthumously in 1972. Lael Wertenbaker assembled the book, a long-running project between her and Rosenthal, from tape-recorded dictation sessions.

References

Jean Rosenthal Wikipedia