[1] Pascal was a NESTA Dreamtime Fellow in 2006 and Writer in Residence at the Wiener Library in 2007 with a Leverhulme Grant.
[2] The first of these is Theresa, based on historical accounts of a Jewish woman in Guernsey during the German occupation in the Second World War.
Her autobiographical essay "Prima Ballerina Assoluta" appeared in a Virago Press collection Truth, Dare or Promise.
The Miami Herald said the incident "has left raw feelings among those who call the cancellation a capitulation to politics and those who say the play was deeply and needlessly hurtful".
Pascal protested that “the intent of the play was to show the complexity of Israeli life”, and called the early closure "censorship.
"[3] Forward magazine commented: "The controversy mirrors others faced by American JCCs over media perceived to be critical of Israel, notably in Washington and New York".
In 2019 her play inspired by Kurdish women soldiers, Blueprint Medea, premiered at The Finborough Theatre, London.
Her semi-staged reading of As Happy As God In France was seen at Burgh House, Hampstead for Holocaust Memorial Day 2023.