Wendy MacLeod

Set in the New York City music industry (with a slight nod to Othello), Find and Sign is about a bumpy romance between an on-the-rise young record executive and an idealistic public school teacher.

MacLeod's essay "Name Brand Nostalgia"[12] was featured in The New York Times and her essay/talk "The Daily Struggle"[13] was given as part of the Kenyon Review's "Writers-on-Writing" series in October 2016.

Her prose and humor pieces have appeared in Poetry magazine, The New York Times, Salon, The Rumpus, McSweeney's Internet Tendency, The Washington Post, and All Things Considered.

MacLeod worked as the Executive Story Editor for Popular for the WB and wrote the pilot Ivory Tower, commissioned by CBS, produced by Brillstein-Grey (The Sopranos) and Diane Keaton, with actress Jeanne Tripplehorn.

She served as the artistic director of the Kenyon Playwrights Conference [14] which supported new work though its commissioning program and offered an intensive playwriting workshop taught by the artistic staff of partner companies including Playwrights Horizons, Steppenwolf Theater, Roundabout Theatre, The Old Vic, Royal Court Theater, La Jolla Playhouse, and ACT Theatre in Seattle.