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  1. Deborah Puette began her career on the stages of Chicago, where she made her professional debut in the lead role of the world premiere of Rebecca Gilman's "The Glory of Living". The play, a critical smash that topped all of the major critic's lists for the year, was nominated for the Pulitzer Prize.

    • January 1, 1
    • 1.73 m
    • Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA
  2. www.deborah-puette.comDeborah Puette

    The official site for actress-writer-producer Deborah Puette past, current and upcoming projects.

  3. Jul 22, 2019 · I played a version of the youngest woman ever sentenced to death in the U.S. — she was 16 when she committed her crimes, I think — and it was a sublime, profoundly touching play. It topped all the critics’ lists that year, won all the awards and launched my acting career. Most importantly, it introduced me to the father of my daughter.

  4. About. A queer, femme creator who moves between film, television, and theatre, Deborah Puette grew up in an Irish-Catholic family of hunters who taught her to use a shotgun when...

    • 500+
    • 2.3K
    • A Season of Rain
  5. NBC's 'Revolution' Play Clip. Oz The Great and Powerful (Walt Disney Pictures) Written by David Lindsay-Abaire. Directed by Sam Raimi. Walt Disney Pictures. By far the most magical experience I've had on film to date: going to work every day on the Yellow Brick Road.

  6. A queer creator who moves between film, television, and theater, Deborah Puette draws on over two decades as a working actor to tell sophisticated stories centering sharply observed female and LGBTQ+ characters claiming space in places that traditionally tell them to stay the eff out.

  7. A queer, femme writer/director/actor, Deborah Puette grew up in a family of hunters and snowmobile riders before setting off to live eclectic global experiences as a photography student in Paris, an advocate for abused women in Alaska, and part of a creative team at one of Chicago's top advertising agencies.