Amy Guterson Explained

Amy Gordon Guterson
Birth Name:Amy Gordon
Birth Date:1965
Alma Mater:Stern College for Women
Occupation:Actress, director, educator
Years Active:1995–present
Known For:Agent Emes
Boards:ATARA
Spouse:John Guterson
Children:4
Website:

Amy Gordon Guterson (born 1967) is an American Orthodox Jewish actress, filmmaker, and educator. She is best known for her role as Chaya Epstein in the long-running video series Agent Emes. She is the founder and director of the Tzohar Seminary for Chassidus and the Arts and co-founder of the Jewish women's theater troupe Kol Isha. She is also a board member of the Arts and Torah Association for Religious Artists (ATARA), founded by Miriam Leah Droz.

Early life

Guterson was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania to a Modern Orthodox family.[1] She attended high school at Hebrew Academy of the Five Towns and Rockaway and studied theater at Stern College for Women in New York, where she was the school's first theater major and played Hannah Szenes in a one-woman show.[2] [3] Following her graduation from Stern in 1988, she studied with Uta Hagen at the HB Studio and with Mike Nichols and Paul Sills at The New Actors Workshop, where she received a graduate degree in acting.[4] She also performed in Off-Broadway plays as well as Jewish repertory and Yiddish theatre, earning Actors' Equity Association membership.

Career

Kol Isha

After getting married and settling in Squirrel Hill, Guterson began educating artists and actresses in the community through the local Chabad. During this time she met Barb Feige, an actress and stage manager, and the two formed Kol Isha, a Jewish women's theatre troupe, in 1995.[5] The following year, the troupe performed their first play, An Invisible Thread, at the Squirrel Hill Jewish Community Center.

The group's second play, Journey Through Ruth, about modern-day women encountering the Biblical figures of Ruth and Naomi, premiered in 1998. A third play, The Choosing, premiered in 1999 at Pittsburgh's City Theatre; that same year, the troupe performed a Hanukkah play entitled Hannukah Lights. In 2001 they performed Spirits of Valor, which portrayed the historical Jewish women Bella Abzug, Barbara Myerhoff, Molly Picon, Emma Lazarus, and Glückel of Hameln, at the Jewish Community Center of Greater Pittsburgh in celebration of Jewish Women's History Month. Another play, Imagining Bubbe, based on stories told by the troupe members' grandmothers, premiered in 2007.

In addition to their productions, the troupe have also presented workshops and small performances at such venues as the Jewish Orthodox Feminist Alliance and Pittsburgh's Congregation Beth Shalom.

Tzohar Seminary

In October 2011, Guterson opened the Tzohar Seminary for Chassidus and the Arts in Pittsburgh, a post-high school arts program for Orthodox Jewish girls.[6] The name "Tzohar" comes from the Hebrew term for "window" used in the Biblical description of Noah's Ark, which also translates to "precious stone".[7] [8] Tzohar curriculum combines Torah study and arts education, with classes in creativity and the arts, Hasidic teachings, writing, music, dance, fine arts, theatre, filmmaking, Tanya, and the weekly Torah portion. The school's principal is Rabbi Dovid Hordiner, and teachers have included Agent Emes creator Leibel Cohen and author and columnist Rabbi Shais Taub.

Film

In 2005, Guterson wrote, directed, and co-produced the short film Becoming Rachel, which stars Guterson's daughter, Tanya, and premiered at the 12th annual Pittsburgh Jewish-Israeli Film Festival. The film was based on a fable Guterson's grandmother had told her, which she would later use for a segment in Imagining Bubbe.[9]

Personal life

Guterson lives in the Squirrel Hill neighborhood of Pittsburgh with her husband, Dr. John Guterson, and their children.

Credits

Theatre

YearTitleCredit(s)Notes
1996 An Invisible Thread Writer First Kol Isha production
1998 Journey Through Ruth Writer Kol Isha production
1999The Choosing
Hanukkah Lights
2001Spirits of Valor
2007 Imagining Bubbe Director
2008 Can You Imagine? Director

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Sara Trappler Spielman. A Theater Troupe Of One's Own. The Forward. Aug 19, 2005.
  2. Web site: Shalva Ginsparg. April 13, 2015. A Storied Career: Peninnah Schram, Professor and Award-Winning Storyteller, Retires. 17 August 2016. The Observer.
  3. Web site: Lights, Camera, Action: Alumni Who Work in the Entertainment Industry Are Stars Behind and In the Scenes. May 2012 . 17 August 2016. Yeshiva University.
  4. Web site: Sara Trappler Spielman. New Seminary Combines Worlds of Chassidism and Performance Art. Chabad.org. Nov 10, 2011.
  5. Web site: Alice T. Carter. Feb 20, 2007. Women's theater group draws on own experiences. Pittsburgh Tribune-Review.
  6. Web site: Sara Trappler Spielman. Woodmere actress opens women's art school in Pittsburgh. The Jewish Star. Nov 9, 2011.
  7. Web site: Beth Kissileff. Oct 6, 2011. Pittsburgh Hasidic Seminary Offers Arts Education to Women. The Forward.
  8. Web site: Sara Trappler Spielman. A Musical Endeavor. San Diego Jewish Journal. Dec 31, 2011.
  9. Web site: Ed Blank. April 2, 2005. Grandma's tale evolves into coming-of-age story. Pittsburgh Tribune-Review.