Jump to content

Tracey Wigfield: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
added personal life info
No edit summary
Line 12: Line 12:
}}
}}


'''Tracey Wigfield''' (born 1983) is an American [[comedy writer]] who won a [[Primetime Emmy Award]] in 2013 for her work on ''[[30 Rock]]''. She created and is producing the current [[NBC]] sitcom ''[[Great News]]''.
'''Tracey Wigfield''' (born 1983) is an American [[comedy writer]] who won a [[Primetime Emmy Award]] in 2013 for her work on ''[[30 Rock]]''. She created and produces the current [[NBC]] sitcom ''[[Great News]]''.


==Early life==
==Early life==

Revision as of 20:28, 25 May 2017

Tracy Wigfield
Born (1983-06-19) June 19, 1983 (age 41)
Wayne, New Jersey, United States
Alma materBoston College
Occupations
  • Actress
  • comedian
  • writer
  • producer

Tracey Wigfield (born 1983) is an American comedy writer who won a Primetime Emmy Award in 2013 for her work on 30 Rock. She created and produces the current NBC sitcom Great News.

Early life

Raised in Wayne, New Jersey, Wigfield attended 12 years of Catholic schools.[1] She graduated in 2001 from the all-girls Immaculate Heart Academy, a Catholic high school in Washington Township, Bergen County, New Jersey. As a child, she used her parents' video camera to record comedy skits together with a friend.[2] Wigfield graduated from Boston College in 2005, where she majored in theater and English.[3]

Career

After graduating, Wigfield took an internship at CNN, then transferred to the page program at Late Show with David Letterman. She was then a production assistant on the short-lived television sitcom Knights of Prosperity. Wigfield has written for and performed with the Upright Citizens Brigade.[4] Tina Fey hired Wigfield at the age of 23 as a staff writer on 30 Rock after convincing her to submit a sample of her writing skills. She moved up to lead writer and then producer. Wigfield and Fey did much of the writing for the series finale of 30 Rock and the two went on to win the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Writing for a Comedy Series for the episode, which aired on January 31, 2013. After her work on 30 Rock, Jack Burditt brought her to California to write for The Mindy Project and its star Mindy Kaling.[2] She has also appeared on the show, portraying Dr. Lauren Neustadter, a love interest of Dr. Peter Prentice. Wigfield now serves as its co-executive producer. Wigfield is the creator of the current NBC sitcom Great News, of which Fey is an executive producer. The series follows a producer at a news station whose mother begins an internship at the company.

Personal life

Wigfield was raised Roman Catholic and today describes herself as a "Sorta Catholic."[1] In a 2017 America magazine piece, she described being Catholic as "not a huge part of my deal... I practice what I call “Chipotle Catholicism”: I go down the line picking and choosing the parts of Catholicism that appeal to me (charity, Pope Frank, spooky stories about saints) in order to create a custom-made spiritual burrito."[1]

References

  1. ^ a b c "A Sorta Catholic's Very Catholic Wedding". America Magazine. 2017-04-20. Retrieved 2017-05-21.
  2. ^ a b Winters, Debra. "Wayne native Tracey Wigfield scores Emmy for '30 Rock' writing", Wayne Today, September 27, 2013. Accessed October 27, 2013. "Wigfield graduated from Immaculate Heart Academy, an all girls school located in Washington Township, in 2001."
  3. ^ "Soaring Eagles", Boston College, October 1, 2013. Accessed October 27, 2013.
  4. ^ Tracey Wigfield, Upright Citizens Brigade. Accessed October 27, 2013.