Catherine Ann Jones

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Catherine Ann Jones is a playwright, screenwriter, and author. She wrote the screenplay for the film The Christmas Wife [1] and Unlikely Angel. [2][3] She wrote several episodes of the television series Touched by an Angel.

Education and career[]

Catherine Ann Jones holds a graduate degree in Depth Psychology and Archetypal Mythology from Pacifica Graduate Institute where she has also taught. After playing major roles in over fifty plays on and off-Broadway, she became disappointed by the lack of good roles for women and wrote a play, On the Edge, about Virginia Woolf and her struggle with madness in a world gone mad, Hitler and WWII. The play won a National Endowment for the Arts Award. Eleven of her plays, including Calamity Jane (both play and musical), The Women of Cedar Creek, and Freud’s Oracle, have won multiple awards and are produced both in and out of New York. Her films include The Christmas Wife (1988), Unlikely Angel (1996), and the TV series Touched by an Angel. A Fulbright Research Scholar to India studying shamanism, she has taught at The New School University, University of Southern California, the Esalen Institute and the Omega Institute for Holistic Studies.

Books[]

Jones has written six books:

  • The Way of Story: The Craft & Soul of Writing[4]
  • Heal Your Self with Writing (Nautilus Book Award 2014)
  • What Story Are You Living?
  • Freud's Oracle
  • True Fables: Stories from Childhood
  • Buddha and the Dancing Girl: A Creative Life

Personal life[]

When Jones was 19 she met the East Indian writer and novelist Raja Rao who was lecturing on Indian philosophy at the University of Texas, Austin.[5] They were married in Paris in 1965 and had one son, Christopher Rama Rao. The twenty-year marriage ended in divorce in 1986.[6]

References[]

  1. ^ canizone (12 December 1988). "The Christmas Wife (TV Movie 1988)". IMDb. Retrieved 1 November 2015.
  2. ^ joepuglatz (17 December 1996). "Unlikely Angel (TV Movie 1996)". IMDb. Retrieved 1 November 2015.
  3. ^ "Movie Reviews". Movies & TV Dept. The New York Times. Baseline & All Movie Guide. 2014. Archived from the original on 2014-09-03.
  4. ^ Harry Binford. "Krotona Programs – Theosophical Society in America". theosophical.org. Retrieved 1 November 2015.
  5. ^ "Back in her spiritual home". The Hindu. 19 July 2011. Retrieved 2 July 2017.
  6. ^ "Raja Rao". The Telegraph. 18 July 2006. Retrieved 2 July 2017.
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