Trudi Goodman
- Actress
Trudi Goodman is a singer, actor, musician, writer. director and
producer. She sings in a variety of languages including Yiddish,
Hebrew, Ladino, German, Spanish, French and Italian. She was born in
Boston, Massachusetts in 1954. She is of Sephardic and Ashkenazic
Jewish descent. Her great-grandfather Herman was a composer of Jewish
Liturgical music who also hand-built pianos and organs. Her Grandmother
Elke sang opera and had a debut at The Metropolitan Opera in New York
City. Her Great Uncle Nathan came up with the name Paramount, for
Paramount Pictures. One of her uncles (Yankel) played in Vaudeville
with The Harmonicats. Her father, Arthur was a highly decorated WW2
Veteran. Her mother's father, Moshe was a Cantor. Trudi plays guitar
and recorder and has performed in a number of One-Woman Shows,
including The Sunny Side of the Street: Scenes from Real and Unreal
Life(which she wrote and produced)and Die Maase Bukh: The Jewish
Experience in Poetry and Song (which she compiled, created, translated,
directed and produced).
She works primarily as a Film and Stage Actor and Singer/Musician. She was at one time a traveling Folk Musician throughout the New England Area. She is a published poet. She was co-editor of the poetry and prose publication: Zone: A Feminist Journal for Women and Men. She is a graduate of University of Massachusetts at Boston (1984) and The New Theatre Conservatory (1997). She teaches Theatre, Performance Skills. She is a winner of The Susan Glover Hitchcock Award (U.Mass/Boston) and The Boston Globe Award for Work in Ensemble.
She works primarily as a Film and Stage Actor and Singer/Musician. She was at one time a traveling Folk Musician throughout the New England Area. She is a published poet. She was co-editor of the poetry and prose publication: Zone: A Feminist Journal for Women and Men. She is a graduate of University of Massachusetts at Boston (1984) and The New Theatre Conservatory (1997). She teaches Theatre, Performance Skills. She is a winner of The Susan Glover Hitchcock Award (U.Mass/Boston) and The Boston Globe Award for Work in Ensemble.