Jessie Jones spent a lifetime making strangers laugh—and now the curtain has fallen. The beloved actress and powerhouse playwright, whose words filled theaters across America, has died at 75 after a long illness. Friends say her stories will keep breathing without her. But the way she left, and what she left behind, will surpr… Continues…
Jessie Jones’s journey from a Texas school contest winner to one of America’s most-produced female playwrights was built on grit, timing, and a rare instinct for human warmth. Her early TV work on shows like Murphy Brown, Night Court, and Designing Women hinted at her sharp comedic rhythm, but it was on the stage that her voice truly exploded. With longtime collaborators Jamie Wooten and Nicholas Hope, she crafted plays like Dearly Departed, The Savannah Sipping Society, and The Red Velvet Cake War, stories that became staples in community and professional theaters worldwide.
Behind the laughs was a woman known for quiet kindness and fierce dedication to actors and audiences alike. Her scripts gave older women center stage, small towns dignity, and ordinary people a chance to be hilarious. Jessie Jones may be gone, but every time a curtain rises on her work, she gets one more ovation.





