After more than a decade of waitressing and writing plays, Molly Smith Metzler reached her breaking point.
Her play, “Close Up Space,” starring David Hyde Pierce and Rosie Perez, had been produced by Manhattan Theater Club in December 2011, but the show “bombed,” according to Metzler. Shortly afterward, Metzler and her husband “accidentally got pregnant” and moved to Long Island where he began teaching and she raised their daughter, who was born in November 2012. After almost three years of being a full-time mother, Metzler was ready to start working professionally again—and she wanted to transition to a new industry.
In 2015, Metzler called her agents and said, “You promised me the sun, the moon and the stars. I need a job. And I would like to write for TV.’”
When they told her she would need to take “55 million meetings”—essentially job interviews—in Manhattan before she could break into the television world, she told them, “I can’t because I have a baby.” Instead, she urged her agents to submit her writing to speak for her. Though her agents assured her that it would be a wasted effort, they did as she asked.
The following Monday, her agents told her that Steve McQueen, who had just directed “12 Years a Slave,” was looking for a funny female writer to join the writing team for his new television show. And best of all, the writer’s room was in New York City instead of Los Angeles.
The demands of motherhood led Metzler to advocate for herself, landing her an ideal opening in a new industry.
“Becoming a mother made me tougher and less passive about my own trajectory as a writer. I became the CEO of my company. Before being a mom, I was only the secretary of it,” said Metzler, mom of Cora, now 8.
Finding her way
While attending Juilliard, Metzler studied with Marsha Norman, who won the Pulitzer Prize for Drama for her play “‘night, Mother,” taught her that playwrights all have their “stuff,” or the content they are really comfortable writing about.
“My stuff is class. I tend to write about class in America all the time. I find it fascinating,” she said. While a part of the playwriting program there in 2010, Metzler composed her breakout play, “Elemeno Pea,” which explores class and ambition through the relationship between two sisters. Metzler said that the comedy raised the question: “How far would you go to join the ranks of the 1 percent?”
In that “weird time” between 2012 and 2015 when Metzler was at home with her young daughter in Long Island, she started layering motherhood into the fabric of her writing. She composed her most often-produced work, “Cry It Out,” a play that demonstrates how socioeconomics affect the choices that we make during maternity leave, taking a sharp look at everything from postpartum anxiety, to back-to-work decisions, to the disconnect between money and happiness.
“Everything is cracked open by the experience of having a child, everything—your marriage, your identity and then in a lot of cases, your body,” said Metzler. “The play creates a place for these characters to connect and be open about that.”
With more than 75 productions across the country, the play feels relevant and essential, but Metzler has had a hard time getting it produced in New York City. “I think theater is behind,” she said. “I’m proud of American theater for how much, how hard they’re working toward inclusion. But I feel like there’s still a huge blind spot to female writers and female characters.”
Working hard for the money









