Jean Rosenthal was an American lighting designer. She is considered a pioneer in the field of theatrical lighting design. She was born in New York City to Romanian-Jewish immigrants.
Some of her major contributions were the elimination of shadows by using flood lights from upstage positions and controlling angles and mass of illumination to create contrasts without shadows. "Some of the signature lighting she did for Balanchine and the diagonal shaft of light she created for Graham (lovingly referred to by her as 'Martha's Finger of God'), are now in such widespread use by dance companies of every style that they have become standards of the lighting repertoire." == The Magic of Light ==
The Magic of Light
Jean Rosenthal's book, The Magic of Light: The Craft and Career of Jean Rosenthal, Pioneer in Lighting for the Modern Stage, (Little Brown & Co, ) was published posthumously in 1972. Lael Wertenbaker assembled the book, a long-running project between her and Rosenthal, from tape-recorded dictation sessions. The book begins with an autobiography, and goes on to detail the history of illumination, and methods for lighting plays, musicals, operas, and the house. It later details theatrical lighting equipment in use at the time of its publication. The Magic of Light concludes with samples of Rosenthal's paperwork (light plots, hookups, and focus charts), and a list of her lighting credits. ==Death==
Death
On May 1, 1969, she died of ovarian cancer at the age of 57. Rosenthal shared her apartment and her vacation home on Martha's Vineyard with lighting designer Marion Kinsella; for a period of time, she also lived with another lighting designer, Nananne Porcher. ==References==