Jennifer Hoppe-House

Jennifer Hoppe-House (also credited as Jennifer Hoppe) is an American film and television writer, having worked on the series “Grace and Frankie,” Get Shorty (2017), Nurse Jackie and Damages. She also co-wrote the 2004 made-for-television movie The Dead Will Tell.[1] She often works with her writing partner Nancy Fichman.

Jennifer Hoppe-House
Pen nameJennifer Hoppe
OccupationScreenwriter
Television writer
Notable worksNurse Jackie
Damages

Career

Film

Hoppe and Fichman have sold and developed several feature film projects, including scripts for Mike Figgis, Allen Coulter, and Damon Santostefano. Their film Fortune is currently in development.

Television

Hoppe-House and Fichman have written the following television episodes.

The team has sold pilots to HBO and TNT, and currently has series in development with Lifetime, WE and Sony.

Theater

Hoppe-House's play Bad Dog will have a rolling world premiere at the Orlando Shakespeare Theater in April 2015 and the Olney Theatre Center in Olney, Maryland in September 2015.

Awards and nominations

In 2009 and 2010, Hoppe-House and Fichman were nominated for a Writers Guild of America award. Both nominations were for their work on Nurse Jackie.[2][3]

gollark: It would also not be very useful for spying on people, since they would just stop saying things if they got a notification saying "interception agent has been added to the chat" and it wouldn't work retroactively.
gollark: One proposal for backdooring encrypted messaging stuff was to have a way to remotely add extra participants invisibly to an E2Ed conversation. If you have that but without the "invisible" bit, that would work as "encryption with a backdoor, but then make it very obvious that the backdoor has been used" somewhat.
gollark: Not encryption itself, probably.
gollark: They don't seem to want to *ban* end-to-end encryption as much as backdoor the popularly used stuff. Which is still bad. I should finish writing that blog post on it some time this decade.
gollark: It's probably with consent to the extent that *any* social media apps do, i.e. "the long incomprehensible privacy policy says we can".

References

  1. "Nancy Fichman Filmography". The New York Times. Retrieved July 7, 2012.
  2. "2010 Writers Guild Awards Television, Radio, News, Promotional Writing, and Graphic Animation Nominees Announced". Writers Guild of America, West. December 14, 2009. Archived from the original on January 29, 2010. Retrieved July 7, 2012.
  3. "2011 Writers Guild Awards Television, News, Radio, Promotional Writing, and Graphic Animation Nominees Announced". Writers Guild of America, West. December 8, 2010. Archived from the original on February 11, 2012. Retrieved July 7, 2012.
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