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Most people spend decades climbing, then call it a life. Elizabeth Coplan spends four decades in Fortune 500 marketing and high-stakes law firm PR, then makes a sharper turn: she uses those same skills to build Grief Dialogues, a theater-driven movement that invites people to look straight at death, grief, and love without flinching.
We talk about the compounded losses that changed her path, including the moment she realized how quickly coworkers and friends can shut down when grief enters the room. From that silence, she writes plays that become an unexpected key: audiences laugh, cry, and then stay to talk, often longer than the performance itself. We dig into why the stage works as an empathy generator, what caregivers most often regret, and why acceptance near the end of life can make mourning less chaotic for the people left behind.
Elizabeth also shares how her commissioned project “Honoring Choices” tackles end-of-life planning and advance care conversations, and why she adapted it across cultures, including African American and Spanish-language versions. Then we zoom out to the bigger theme of reinvention after retirement: how she finds her second act by asking what brought her joy at 13, what it takes to fund and run a nonprofit, and why she refuses to let “grief” become a softened, hidden word. We close with a practical preview of immersive theater, where the audience has agency to move, reflect, and connect, including upcoming Detroit dates and how to find tickets.
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