
You may not know the name Stan Zimmerman, but if youâve ever watched an episode of âThe Golden Girls,â âGilmore Girlsâ or âRoseanne,â you may already know his work.
But, whether you know his name or not, you owe it to yourself to check out Zimmermanâs original play, âright before I go,â in which he also acts as the narrator.
Zimmermanâs play about suicide notes will be performed at the New Tampa Performing Arts Center (NTPAC, 5850 Hunters Village Rd.) on Friday and Saturday, September 20-21, 7 p.m., by Powerstories, âa nonprofit professional theatre troupe whose mission is to stage true stories to open minds and hearts and inspire action worldwide.â Powerstories will âCelebrate the Power of the Artsâ throughout the weekend, which also will include an art display, raffles, appetizers, staged reading, talkback, celebrity meet & greet and live music.
Zimmerman, who also has directed many plays, says âright before i goâ itself is âonly about an hour longâ and that there will be a half-hour sit-down with a mental health professional following the performance. A portion of the ticket sales will be donated to the Crisis Center of Hillsborough. Also scheduled to be readers are chief meteorologist Denis Phillips and anchor Wendy Ryan of ABC Action News Tampa Bay.
âI feel that with this piece, the audience will need to talk about it afterwards,â Zimmerman says. âItâs really about starting a discussion. Iâve found that after the show, people want to talk about it with total strangers on the street or friends and family.â
Theatrical Rights Worldwide (TRW) had this to say about the play: âStan Zimmerman brings to life the last words written in letters by individuals lost to suicide â including celebrities, veterans, kids that were bullied, LGBTQ and the clinically depressed â and those who have survived suicide attempts. Since its acclaimed first performance at the Hollywood Fringe Festival in 2015, the play has traveled across the country, raising awareness and offering hope for suicide prevention.âÂ
Zimmerman, who says he was mercilessly bullied and regularly spit on in 7th, 8th and 9th grade, admits that he would go home and âvisualize taking my own lifeâ many times.
In an interview on YouTube, he said, âI donât suffer from depression, but if I did, and had those feelings [of suicide], I honestly donât know if Iâd be here today.â
But then, in 2012, âI was one of a couple of people who received a suicide note from a very good friend of mine named Kevin, who took his own life. I started Googling âsuicide notesâ and had an idea to use my craft to put what I found into a play, with actors reading the suicide notes in order to help raise awareness and prevention for suicide.â

With his career predominantly as a comedy writer, Zimmerman says he really scoured the internet in order to try to find a âfunnyâ suicide note, âbut what I found is that there really wasnât one. Some of them were lighter, and that some people will laugh or giggle, but that may be nervous laughter. But, this is a very important moment in anyoneâs life when they decide to do this.â
He says that when the play was first performed at the Fringe Festival, âthe tendency for the actors was to play the result, you know, where this was going. And I had to remind them that thereâs an urgency to these notes. These people that wrote these notes needed to get this out [because] they werenât being heard and they had to tell people what they felt inside. And I think thatâs why theyâre all so powerful.â The subtitle of âright before i goâ is âDestigmatizing Suicide.â
As for how he approached writing âright before i go,â Zimmerman says, âI wanted this to be sort of like âThe Vagina Monologues,â in that it would be something that would be easily performed and wouldnât take a lot of rehearsal, so theatre companies, when they did this piece, they could rehearse it for a couple of hours or a couple of days and interpret it any way they wanted.âÂ
He also says that it just came to him âhow the structure needed to be and how to group the notes to tell the story.â
Meanwhile, Zimmerman says that although he has made a career of writing, his first love was acting, and he started his career in the theatre program at New York University.
And, even though he didnât originally intend to be the playâs narrator, âWhen I did the first table read in my living room with friends of mine, a lot of them said, âYouâre a writer, you need to put yourself in this piece.â Thatâs when I started writing a lot more in between. And, they said they wanted hope, so thatâs when I started putting a lot of stuff about hope at the end.â
An Illustrious Career
Although Zimmerman and his long-time writing partner James Berg were never the head writers on âThe Golden Girls,â âGilmore Girlsâ or âRoseanne,â the Zimmerman/Berg team did write multiple episodes for all three and were able to capitalize on those successes (and others) with many other writing credits.
In addition, while they also didnât receive writing credits for the original script of âThe Brady Bunch Movieâ (and werenât happy about it), the team was hired by the filmâs director Betty Thomas to do rewrites of the original script, and the movie became a hit. Zimmerman and Berg would then get full writing credits for âA Very Brady Sequel,â which also became a hit in 1996.
And, while none of the other TV series the pair wrote for â including the TV adaptation of the hit movie âFame,â as well as âJust Our Luck,â âPaulyâ and âRita Rocks,â to name just a few â became monster hits, they also were hired as âterm writersâ for other series, most notably âThe Nanny.â

Their work won the team two Writers Guild of America award nominations â for the âRoseâs Motherâ episode of âThe Golden Girlsâ and the infamous âLesbian Kissâ episode of âRoseanne.â
Zimmerman and Berg also were the writers for âLadies of the â80s: A Divas Christmas,â a 2023 TV Christmas comedy starring some of the most famous TV divas of the â80s â Loni Anderson (âWKRP in Cincinnatiâ), Morgan Fairchild (âFlamingo Roadâ and âFalconâs Crestâ), Linda Gray (âDallasâ), Donna Mills (âKnots Landingâ) and Nicollette Sheridan (also âKnots Landingâ and later, âDesperate Housewivesâ).
Also last year, Indian River Publishing (an independent book publishing company distributed by Simon & Schuster) published Zimmermanâs book The Girls: from Golden to Gilmore, subtitled âStories about all the wonderful women Iâve worked with…â (Note-He says that the words that come after the ellipsis are âand Roseanne,â although the book cover doesnât say it.)
The book tells Zimmermanâs true story as a TV and film writer and yes, all of the wonderful women he and Berg worked with together. Iâve read several chapters of my copy, which I will ask Stan to autograph when I meet him next month. Itâs a great read.
Editorâs note â Although I also interviewed him on the phone, most of the direct quotes in this article came from the YouTube video âPlaywright Stan Zimmerman Discusses Right Before I Go.â And, the information about his early life and career came from The Girls.
For tickets ($40-$100) to the performances of âright before i go,â visit bit.ly/NNCelebration or Powerstories.com.