A Rhode Island theater has pulled an upcoming production of The Revolutionists after newly released federal documents tied to Jeffrey Epstein included references to playwright Lauren Gunderson, a move that has sparked a fast-moving dispute inside the theater community about guilt-by-association and institutional risk.
Contemporary Theater Company announced the cancellation in a social media statement and said it would replace the title in its 2026 season, pointing to information circulating from the latest document release. Local reporting said the company argued that the files raised questions about Gunderson’s ties through her former husband, scientist Nathan Wolfe, who appears frequently in the same material. The theater had not named a replacement production at the time of the reports.
Gunderson has publicly denied any personal relationship with Epstein and said she never met him. Accounts of the documents and her response describe the references to her as administrative or social correspondence connected to wedding-related communication from years ago, rather than direct exchanges about meetings or travel. In an Instagram statement cited by multiple outlets, Gunderson said she was “appalled” by the association and characterized the appearance of her name as incidental, tied to shared email logistics from that period.
The episode has pushed theaters and artists into a familiar pressure test: how quickly institutions should act when a name surfaces in high-profile files, and what threshold should trigger programming changes. Commentators and theater voices have framed the Rhode Island decision as a reputational safeguard for a small organization selling tickets in real time, while others argue the move punishes an artist who has stated she had no contact with Epstein and has called the association “nauseating.”















































