Maggie Keenan-Bolger (she/her) is a queer, disabled woman who grew up inner city Detroit where she developed a love for both theatre and activism early on. She attended Oberlin College where she double majored in Theatre and Gender and Women Studies and created her first show, an award-winning play, From the Inside, Out (FtIO). After a successful run at the NY Fringe Festival, FtIO went on to complete an east-coast tour.  

Since then, Maggie has worked extensively with LGBTQIA+ populations, including homeless youth, inter-generational groups of teens and seniors, and GSAs in high schools. Her work in the LGBTQIA+ community was recognized by the White House when she was appointed an LGBT Leader of the Next Generation by Joe Biden. That same year, she was named a "Person to Watch" in the Advocate. A two-time Point Foundation scholar, her pieces Queering History and Not Just Another Coming Out Story, were written in collaboration with LGBTQIA+ homeless youth. They performed in the plays alongside of Broadway talent as a fundraiser for Green Chimneys NYC.

In 2012 she founded and is now Artistic Director for Honest Accomplice Theatre (HAT) after a successful run of her thesis project for the CUNY/SPS Applied Theatre MA Program. HAT's pieces The Birds and the Bees: Unabridged, ReconFIGUREd and Engineers Not Found have been performed in NYC as well as at colleges all along the east coast. HAT also co-created The Trans Literacy Project, which is currently used as an educational tool at centers and schools around the country. Their episode, "What is Gender?" was sponsored by the NYC Commission on Human Rights and is currently shown to all new employees being trained in New York State and California as a part of their sexual harassment training. HAT was supported by The Ford Foundation.

Keenan-Bolger has worked as a teaching artist with organizations such as Urban Stages, The Creative Arts Team and The Leadership Program. She was also a sex educator with the "I Love Female Orgasm" program, speaking to thousands of college students across the U.S. Maggie also received an MFA in Interdisciplinary Arts from Goddard College.

After being diagnosed with cervical dystonia, a neurological movement disorder, she has further dedicated her career to making theatre more accessible to everyone- particularly those who have been historically excluded from theatre and media spaces.