Samuel A. Simon


Samuel A. Simon is an American playwright and performer, and leading national advocate and author for consumer protection and social justice movements.

Career

Early years

Simon grew up in El Paso, Texas; he attended Mesita Elementary School, and in 1963 graduated from El Paso High School. He went on to graduate from the University of Texas at El Paso, and received a law degree from the University of Texas Law School in Austin.

Consumer advocacy

At age 25, he became a founding member of Nader's Raiders, a high-profile public interest and advocacy group spearheaded by Ralph Nader which critically examined the Federal Trade Commission. As a result of the group's work, the FTC reformed and toughened its consumer protection and anti-trust enforcement.
He has testified to Congress, and published numerous articles and books on consumer advocacy issues. In the 1980s, he served as executive director of the National Citizens Committee for Broadcasting, a national advocacy group backed by Nader which drew attention to excessive violence on children's TV programming. The group, which often struggled with funding issues,
was frequently in the news, and—following the breakup of the AT&T monopoly—worked to provide consumers with information to compare long distance services provided by various carriers.

Theater

Simon wrote an intensely personal play titled The Actual Dance, which chronicles an emotional family roller coaster that began when his wife was diagnosed with breast cancer. "It's sad when two loving souls face leaving each other because of a life-threatening illness," he told a Houston reporter in 2018.

Personal

Simon's father was a traveling salesman, and his mother worked as a bookkeeper. In 1966, he married his wife, Susan, a former teacher and psychiatric social worker. They currently live in McLean, Virginia, and have two grown children and four grandchildren. Their son, Marcus Simon, is a state delegate serving in Virginia; their daughter, Dr. Rachael Simon Proper, is a pediatric dentist in Catonsville, Maryland.
He is active in his local community. In 2016, Governor Terry McAuliffe appointed him to the board of directors of the Virginia Recreational Facilities Authority.