Lanford Wilson was an American
playwright,
[1] considered one of the founders of the
Off-Off-Broadway theater movement died he was , 73.. He received the
Pulitzer Prize for Drama in 1980, was elected in 2001 to the
Theater Hall of Fame, and in 2004 was elected to the
American Academy of Arts and Letters.
(April 13, 1937 – March 24, 2011) |
Biography
Early years

Wilson was born to Ralph Eugene and Violetta Tate Wilson in
Lebanon, Missouri. After his parents' divorce, he moved with his mother to
Springfield, where they lived until she remarried; when he was 11, they moved again to
Ozark. There he attended high school, and after graduation, he moved to
San Diego, California, where he briefly attended
San Diego State University, and lived with his father. Thereafter, he relocated for six years to Chicago, where he began to explore playwriting at the
University of Chicago.
[2]
Career
Wilson began his active career as a playwright in the early 1960s at the
Caffe Cino in
Greenwich Village,
[3] writing
one-act plays such as
Ludlow Fair,
Home Free!, and
The Madness of Lady Bright.
The Madness of Lady Bright premiered at the Caffe Cino in May 1964 and was the venue's first significant success. The play featured actor
Neil Flanagan in the title role as Leslie Bright, a neurotic aging
queen.
The Madness of Lady Bright is considered a landmark play in the representation of
homosexuality. It lasted for over 200 performances, making it the longest running play ever seen at the Caffe Cino. Wilson was subsequently invited to present his work
Off-Broadway, including his plays
Balm in Gilead and
The Rimers of Eldritch produced at
Cafe La MaMa.
Joanna (Lee Taylor-Allan) and Lawrence (Kenneth Boys) in a scene from the 1986 New York revival of Lanford Wilson's
Home Free!Wilson was a co-founder of the
Circle Repertory Company in 1969 and many of his plays were first presented there, directed by his long-standing collaborator,
Marshall W. Mason.
[4] The Circle Rep's production of Wilson's
The Hot l Baltimore won the 1973
New York Drama Critics' Circle Award, the
Outer Critics Circle Award, and the
Obie Award, and in 1980 he received the
Pulitzer Prize for Drama and the
New York Drama Critics' Circle Award for
Talley's Folly.
Wilson's first full-length play,
Balm in Gilead, depicts a doomed romance in a greasy spoon diner inhabited by junkies, prostitutes and thieves. It premiered at
LaMaMa in 1965 directed by
Marshall W. Mason, and had a memorable Off-Broadway revival in the 1984, directed by
John Malkovich. The latter production was a co-production of
Circle Repertory Company and the
Steppenwolf Theatre Company.
As the above description of
The Madness of Lady Bright indicates, gay
identity is a major theme in Wilson's work,
[5] although some of his plays, such as
Talley's Folly (1979), which won him the
Pulitzer Prize, don't explore it at all.
Lemon Sky (1970),
Fifth of July (1978), and
Burn This (1986) also deal with gay issues.
Lemon Sky, his most autobiographical play, tells the story of a young man's struggle with his crude, uneducated father, when he tries to
come out of the closet. In
Fifth of July, a hit on Broadway in 1980-82, two of the central characters are a gay couple living in a Midwestern town, one of whom is a disabled
Vietnam veteran. In
Burn This a central character is a gay man who writes advertising for a living and is involved with both gay
identity and
straight friends, one of whom has died in a boating accident before the play begins. The entire group struggles together to deal with their collective grief.
Wilson's plays which have run nine months or more on Broadway include
Fifth of July, Pulitzer Prize-winning
Talley's Folly, and
Burn This.
Hot l Baltimore, one of his most successful plays, ran for 1,166 performances in a venue seating 299 people. It was also adapted into a short-lived television comedy by TV producer
Norman Lear.Wilson was also a founding member of the
New York State Summer School of the Arts, of which Circle Rep was the theater contingent.
Wilson and his directing collaborator
Marshall W. Mason encouraged so-called
"method" acting and often hark back to the classic techniques of
Anton Chekhov, updated with some distinctly
modernist and
post-modernist touches.
[citation needed] They have also been close to and have been fervent admirers of
Tennessee Williams and
Edward Albee. Many of Wilson's plays feature strong, sympathetic central characters, truly repulsive villains, agonizing plot twists, and
tragic or semi-tragic endings.
In addition to writing plays, Wilson wrote the texts for several 20th-century
operas, including at least two collaborations with composer
Lee Hoiby:
Summer and Smoke (1971) and
This is the Rill Speaking (1992) (based on his own play). With
composer Kenneth Fuchs, he created three chamber musicals,
The Great Nebula in Orion,
A Betrothal, and
Brontosaurus, which were originally presented by Circle Repertory Company in New York City.
In 2010,
Debra Monk presented Wilson with the Artistic Achievement Award from the
New York Innovative Theatre Awards. This honor was bestowed on Wilson on behalf of his peers and fellow artists of the Off-Off-Broadway community "in recognition of his brave and unique works that helped established the Off-Off-Broadway community, and propel the independent theatre voice as an important contributor to the American stage."
[6][7]
A Personal Note
After Wilson moved to New York City in the early 1960's, he settled in a small apartment in West Greenwich Village on Sheridan Square, where he lived for many years. Later, after
Hot L Baltimore became a hit, he was able to buy a house in Sag Harbor, Long Island. He then began living in both places, using the West Village apartment mainly when he had a play in production in New York. He also became active in a community theatre company in Sag Harbor and produced some of his shorter plays there. Around 1998 he finally gave up his apartment and lived full-time in Sag Harbor, where he was living when he died.
Bibliography
The following list is not complete and includes only some major works. Wilson has written dozens of short plays, they are collected in a volume entitled "Twenty-one short plays of Lanford Wilson."
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