CMU School of Drama


Tuesday, October 21, 2008

Lanford Wilson (DSC #224)

ATW: "Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Lanford Wilson discusses the creation of his famed “Talley trilogy,” including Fifth of July, which stemmed in part from his equating an Eskimo folk tale with the war in Vietnam, and Talley’s Folly, now in revival at the McCarter Theatre, and how it grew out of an acting suggestion made to one of the original cast members of Fifth of July. He also talks about his original aspirations of being an artist, with writing being simply something to fall back on; his move from Chicago to New York and his introduction to Off-Broadway’s famed Cafe Cino in the mid-60s; the genesis of his landmark plays Balm in Gilead and The Hot l Baltimore; how he came to write Burn This to break away from his growing reputation as a “suburban” playwright and as the antithesis of Talley’s Folly; and whether we’ll be seeing new plays from him any time soon."

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