Lanford Wilson
Lanford Wilson is an
American playwright who was born on
April 13,
1937 in
Lebanon, Missouri. He was raised in the
Ozarks until, as a teenager, he moved to
California to live with his father, from whom his mother had been long divorced. He began his career as a playwright in the early
1960s at the Caffe Cino in
Greenwich Village with one-act plays such as
Ludlow Fair,
Home Free, and
The Madness of Lady Bright. He soon moved to
off-Broadway with
Balm in Gilead in
1964 and
The Rimers of Eldrich in
1965. Wilson was a founding member of the Circle Theatre Company which began in
1969. Many of his plays were first presented there, including
The Hot L Baltimore, which won the New York Drama Critics’ Circle Award the Outer Critics’ Circle Award, and the Obie Award, and
Fifth of July, which later had a successful production on
Broadway. Wilson’s
1979 play,
Talley’s Folly won the
Pulitzer Prize for drama.
Other plays by Wilson include:
- The Gingham Dog (1968)
- Lemon Sky (1970)
- The Mound Builders (1975)
- A Tale Told (1981—later revised and renamed “Talley & Son”)
- Angels Fall (1982)
- Burn This (1987)
- Redwood Curtain (1993)
- Book of Days (2000)