Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Wilson, Lanford (Vol. 197) - Mark Busby (essay date 1987)
Wilson, Lanford (Vol. 197) - Mark Busby (essay date 1987)
Mark Busby (essay date 1987)
SOURCE: Busby, Mark. “Lanford Wilson.” In Lanford Wilson, edited by Wayne Chatterton and James H. Maguire, pp. 5-52. Boise, Idaho: Boise State University, 1987.
[In the following essay, Busby discusses Wilson's Midwestern roots as inspiration for his plays.]
Vincent, the main character in Lanford Wilson's first Broadway play, The Gingham Dog, explains that he left his small Kentucky town for New York because he was “sick of small people—ambitions—hopes—small hopelessness,” and he thought that New Yorkers “could comprehend something outside themselves, respond.” It was perhaps a similar attraction that brought Lanford Wilson from a small farm near Ozark, Missouri, to the bright lights of the Great White Way, but just as Vincent eventually discovers, Wilson learned that continuing connections with one's region remain. He also knows that coming home is not always wrapped in comfortable...
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- Introduction
- Principal Works
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Criticism
- Stanley Kauffmann (review date 13 June 1970)
- Lanford Wilson and Esther Harriott (interview date December 1982)
- Leslie Kane (essay date 1985-86)
- Lanford Wilson and David Savran (interview date 1 December 1986)
- Mark Busby (essay date 1987)
- Richard Hornby (essay date spring 1988)
- Rudolf Erben (essay date February 1989)
- Johan Callens (essay date 1989)
- Christopher Edwards (review date 9 June 1990)
- Lanford Wilson and John C. Tibbetts (interview date spring 1991)
- Lanford Wilson and Jackson R. Bryer (interview date 20 May 1993)
- Philip Middleton Williams (essay date 1993)
- Anne M. Dean (essay date 1994)
- James J. Martine (essay date 1994)
- Charles Isherwood (review date 10-16 February 2003)
- Ricardo Montez (review date 3 May 2003)
- Further Reading
- Copyright
