Thornton Wilder was born on April 17, 1897 and died on December 7, 1975. Born in Madison, Wisconsin, he was an American diplomat, Amos Wilder and Isabella Wilder. Thornton Wilder began her career at The Thacher School in Ojai, California and graduated from Berkeley High School in 1915. He served as a coastguard in the Second World War. After the war he went to Yale University and then Yale University and got a bachelor 's degree. His work is polished at Yale University, which is part of the Alfa Delta Phi Association, where he is a literary association.
As a novelist and a playwright, Wilder's career will prosper in the coming decades. Following the collection of two single-play and two novels will be the fate to become American classic "My Town" (1938) The drama about the life of this small town will bring his second to Wilder . Pulitzer Prize 13 pieces after him are as follows. "Yanke Merchant" (1938), comedy, he changed to The Matchmaker (1954), popular musical Hello, it became a source of dolly! (1963); Our Dental Skin (1942) was awarded the 3rd Pulitzer Prize of Wilder, our century (1947) was a short-lived barresque, and Alcestiad (1955) was based on that by Greek playwright Euripides Arsèsis
When our town first appeared in 1938, Thornton Wilder was a Pulitzer Prize winner (1927), a novel "St. Louis Rey Bridge" (San Luis Rey Bridge). Unhappy with the majority of what he saw on the American stage, Wilder decided to adopt another theatrical approach. He explained his idea in Thornton Wilder's "Three Dramas" preface (Bantam, 1958): for the integration of Wilder's drama into experimental methods, we consider the town as an innovation of the times It is done. The stage director is a role inside and outside the theater and instructs action. He commented on present, past and future spectators. He was bound by time constraints, but he stood outside and outside. In addition, there are no props, background scenery, design suit etc - a chair, two tables, two ladders, two scaffolds ("The landscape of a person who thinks that you must see the scenery as Wilder explained")
Our night movie is comic Agua para chocolate, a popular classic filled with romance and suspense, and a sharp criticism of gender, border town and the Mexican revolution. According to the novel by the best-selling writer, and now famous politician Laura Esquivel, we explore the relationship between food, love and life. Tonight there are lots of food, love, and life. Recipes in the book are drawn on the white wall, and our customers carefully read hungry librarians and other materials. This room is as vibrant as the waves on the coast of Yucatán, and the talking is full-bodied. Our night catering staff Tamales can see most of our pallets and imagination and the food we have never heard before. Chicken chocolate cooked? Cactus salad? Sounds like something in the movie!