Between New Hampshire lawn hills there is a small town called Grover's Corners. This village is at least in the drama "Our Town" written by Thornton Wilder. "Our town" is part of the letters "three things", "everyday life", "love and marriage", and "life and death". Each show represents the world of people who live and live in the corner town of Grover and this secluded city. However, unlike other plays, "our town" does not have a view during the performance.
Our Town of Thorton Wilder, written in 1938, brought to the audience a remarkable reality. Theater expresses the life-long behavior of life, marriage and death, and conveys the tale of three average life stories with very few props. In the third and last work "Death and Death" of the theater, Thorton Wilder depicts many aspects of life, such as drawing dead in a cemetery and thinking and talking to each other, but they are totally life I think. It is the opposite.
According to the New York Times commentary on Thorton Wilder's play "Our Town", critic Brooks Atkinson claims that "Mr. Wilder changed simple events of human life into universal delusions" (Atkinson 119 ). It can be seen as an example of our city, of course, universality of time, social history, and religious ideals. Thorton Wilder was born in 1897. He was interested in drama since I was young. When he entered the University of Overrin in 1915, he wrote three short plays, or "three minute drama". He completed a bachelor's degree at Yale University in 1921 and started education at Lawrenceville School near Princeton, New Jersey. I got a degree from Princeton University in 1926. Wilder was first recognized by a novelist. He received his first Pulitzer Prize at St. Louis Ray Bridge in 1927. In 1938, his famous drama "My Town" was played. It was a huge success, and I won the second Pulitzer Prize Wilder Award.