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A Study Guide for Lanford Wilson's "Burn This"
A Study Guide for Lanford Wilson's "Burn This"
A Study Guide for Lanford Wilson's "Burn This"
Ebook35 pages24 minutes

A Study Guide for Lanford Wilson's "Burn This"

By Gale and Cengage

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A Study Guide for Lanford Wilson's "Burn This," excerpted from Gale's acclaimed Drama For Students. This concise study guide includes plot summary; character analysis; author biography; study questions; historical context; suggestions for further reading; and much more. For any literature project, trust Drama For Students for all of your research needs.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateJul 27, 2016
ISBN9781535820042
A Study Guide for Lanford Wilson's "Burn This"

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    A Study Guide for Lanford Wilson's "Burn This" - Gale

    4

    Burn This

    Lanford Wilson

    1987

    Introduction

    Burn This opened in Los Angeles, California, on January 22, 1987. Wilson’s play is a contemporary romantic drama, but it is not a happy romance, and even the resolution cannot be described as entirely happy. The two romantic leads, Anna and Pale, do not find love easy, and it is not easy for the audience to witness. Early reviews of the play were mixed. Although reviewers commended Joan Allen and John Malkovich’s performances, some critics questioned the credibility of an attraction between Anna and Pale. Nevertheless, the play has been generally well-received because the characters are interesting, particularly Larry, Anna’s homosexual roommate, who is funny and endearing. In a 1986 interview with David Savron, Wilson explained that Burn This is a love story different from any other love story because the characters do not say, I love you; they say, I don’t want this. This conflict, argued Wilson, makes the love story contemporary. Wilson spent time studying modern dance so that he could incorporate the atmosphere and style into his character of Anna. Burn This is Wilson’s thirty-eighth play, and he was willing to wait for nearly a year to put it on stage because he wanted John Malkovich to play Pale. He has stated that with this play he wanted to recapture the convoluted plotting of his earliest plays. Wilson relies upon dialogue to reveal the plot, and thus, the audience must pay close attention in order to follow the action. Burn This was not as commercially or critically successful as were Wilson’s Talley’s Folly or Hot I Baltimore, but it has been widely discussed as a depiction of a contemporary love

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