THEATRE PREVIEW
LANFORD WILSON “LEMON SKY”
Published in KPBS On Air Magazine January
1993
Pulitzer
Prize-winning playwright Lanford Wilson only knew his father for six
months. He was seventeen, and he'd left
Lebanon, Missouri
to live with Dad in El Cajon. The relationship ended in an explosive
argument during which his father accused him of being a homosexual and kicked
him out of the house. They never saw each
other again.
The events are
fascinatingly depicted in “Lemon Sky”, which was first mounted in Buffalo
in 1970 and beautifully re-produced on PBS' "American Playhouse" in
1987. The real time of the action was
1956. Wilson
worked at Ryan Aeronautical and attended San Diego State College for a year,
studying painting and hanging out with writers and poets. He started writing while he was living
here. The play about his father's
second family was dedicated to his half-brothers, Jim and John (Jerry and Jack
in the play). Jim currently lives in Oceanside
and John teaches in the Math department at SDSU.
"The
chronology of events is all screwed up in the play," Wilson
said. "But that last fight with my
father really happened... He died several years ago... He'd actually read
“Lemon Sky” and said 'That's about right.'
He read himself as the hero of the piece. He says a lot of wonderful,
outrageous things in the play. I always
thought he was marvelous, until the reviews said he was relentless and
horrible. I remember him as quite
terrific -- but he was horrible to me.
I just wasn't the tail-chaser and macho-man he was. I was really quite a sissy. I didn't turn out the way I was supposed
to."
But the PBS
production of ”Lemon Sky” turned out better than Wilson
had imagined. "When I heard they'd
cast Kevin Bacon (in the writer-son role) I said, 'Kevin Bacon? Give me a break!' But he was terrific, and the production was gorgeous. Theatrical.
Surreal. Strange. Kevin and I are great buddies now. He met his wife on that project. Kyra Sedgwick. She played Carol, the gorgeous one." In last month's issue of Movieline magazine,
Kevin Bacon called “Lemon Sky” "the most challenging work and the best
work I've ever done... the rawest, most
complex work that I've had to do, and the thing I'm most proud of."
Having put that
part of his past behind him, Wilson
is back in San Diego for the first
time since. He's here for the Old
Globe's pre-Broadway production of his latest play, “Redwood Curtain”. He doesn't plan to visit El
Cajon. "I
have no particular fondness for the place," he says dryly.
Wilson
has spent time in California,
though. It was his teaching stint at Humboldt
State in the summer of 1991 that
inspired him to write “Redwood Curtain”, a sort-of mystery about a gifted,
magical Eurasian girl who searches for her father among the burned-out Vietnam
veterans that live among the Northern California
redwoods.
"Behind
the Redwood Curtain, there are somewhere between three and eight thousand
men," Wilson explains. "They live like hermits, look like the
walking dead. I tried to talk to
them. Only two would speak to me. They hang out on corners, walk the streets,
do odd jobs... It's not a communal living arrangement, like some of the Oregon,
Washington or Florida
groups of vets. They're hiding up there
in Eureka, Arcata. Hiding the whole war and its consequences.
"But the
play is really talking more about the girl," he continues. "The first time I heard about the forty
thousand bastards we created over there [in Vietnam],
I was shocked. Fifty thousand died and
we created forty thousand more. I was
very upset about this gorgeous cross-breed of people being ignored, denied,
looking for fathers who want nothing to do with them. About four of them were my students at Humboldt.... The play is
about the possibilities of that whole race of people we're ignoring so
desperately. That's the healing
process. And part of the healing is
taking those badly wounded men into our hearts. It's a mystery-fantasy-comedy on a very serious subject."
Wilson
has often been accused of writing plays that are 100% character with no
action. "I hate hearing
that," he says. "I think
there's a great deal of action in my plays.
A lot of it is interior. Usually
by the end of a play, a lot has happened and everyone has changed. It's not a lot of talk and some gratuitous
action at the end. [My critics and I
are] just not talking about the same kind of action."
Wilson
does agree that character always comes first in his plays. (Among his best known are “The Hot l Baltimore”,
“Tally's Folly”, for which he won the Pulitzer, and most recently, “Burn
This”). “Redwood Curtain” is "a
real departure" in that it is "completely plotted, with a surprise
ending."
Characters and
events "reverberate" from Wilson
play to play, and there's also, he admits, a recurring theme: "a search for identity, for a path, a
way. In “Redwood Curtain”, the girl's
first line to the vet is 'Excuse me.
Could you tell me where the path is?'
And by the end of the play, he has."
“Redwood
Curtain” runs from January 16-February 28 in the Old Globe Theatre. 239-2255.
©1993
Patté Productions Inc.