Thornton Wilder Movies
Thornton Wilder is best remembered for his play Our Town, which has been filmed once and presented numerous times on television, as well as being a staple of high school, college, semiprofessional, and regional theater companies' repertories throughout the many decades since its inception in 1938. He was also responsible for authoring the novel The Bridge of San Luis Rey, and for co-writing the script for one of Alfred Hitchcock's most enduring thrillers. Born Thornton Niven Wilder in Madison, WI, in 1897, he was the son of Amos Parker Wilder, a newspaper editor and diplomat, and the former Isabella Thornton Niven. He was raised in Madison in his early years, but when he was nine, his father received an appointment as consul general in Hong Kong, where the family resided for part of that year. His mother, however, was wary of the political violence sweeping China and she and the children returned to America; the family went back to Hong Kong in 1910, following the cessation of the turmoil. He was educated at the Kaiser Wilhelm School and the China Inland Missionary Boys' School, before returning with his family to America in 1913, at the end of his father's appointment. Wilder spent the remainder of his youth in Berkeley, CA, attending Berkeley High School, where his interests in theater and playwriting first manifested themselves. He studied next at Oberlin College and Yale University, earning his B.A. in 1920, along with accolades from his professors for his potential as a writer. At his father's behest, he initially studied archeology in Rome, and then taught French at Lawrenceville, a boys' preparatory school in New Jersey.Over the next several years, Wilder taught, traveled a bit (including a visit to New Hampshire that would later prove extremely important), and also wrote his first novel, The Cabala, inspired by his summer in Rome. Published in 1926, the book was reviewed enthusiastically, though it was hardly a bestseller, but it encouraged him to continue writing, and in 1927, he published his second novel, The Bridge of San Luis Rey. The book, a story set in the 18th century and dealing with issues of faith, tolerance, and love, all confronted through the prism of a seemingly random instance of cruel fate, was received with universal enthusiasm by critics and the public, winning the Pulitzer Prize and instantly earning a permanent place on high school and college reading lists for decades to come. A film adaptation followed in 1929, produced by MGM, and the story was adapted to the screen in 1944, from independent producer Benedict Bogeaus and director Rowland V. Lee. The earlier film was an awkward partial talkie, done during the transition to sound, while the 1940s version is usually regarded as an unsatisfactory film in most respects and has been seen very seldom on television since the 1960s. Wilder resigned his post at Lawrenceville in 1928, accepting an appointment to teach at the University of Chicago that was extended by an Oberlin classmate who was then the institution's president. In 1928, Wilder published a new book, The Angel That Troubled the Waters and Other Plays, a volume of writing dating back to his days at Oberlin, which was more of a publication of a sketchbook of ideas than a representation of his current work. His 1930 novel The Woman of Andros, set in ancient Greece and dealing with the conflict between pagan and Christian morality, was reviewed unevenly, declared a masterpiece by some critics and a failure by others, who couldn't respond to its setting or characters.
It was five years before Wilder published another novel, but that book, Heaven's My Destination, was a deep and moving reflection of his vision of life and the best ways to live it in Depression-era America, told from the point of view of an itinerant salesman of religious books and the people he meets and interacts with. In 1938, Wilder published the work for which he is best known, the play Our Town. Set in Grovers Corners -- which was modeled after Petersborough, NH, which he had visited in 1924 -- the play told of the cycles of life, small and large, intimate and cosmic, from the point-of-view of two families, the Gibbs and the Webbs. The play was Wilder's second great success, winning a Pulitzer Prize and immediately getting taken up by companies all over the country. The film rights were purchased by producer Sol Lesser, who brought the play to the screen in 1940 under the direction of Sam Wood. It was criticized for altering the ending, making Emily's death a dream, a change that Wilder himself had insisted upon, in close consultation with the producer, because of his recognition that a movie of Our Town was fundamentally different from a play. The movie, which starred Martha Scott and a young William Holden, and featured production design by William Cameron Menzies and a widely acclaimed score by Aaron Copland, was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Picture, and has continued to be highly regarded over the decades since. Wilder's next play, The Merchant of Yonkers (1939), was less than a success in its original form, although he later reworked it under the title of The Matchmaker, which was filmed under that title and later transformed into the musical Hello, Dolly!, which became one of the longest running shows on Broadway up to that time.
Wilder himself exerted his greatest direct influence on movies at the end of the 1930s and the outset of the 1940s. His reputation was so substantial in 1940 that Hollywood was eager for any input that he could provide and that they could afford. That year, he was given the task of adapting a short story entitled Uncle Charlie, written by Gordon McDonell, into a screen treatment. What Wilder delivered, with dialogue by Sally Benson, became the script for Shadow of a Doubt, which is regarded by most critics as Alfred Hitchcock's first seriously penetrating American thriller. That film and its setting was almost a macabre inversion of the small-town Americana of Wilder's Our Town, a Norman Rockwell vision with fangs and psychosis added. Wilder's next play, The Skin of Our Teeth (1942), was inspired by the events surrounding the American entry into the Second World War. A daring attempt to interweave the history of humankind from prehistoric times to the conflict at hand, it earned Wilder his third Pulitzer Prize. He returned to writing fiction after World War II with The Ides of March, by which time he was one of the most renowned authors in the world. His later works, which included novels and plays, were somewhat anticlimactic compared with his three successes of the 1920s, '30s, and '40s.
Our Town remained as popular in the 1950s as it had been in the late '30s and '40s, and in 1955, was even musicalized by Jimmy Van Heusen and Sammy Cahn in a television production starring Paul Newman and Eva Marie Saint; Frank Sinatra played the Stage Manager, introducing the songs "Love and Marriage" and "The Impatient Years." The Matchmaker was filmed in 1958, and eventually turned into Hello, Dolly!, the stage version of which was breaking box-office records for most of the 1960s. Collections of his plays were interspersed with new works, among them the play The Alcestiad (1977) and the novels The Eighth Day (1967) and Theophilus North (written in 1973, and filmed as Mr. North in 1988). The latter was as close to an autobiographical work as Wilder ever came, dealing with a character who had lived in China and attended Yale, as well as having a summer in Rome behind him. Wilder passed away in 1975 at the age of 78, by which time his work had become part of the intellectual and cultural landscape of the United States.
It was after his death that Wilder became somewhat controversial, both personally and professionally, in a most unexpected way, amid the odd flow of ideological currents running through American life. The emergence of the aggressive gay rights movement during the mid-'70s, coupled with the lingering drug use and freer overall sexual mores of the 1960s, along with the presidential battle between Ronald Reagan and Gerald Ford (representing reactionary and conservative wings of the Republican Party, respectively), and the ascent of Jimmy Carter to the presidency, had all served to inflame the reactionary right. The latter, focused through newly combative religious reactionaries, began aiming at targets across society, including school reading lists -- Our Town, with its mystical overtones, became a subject of controversy all by itself. Additionally, as these same forces took the battle specifically over gay rights to ever more absurd levels, the gay community and its supporters fired back by pointing out all of the known homosexuals whose writings were standard to most high schools and colleges. Thornton Wilder was one name that figured prominently in those arguments. Ironically, the author had never publicly addressed his sexuality, and the general subject of sexuality was largely absent from his writing. As the political right was often culturally obtuse, it came as something of a shock to many leaders and adherents that an author whose writing permeated school reading lists to the degree that Wilder did, or who was as closely associated with an idealized Americana, could have been homosexual. Overall, the controversy probably had no net effect -- Our Town was likely removed from schools in some very conservative districts (which was unfortunate for those students), but the dispute probably gave it a new level of interest in the many locales where it was still used without protest. The play remains one of the most well known ever written, sufficiently so that it was capable of being used as the key plot element of a 1989 episode of the popular sitcom Cheers entitled "Two Girls For Every Boyd," with no concern that audiences would not recognize it. ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide
Thornton Wilder's award-winning novel is given a lavish screen adaptation in this historical drama from writer and director Mary McGuckian. In Peru in 1714, a rickety bridge collapsed as five people were attempting to cross, forcing them to plunge to their deaths. Brother Fray Juniper (Gabriel Byrne) is a Franciscan monk who has been given the duty of looking into the tragedy by the archbishop of Lima (Robert De Niro), and to learn what he can about the victims. It is Juniper's belief that these particular people died for some reason, and that it is his duty to determine why God chose these five people to perish, while others in the vicinity survived. After five years, Juniper delivers his findings to the archbishop as well as the viceroy of Peru (F. Murray Abraham), as Juniper tells them of the lives of the troubled Dona Maria (Kathy Bates), the nun Pepita (Adriana Dominguez), warm-hearted Uncle Pio (Harvey Keitel), street kid-turned-actress La Perichola (Pilar Lopez de Ayala), and others involved in the tragedy. The Bridge of San Luis Rey also features Geraldine Chaplin, John Lynch, and brothers Mark Polish and Michael Polish. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Robert De Niro, F. Murray Abraham, (more)
Originally assembled by actress Joanne Woodward at Connecticut's Westport County Playhouse (where she served as artistic director), this highly praised 2002 revival of Thornton Wilder's Pulitzer Prize-winning 1938 play Our Town enjoyed a brief Broadway stay that same year, and it was during its New York run that the production was videotaped for the Showtime cable network. The revival's principal attraction was Woodward's husband, Paul Newman, in the role of the avuncular Stage Manager, who narrates the action and occasionally converses with the characters on-stage and with members of the audience. Covering a period from 1901 to approximately 1917, the play is set in the New England community of Grover's Corners (conveyed with a bare minimum of sets and props, as dictated by Wilder's original staging notes). The focus is on the romance between Emily Webb (Maggie Lacey), daughter of the town's newspaper editor, and George Gibbs (Ben Fox). The play's three acts run the full gamut of Emily and George's relationship, from courtship, to marriage, to early death. In addition to Newman, the cast of Our Town is full of familiar TV and movie faces, among them Jeffrey DeMunn, Jane Curtin, Mia Dillon, Travis Walters, Stephen Mendillo, and Jake Robards, grandson of Jason Robards Jr. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Paul Newman, Maggie Lacey, (more)
- Starring:
- Spalding Gray
A young man freshly graduated from Yale (Anthony Edwards) moves to Rhode Island and finds himself with a strange power: the ability to create mild electric shocks through his hands. He begins to make friends around the community, and tries to help those around him by healing several minor sicknesses. Mr. North was the directorial debut for Danny Huston, the son of John Huston. ~ John Bush, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Anthony Edwards, Robert Mitchum, (more)
The cast of the Old Globe Theater's acclaimed early-'80s revival of Thornton Wilder's Pulitzer Prize-winning classic reunited to re-create their roles for this made-for-TV production, taped for PBS's anthology series American Playhouse. The Skin of Our Teeth follows the often funny and occasionally tragic circumstances of the Antrobus family, who have learned to persevere and even thrive through any number of natural and personal crises, including war, flood, disease, and even a plague of locusts. The distinguished cast of The Skin of Our Teeth includes Blair Brown, Rue McClanahan, Harold Gould, Sada Thompson, Larry Drake, and John Houseman. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide
This videotaped version of Thornton Wilder's Pulitzer-winning play Our Town stars Hal Holbrook as the Stage Manager. Acting as narrator and assuming several different interlocutory roles throughout the production, Holbrook shows us life in Grovers Corners, New Hampshire, in the first few years of the 20th century. The focus is on the romance and marriage of Emily Webb (Glynnis O'Connor) and George Gibbs (Robby Benson); the play ends at Emily's funeral, with the girl's spirit commenting detachedly on the miracle of life. In keeping with Wilder's stage directions, the play is enacted on a bare stage with minimal props, allowing the audience to fill in the rest with imagination. Also starring Ned Beatty, Sada Thompson, Ronny Cox and Barbara Bel Geddes, this TV adaptation of Our Town originally aired May 30, 1977. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Hal Holbrook, Glynnis O'Connor, (more)
Previously filmed twice in Hollywood, Thornton Wilder's Pulitzer Prize-winning novel The Bridge of San Luis Rey was brought to television in this lavish, live, star-studded DuPont Show of the Month adaptation. The story essentially begins at the end -- July 20, 1714 -- when the famous San Luis Rey bridge near Lima, Peru, collapses, plunging five people to their deaths. The victims were the wealthy but embittered Marquess de Montemayor (Judith Anderson); the Marquess's young maid, Pepita (Sandra Whiteside); Uncle Pio (Hume Cronyn), mentor of the celebrated Peruvian actress La Perichole (Viveca Lindfors); Jaime (Miko Oscard), Pio's youthful traveling companion; and Esteban (Steven Hill), a talented young scribe who left behind a twin brother, Manuel (Clifford David). Investigating the tragedy, Captain Alvarado (Theodore Bikel), an intimate of one of the victims, tries to figure out how it came to be that the unfortunate five were all brought together on the same disastrous day. Also in the cast is the celebrated actress/director Eva Le Gallienne as Madre Maria, and Kurt Kaznar, with whom Theodore Bikel would later co-star in the Broadway production The Sound of Music. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Judith Anderson, Hume Cronyn, (more)
Thornton Wilder's 1938 stage play The Merchant of Yonkers was based on an old British stage farce by John Oxenford (which in turn served as the basis of an Austrian farce by Johann Nestroy). Merchant of Yonkers was a bomb, but Wilder was quite fond of the piece, so he revised it as the considerably more successful The Matchmaker in 1955. The 1958 film version stars Shirley Booth as 19th-century matchmaker Dolly Gallagher Levi (a character not found in the Oxenford or Nestroy versions; Wilder "borrowed" Dolly from Moliere's The Miser). Dolly is currently trying to arrange a marriage between Yonkers dry-goods merchant Horace Vandergelder (Paul Ford) and hatmaker Irene Molloy (Shirley MacLaine)-though she secretly harbors a desire to march Horace to the altar herself. Meanwhile, Vandergelder's chief clerk Cornelius (Anthony Perkins), celebrating a recent promotion, decides to head to New York for a "good time". Though he's supposed to be minding the store, Cornelius abandons the shop, with fellow-clerk Barnaby (Robert Morse, repeating his stage role) in tow. Inevitably, Cornelius and Barnaby wind up escorting Irene Molloy and her co-worker Minnie Fay (Perry Wilson) to a fancy restaurant, where Horace and Dolly are also dining. As the many plot twists wend their way through the proceedings, the camera occasionally pauses to allow the character to speak directly to the audience, expressing their innermost desires and philosophies; this purely theatrical device works quite well on screen, especially the monologue about honesty delivered by handyman Malachi Stack (played with alcoholic whimsy by Wallace Ford). While the name "Malachi Stack"may not be familiar to you, the other characters-and the basic plot-will be instantly recognizable to fans of Hello Dolly, the 1964 musical comedy version of The Matchmaker. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Shirley Booth, Anthony Perkins, (more)
Irregularly scheduled on NBC from 1954 through 1957, Producers' Showcase was a series of lavish, full-color 90 minute specials, bringing the best of Broadway to the 21 inch screen. On September 11, 1955, the series expanded to two hours to offer an elaborate "life from Hollywood" staging of Thornton Wilder's surrealistic comedy The Skin of Our Teeth. Though the action ostensibly takes place in New Jersey--first the city of Excelsior, then on the boardwalk of Atlantic City--the episodic plotline girdles the entire history of the world, with Mankind represented by the "ubermensch" Antrobus family. Surviving the Creation, the Ice Age, the seven deadly plagues, the Black Death and every other historical calamity, the unflappable and always fastidiously dressed George Antrobus (a rare acting performance by legendary Broadway director George Abbott) and his even-tempered wife (Helen Hayes) personify every man and woman who has weathered the most harrowing of storms "by the skin of their teeth." Acting as a combination Greek Chorus and Protean Player is the Antrobus' sexually uninhibited maid Sabina (Mary Martin, in a role created on Broadway by Tallulah Bankhead), whose duties range from wrangling baby mastodons to periodically replenishing the human race. Featured in the cast as Gladys is Heller Halliday, the daughter of costar Mary Martin. This lively adaptation of Wilder's Pulitzer Prize-winning play was originally staged in Paris as part of the American National Theater Academy's Salute to France program. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
First filmed in 1928, Thornton Wilder's Pulitzer-winning novel The Bridge of San Luis Rey is given a ponderous treatment in this 1944 remake. Like the novel, the film begins at the end, with the collapse of a rope bridge in 18th century Peru. The story then flashes back to the lives of the five unfortunates killed in the collapse. Among the five are singer-turned-couresan Michaela (Lynn Bari), her obsequious Uncle Pio (Akim Tamiroff), feuding twin brothers Manuel and Estaban (both played by Francis Lederer) and the envious Marquesa (Nazimova). Trying to make sense of the lives and deaths of the five is sensitive young priest Brother Juniper (Donald Woods). ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Lynn Bari, Akim Tamiroff, (more)
Teresa Wright plays Charlie, a small-town high-schooler who enjoys a symbiotic relationship with her favorite uncle, also named Charlie (Joseph Cotten). When young Charlie "wills" that old Charlie pay a visit to her family, her wish comes true. Uncle Charlie is his usual charming self, but he seems a bit secretive and reserved at times. Too, his manner of speaking is curiously unsettling, especially when he brings up the subject of rich widows, whom he characterizes as "swine." When a pair of detectives (MacDonald Carey and Wallace Ford), posing as magazine writers, arrive in town and begin asking questions about Uncle Charlie, young Charlie's curiosity is aroused. Why, for example, has Uncle Charlie torn an article out of the evening newspaper? Rushing to the library, Young Charlie locates the missing item: the headline screams WHO IS THE MERRY WIDOW MURDERER? As the horrified Charlie reads on, the conclusion is inescapable: her beloved Uncle Charlie is a mass murderer, preying upon wealthy old women. And what happens next? Thornton Wilder, Sally Benson, and Alma Reville (Mrs. Hitchcock) based their screenplay on a story by Gordon McDowell, who in turn was inspired by real-life "Merry Widow Murderer" Earle Leonard Nelson. The casting, from stars to bit players, is impeccable; the best of the batch is Hume Cronyn, making his film debut as a wimpy murder-mystery aficionado. Lensed on location in Santa Rosa, California, The Shadow of a Doubt wasAlfred Hitchcock's favorite film. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Joseph Cotten, Teresa Wright, (more)
Thornton Wilder's Pulitzer Prize-winning play Our Town is given the Hollywood treatment in this adaptation directed by Sam Wood featuring an evocative score by Aaron Copland and outstanding production design by William Cameron Menzies. Frank Craven is Mr. Morgan, the narrator and our guide through the small town of Grover's Corners in the more innocent American times of 1901, 1904, and 1913. Mr. Morgan chronicles the lives of a handful of Grover's Corners citizens, centering upon Emily Webb (Martha Scott), the daughter of the local newspaper editor (Guy Kibbee), and George Gibbs (William Holden), the son of the local doctor (Thomas Mitchell). Emily and George fall in love and the film details their difficult courtship, marriage, and tragic childbirth. The film was nominated for a Best Picture Oscar, losing out to Rebecca. ~ Paul Brenner, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- William Holden, Martha Scott, (more)
We Live Again was based on Tolstoy's Resurrection; the title was changed upon producer Sam Goldwyn's theory that it meant the same thing as Resurrection and was easier to understand. The film was meant as an introductory showcase for Goldwyn's latest discovery, Russian actress Anna Sten. The story, much laundered from the Tolstoy original, depicts the downfall of a peasant girl who is seduced by a Russian prince (Fredric March). The once-callous nobleman tries to make amends for the hurt he has inflicted on the girl, who has wound up in prison for solicitation. The first American version of Resurrection, directed by D. W. Griffith, was made in 1909 and lasted ten minutes. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Anna Sten, Fredric March, (more)
The first of two film versions of Thornton Wilder's novel, The Bridge of San Luis Rey begins at the end. The titular bridge, which stands in 18th-century Peru, collapses, killing five people. The natives believe that the bridge's destruction was the result of Divine intervention. Using this as a cue, the film flashes back on the lives of the five victims, allowing the audience to determine whether or not their deaths were deserved. Top-billed as a wanton Spanish dancer/courtesan is Lily Damita, who later gave up her career to become the first wife of Errol Flynn. Originally a silent film, Bridge of San Luis Rey was hastily fitted with an opening and closing reel of dialogue to take advantage of the "all-talkie" craze of 1929. The film was remade in 1945, with perennial "other woman" Lynn Bari in the Lily Damita role. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Ernest Torrence, Raquel Torres, (more)





















