No scenery.” The costumes are simple the lighting instructions, complex. The play’s opening stage directions are clear and radical, especially for 1938: “No curtain. He tells the audience that the play will show “people a thousand years from now” that “this is the way we were: in our growing up and in our marrying and in our living and in our dying.” The three acts mostly follow two characters, Emily Webb and George Gibbs, who go to school together in Act I, marry in Act II, and experience tragedy in Act III. While he sometimes talks directly to the actors, he maintains his distance most of his lines are delivered as an address to the audience. The audience encounters Grover’s Corners through the point of view of the Stage Manager-a character in the play who functions as the narrator and a sympathetic director. Wilder wanted the play to show “the life of a village against the life of the stars,” he said in an early preface to the book, and to explore “the trivial details of human life in reference to a vast perspective of time, of social history and of religious ideas.” The townspeople know many pleasures: seeing the sun rise over the mountain, noticing the birds, watching for the change of seasons. Thornton Wilder’s stage drama Our Town (1938) takes place between 19 in Grover’s Corners, New Hampshire, a community that has not produced anyone very “remarkable” (p. “The morning star always gets wonderful bright the minute before it has to go,-doesn’t it?”-the Stage Manager in Our Town (p.
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