Thornton Niven Wilder Chronology

  • 1897 Born in Madison, Wisconsin (April 17)

  • 1906 Moves to Hong Kong in May and to Berkeley, California in October

  • 1906-10 Emerson Public School in Berkeley

  • 1910-11 China Inland Mission School, Chefoo, China (one year)

  • 1912-13 Thacher School, Ojai, CA (one year). First play known to be produced: The Russian Princess

  • 1915 Graduates from Berkeley High School; active in school dramatics

  • 1915-17 Oberlin College; published regularly

  • 1920 B.A. Yale College (3-month service in 1918 with U.S. Army in 1918); many publications

  • 1920-21 American Academy in Rome (8-month residency)

  • 1920s French teacher at Lawrenceville School, Lawrenceville, New Jersey (’21-’25 & ’27-’28)

  • 1924 First visit to the MacDowell Colony, Peterborough, New Hampshire

  • 1926 M.A. in French literature, Princeton University

    The Trumpet Shall Sound produced off-Broadway (American Laboratory Theatre)

    The Cabala (first novel)

  • 1927 The Bridge of San Luis Rey (novel- Pulitzer Prize)

  • 1928 The Angel That Troubled The Waters (first published collection of drama—playlets)

  • 1930s Part-time faculty, University of Chicago (comparative literature and composition); lectures across the country;

  • first Hollywood screen-writing assignment (1934); extensive foreign travel

  • 1930 The Woman of Andros (novel)

  • Completion of home for his family and himself in Hamden, Connecticut

  • 1931 The Long Christmas Dinner and Other Plays (six one-act plays)

  • 1932 Lucrece opens on Broadway staring Katharine Cornell (translation of André Obey’s Le Viol de Lucrèce)

  • 1935 Heaven’s My Destination (novel)

  • 1937 A Doll’s House (adaptation/ trans.) opens on Broadway with Ruth Gordon

  • 1938 Our Town (Pulitzer Prize) and The Merchant of Yonkers open on Broadway

  • 1942 The Skin of Our Teeth opens on Broadway (Pulitzer Prize)

  • Screenplay for Alfred Hitchcock’s The Shadow of a Doubt

  • 1942-45 Service with Army Air Force in North Africa and Italy (Lieut. Col. at discharge – Bronze Star and O.B.E.)

  • 1948 The Ides of March (novel); performing in his plays in summer stock in this period

  • The Victors opens off-Broadway (translation of Sartre’s Morts sans sépulture)

  • 1949 Major role in Goethe Convocation in Aspen; lectures widely.

  • 1951-52 Charles Eliot Norton Professor of Poetry at Harvard

  • 1952 Gold Medal for Fiction, American Academy of Arts and Letters

  • 1953 Cover of Time Magazine (January 12)

  • 1955 The Matchmaker opens on Broadway staring Ruth Gordon

  • The Alcestiad produced at Edinburgh Festival with Irene Worth (as A Life in the Sun)

  • 1957 German Peace Prize

  • 1961 Libretto for The Long Christmas Dinner (music by Paul Hindemith—premieres in Mannheim, West Germany)

  • 1962 “Plays for Bleecker Street” (Someone from Assisi, Infancy, and Childhood) premiere at NYC’s Circle in the Square

  • Libretto for The Alcestiad (music by Louise Talma—premieres in Frankfurt, West Germany)

  • 1963 Presidential Medal of Freedom

  • 1964 Hello, Dolly! starring Carol Channing opens on Broadway

  • 1965 National Book Committee’s Medal for Literature

  • 1967 The Eighth Day (National Book Award for Fiction)

  • 1973 Theophilus North (novel)

  • 1975 Dies in sleep in Hamden, CT on December 7. Buried at Mt. Carmel Cemetery, Hamden, Connecticut

For more information visit www.thorntonwilder.com and www.thorntonwildersociety.org.