Could Josh Wilder be a new August Wilson?
He hopes so. Just a year out of Carnegie Mellon University, the energetic, well-spoken and promising playwright has moved to the Twin Cities to pursue his dream.
Wilder arrived in Minneapolis in July on a $12,500 Jerome Foundation fellowship administered by the Playwrights' Center. Wilder and Yale-educated playwright Janaki Ranpura of Columbus, Ohio, are winners of this year's Many Voices awards, which support playwrights of color who have had no more than one production of their work.
"Some writers carry fear in their writing, or they become so polished they lose their voice," said Jeremy Cohen, producing artistic director at the Playwrights' Center. "Josh's writing is really raw. You sense this bold forwardness, this confidence. And though he's a young writer, he has a huge vision, so he imagines these plays as part of a body of work. There's a lot of hope in this guy."
Wilder grew up in Philadelphia. It was there, as a ninth-grader, that he first read Wilson's "Fences" for an English class. He was enthralled by the African-American vernacular that Wilson used so deftly in his drama about baseball, father-son relations and dreams circumscribed by America's racial caste system.
"I literally ignored everything else that was going on around me, including all my other classes," Wilder said last week in his first press interview. "I would put it between the textbooks for math and science and read it in those classes. I laughed and screamed and cried. It was like, 'Whoa, these are people that I know.' August Wilson's words changed me."
A solicitous young man with a taut build and close-cropped hair, Wilder, 23, looks like one of the many military men in his family. But his tattooed biceps betray his literary bent. He has the words of Langston Hughes' "Dream Variations" inscribed in his flesh:
"To fling my arms wide / In some place of the sun, / To whirl and to dance / Till the white day is done. / Then rest at cool evening / Beneath a tall tree / While night comes on gently, / Dark like me."