I think I liked it?
I know I learned about Lanford Wilson in college, though I can't remember if we read anything of his. I own a copy of Burn This, but that could be due to my habit of buying scripts of all kinds, whether or not I was in the proper class.
In any case, I thought I'd like Lanford Wilson's work, from what I've learned about him and from what little snippets I (think) I've read. And in finishing Burn This, I know I enjoyed it, but there's something about Burn This that leaves me feeling unfulfilled. Maybe it's one of those plays that really has to be seen performed in order to appreciate?
Burn This concerns four characters: Anna and Larry, former roommates of Robby, who has died in a boating accident; Burton, Anna's boyfriend; and Palek Robby's brother. Anna and Larry have just returned from Robby's funeral (wake? It's been a while.) and Burton has just returned from a Canadian retreat to help with his writing. Some time later (a week? a month? I don't remember), Pale unexpectedly shows up to collect his brother's things, and Anna and Larry's world is thrown into a whirlwind. Their universe of art and dance and culture totally clashes with Pale's coarser worldview, and yet . . . there's something that compels Anna and Pale towards one another.
That is largely why I think this play needs to be seen to be fully appreciated: I understood the attraction, but had a tough time believing it just from what I was reading. I hate to cop to that as a critique: in college writing classes, we were taught that disbelief was highly subjective and therefore not a valid critique. I just remember reading Burn This and thinking, "Wait, when did this develop? How did this happen", and not finding satisfaction with any one answer.
Which is not to suggest I didn't enjoy Burn This. Like I said at the top, I think I liked it! I enjoy the characters, and the small world of their apartment. The dialogue is strong: character voices unique, distinct from one another, and there's a danger lurking in the subtext. Perhaps that's where my confusion came in. Dialogue often seemed indirect, characters talking around each other, but to see these conversations carried out onstage, it might be easier to glean the message underneath the message.
The ending left me wanting more, and I haven't made up my mind whether, in this case, that's a good thing or a bad thing. Nevertheless, I enjoyed the journey, and think Burn This is worth checking out. Plus, the original cast note at the beginning indicates that John Malkovich originated the role of Pale and, if nothing else, it was fun imagining his delivery for this paricularly strange character.