The Importance of Being Earnest was one of the plays we studied at school many years ago. I also remember seeing a theatre production of the play a few years later. When my grand-daughter told me she was playing Miss Prism in The Importance of Being Earnest in a school production I decided that I should read the play again before going to watch this version of the play.
Oscar Wilde wrote the play in 1894 and the first production was in February 1895. Despite a scandal concerning Oscar Wilde, the play has remained popular and has also been made into a film. The Importance of Being Earnest is the fourth of a series of plays satirising the upper class in Victorian England. In this volume the other three plays, Lady Windemere's Fan, A Woman of No Importance and An Ideal Husband are included as well as Salome.
Characters in The Importance of Being Earnest include Jack Worthing, Algernon Moncrieff, Gwendolen Fairfax, Cecily Cardew, Lady Bracknell, Miss Prism, Dr Chausable, Lane and Merriman. Jack and Algernon are friends who meet regularly in London but in order to escape the country house where he lives, Jack has created an imaginary friend called Ernest. Algernon uses a similar ploy which he calls being a Bunburist.
When Jack comes to town to propose to Algernon's cousin, Gwendolen, Algernon decides to travel to the country where he meets Jack's ward, Cecily. Life becomes complicated when Algernon also uses the name Ernest. To confuse matters further, when Jack is asked to reveal his parentage all he knows is that he was found in a bag left at a railway station. By the end of this three act play the truth is revealed and all's well that ends well.
I look forward to seeing a version of the play again.
The Importance of Being Earnest - LitCharts






