The Importance of
Being Earnest
Oscar Wilde
The Aurora Cast |
Two young socialites both are engaged to Ernest, only there
is no Ernest – at least not until two young dandies can rush to church for a
late-afternoon re-christening, each planning to become Ernest to cover up his
habitual propensity for lying. But
before such radical altercation of identities can occur, a purse found long ago
in a railway station locker; a long lost, three-volume novel; and a tearful
confession by a now-regretful governess play parts in allowing truth to rear
its rare-seen head. As one of the young
men openly admits, “It is very painful for me to be forced to speak the truth;
it is the first time in my life that I have ever been reduced to such a painful
position and I am really quite inexperienced in doing anything of the kind.”
But ignoring truths and creating convenient realities are as
natural as breathing for the deliciously eccentric characters that Oscar Wilde
populates his wildly popular The
Importance of Being Earnest. Since
its London premiere in 1895, the final and most popular of his literary
creations has been re-staged in many forms worldwide -- live theatre, cinema,
and even opera. Aurora Theatre Company now joins
the one-hundred-twenty-plus-year parade of productions with a fantastically
directed, superbly acted, and beautifully produced outing that teases and
tickles at every turn. Director Josh
Costello orchestrates both staccato-speed delivery of Wilde’s galore of epigrams
and exaggerations as well as sudden silences where the tremble of a lip, the
rise of an eyebrow, or the immense rounding of the eyes evoke hilarious results. Aurora’s Earnest
is an evening of Oscar Wilde at his finest where nothing serious is meant to
ward upon everything that is trivial.
Mockery of all without making malicious fun of any is easily
accomplished through Wilde’s brilliantly farcical script and the joyful, funny,
and yet serious attention it is afforded by both this director and his cast.
Patrick Kelly Jones & Mohammad Shehata |
Algernon (Patrick Kelly Jones) and Jack (Mohammed Shehata)
are two gentleman of some leisure, both best friends and both living double
lives. In the country, Jack is seriously
engaged in overseeing the upbringing of his eighteen-year-old ward and heiress,
Cecily (Gianna DiGregorio Rivera). He
has created for himself an errant, younger brother named Ernest whom he uses as
an excuse regularly to go to the London in order to also see and court on the
sly Algernon’s cousin, Gwendolen (Anna Ishida), with whom he assumes the name
of Ernest. Back in the country, his made-up
stories about his bad-boy brother Ernest have intrigued Cecily, who has in turn
created in her diary an entire scenario of this Ernest having asked her for her
hand in marriage.
London dweller Algernon finds his avenue of escape from his
over-bearing Aunt Augusta (Gwendolen’s mother, known to others as Lady
Bracknell) and her unwanted social obligations by pretending to have an elderly
friend in the country, Bunbury, whom he must frequently visit. This “bunburying” has now become his favorite
occupation. He also has surreptitiously
discovered the location of Jack’s country estate and conceives a plan to show
up uninvited as Jack’s fictitious brother, Ernest – even more a surprise to all
when he arrives since Jack has decided that very day to arrive home in mourning
clothes, announcing his brother has died of a chill in Paris (Jack having tired
of the ruse of having such a brother).
Anna Ishida & Gianna DiGregorio Rivera |
Cecily gets finally to meet in person the not dead, very
much alive “Ernest” (aka Algernon), whom she has secretly engaged, unbeknowst
to him. At the same time, Gwendolen also
shows up unannounced at the manor, having followed Algernon to the country in
order to visit her “Ernest,” aka Jack.
The fact that both young women are dead-set in only loving someone named
Ernest is just one of the many, ensuing hilarious complications that mount in this
gentle but quite pointed parody of the upper classes.
Each of the four would-be lovers is played through
immaculate interpretation that is full of both slight subtleties and outright
grandiosity. Declarations of love and of
new friendship come surprisingly quick and loud, sounding like the conclusions
of business transactions. But at other
moments, feelings that cannot find the words to be expressed are riotously
expressed in stone-silent stares, a quivering lip, or near-choking gulp. The ensemble of four lovers/friends is all
the more fabulous in this Aurora production through the inspired casting of a
wide mix of ethnicities as these late-nineteenth English socialites, giving the
century-plus-old setting and story a wonderfully contemporary feel. (The one downside of the entire cast’s
performance is their ability to reach and maintain a credible English accent.)
Mohammed Shehata & Sharon Lockwood |
As Lady Bracknell, Sharon Lockwood commands the stage’s
focus every time she enters with her proud nose elevated just a bit higher than
everyone else’s. Her cadence of
aristocratic airs is a musical score of delightful ups and downs as she almost
sings her meticulously formed words.
When she is angered, her wrath shatters the air with its pompous
righteousness. When she is appalled,
words like “hand bag” or “cloakroom” become memory-lasting sound-bites that
will ring in audience ears for days to come.
Taking on smaller parts that still leave big impressions are
Trish Mulholland as Miss Prism, the affectively prim and proper governess of Cecily,
who has her eyes and her blushing tee-hee’s focused on The Reverend Canon
Chasuble. Michael Torres is the amiable
minister, quite eager-to-please rich parishioners – and quite pleasingly
flustered by the attention of Miss Prism.
He is also the oft-frowning, philosophically speaking manservant of
Algernon, Lane.
Gianna DiGregorio Rivera & Patrick Kelly Jones |
Nina Ball’s set design in the intimate Aurora doubles nicely
as a London flat and a country manor, both indoors and outdoors. A flooring resembling decorative stones, a
back-drop design of delicately cast iron, and Tiffany-inspired wall-dividers of
a rich rainbow of art-deco colors are all greatly enhanced by the come-to-life
lighting of Wen-Ling Liao. Chris Houston
has composed happy-go-lucky, period-sounding music that adds sparkle to a sound
design where also birds chirp their songs to complete an air of country
gentility. From brightly plaid,
three-piece suits to women’s hats perched like colorful nests on bundles of
curls to even a three-headed fox fur, Maggie Whitaker’s costumes are a sublime
comedy in their own making.
It cannot go unsaid, however, that in the end this and any
production of The Importance of Being
Earnest stars first and foremost the script of its creator, Oscar
Wilde. His ability to turn everything
from simple logic to everyday facts to common phrases upside-down – only to
provide new meanings that ring with their own truth – is incomparable. His tongue-in-cheek observations of that
long-ago era time and again ring often ever so wickedly true in 2019. Consider,
- “It is absurd to have a
hard-and-fast rule what one should and what one shouldn’t read. More than half of modern culture depends on
what one shouldn’t read.”
- “If one plays good music, people
don’t listen; if one plays bad music, people don’t talk.”
- “Relations are simply a tedious
pack of people who haven’t got the remotest knowledge of how to live nor the
smallest instinct about when to die.”
- “All women become like their
mother’s. That is their tragedy. No man does.
That’s his.”
Aurora Theatre Company allows the wit and wisdom of Oscar Wilde to
come pouring forth with a production that ripples with naughty energy, simmers
in untruths that ring with their own truth, and explodes with a multitude of
clever phrases that are guaranteed to bring round after round of chuckles and outright
guffaws.
Rating: 4.5 E
The Importance of
Being Earnest continues in extension through May 19, 2019 at Aurora
Theatre, 2081 Addison
Street, Berkeley, CA. Tickets are
available online at https://auroratheatre.org or by calling 415-843-4822.
Photo
by David Allen
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