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Anyone Can Play Accurately, But I Play With Expression
by Amy Freeman
The Importance of Being Earnest reviewed February 10, 2008
Photo Credit:Graphic Design by Paula Hoza
Everyone knows The Importance of Being Earnest . In Oscar Wilde's comedy of manners, confusion and insults fly when two men pretend to be named Ernest and propose to two women. The play has become such a staple on the syllabi of literature and theater courses that it does not seem to be a play to actually go out and see performed. The Importance of Being Earnest is a relic, suitable for study but not enjoyment.

Or is it? From the reaction of the audience at Theater Ten Ten's production of the play, it appears it is still possible to sit and laugh uproariously at Wilde's script. Wilde's witticisms leap off the stage, still fresh and slightly odd after over one hundred years. It is the jokes that carry the play and the production, under the direction of Judith Jarosz, realizes this fact.

In a theatrical culture that has come to expect some form of psychological realism, some form of the Method from its characters and productions, it can be startling to see realism missing from a production. So many modern productions of Wilde's plays, including the film versions, insert realism into the text, giving the characters a breadth that is actually not truly present. The actors portraying John Worthing, Gwendolyn, Cecily, and Algernon in Theater Ten Ten's production at times seem as though they are automatons, in possession of the ability to project but not the ability to emotionally connect with their characters. As one listens to what they are saying to each other, the way in which each sentence or speech is punctuated by a trifling turn of wit, it becomes clear that it is difficult if not impossible to make such fluffy characters into actual people.

Many of their lines are delivered as the characters face the audience. It is not a form of direct address, per se, as they seem unaware of the audience's presence. The presentational style appears to be used more because the characters are performing for each other. They realize what they are saying is ridiculous and witty, intended to make one laugh. Occasionally, the laughter was so loud that the next lines were drowned out. As it turns out, the play is possibly the Victorian era's version of stand-up.

Unfortunately, not all scenes hold up in Theater Ten Ten's production. The tea scene, in which Gwendolyn and Cecily discover that they are both engaged to someone named Ernest, lacks the bite it should carry. It was as if on this particular evening, the actors' timing was off, creating an odd pace for what should be a fast paced, catty scene. Further, it was hard to notice the fact that vindictive Cecily gave Gwendolyn tea cake when she asked for bread and butter, because the cake and other food props were so small as to be nearly invisible to the audience.

Otherwise, the play holds up nicely. It is possible to still see reflections of contemporary society (one thinks of celebrity culture) in Wilde's flippant, fluffy characters. The costumes, by Kristin Yungkurth Raphael and Lydia Gladstone, are beautiful and truthfully recreate the styles of the Victorian era. In a culture that likes to adapt and meld classic works to fit its own current needs and attitudes, it is nice to see a play left untouched, performed as it was written. The Importance of Being Earnest is a simple show, and is worth seeing for anyone with an appreciation for the styles and mores of the Victorians.

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THE IMPORTANCE OF BEING EARNEST

Theater Ten Ten
Category:  Comedy
Written by:  Oscar Wilde
Directed by:  Judith Jarosz
Produced by:  Theater Ten Ten
Opened:  February 8, 2008
Closed:  March 9, 2008
Running Time:  2 hours

Theater:  Theater Ten Ten
Address:  1010 Park Avenue
New York, NY 10028
Yahoo! Maps Directions

Click for  Theater Listing
BOX OFFICE
Tickets:  $20.00
Tickets and Reservations: All tickets are $20.00. Credit Card purchases may be made at online at www.theatermania.com or by calling 212-352-3101 Reservations: (cash only at the door) may be made at 212-288-3246, Ext. 3. (24-hour hotline) Theater T
CREDITS
Creative Team
Written by: Oscar Wilde
Directed by: Judith Jarosz
Produced by: Theater Ten Ten
Light Designer: Hajera Dehqanzada
Sound Designer: Shauna Horn
Set Designer: David Fuller
Costume Designers: Lydia Gladstone and Kristin Yungkurth Raphael
Assistant Director:  Aaron Diehl

Cast
Algernon:  David Jacks
Lane/Merriman: David Fuller
John Worthing: Christopher Michael Todd
Lady Bracknell: Cristiane Young
Gwendolyn Fairfax: Vanessa Morosco
Miss Prism:  Talaura Harms
Cecily Cardew: Sheila Joon
Rev. Canon Chasuble: Greg Horton

Crew
Stage Manager: Lauren Arneson
Assistant State Managers: Cesar Malantic and Sarah Marck