The Importance of Being Earnest

Maidment Theatre, Auckland

14/03/2010 - 03/04/2010

Production Details



Wilde Divas Take to the Stage

Elizabeth Hawthorne and Lisa Chappell star in Oscar Wilde’s THE IMPORTANCE OF BEING EARNEST at the Maidment Theatre from March 11.

 
Appearing together on stage for the first time, Hawthorne and Chappell play Wilde’s glorious theatrical creations, Lady Bracknell and Gwendolen Fairfax.
 
Blessed with a timeless sense of mischief, daring and wit, Wilde delights in parodying the aristocracy behaving badly. Taking propriety to the point of absurdity and well beyond, THE IMPORTANCE OF BEING EARNEST presents a world where serious matters are treated with much less insignificance than matters of decorum, respectability and breeding.
 
“endlessly funny comedy about deliciously superficial people” New York Time
 
Under his suave exterior, Jack Worthing is all fluster and panic. He’s besotted with Gwendolen Fairfax, daughter of the she-dragon of London society Lady Bracknell, and cousin of his friend Algernon. For his part, Algernon is very keen on Jack’s pretty young ward, Cecily.
 
But marriage is out of the question until the mystery of Jack’s parentage is solved. Just how did he come to be found in a handbag? And in a cloakroom at Victoria Station? And, of course, Lady Bracknell has no intention of giving her consent until she has established Jack’s creditworthiness!
 
One-hundred-odd years on from its spectacular debut, Oscar Wilde’s “trivial comedy for serious people” is as fresh and scintillating and subversive as ever.
 
“the most perfect high comedy in the English language” Telegraph
 
Making her 83rd professional theatre appearance, Elizabeth Hawthorne is relishing the authoritarian outrageousness of Lady Bracknell, Wilde’s monstrous paragon of patrician British matronhood.Hawthorne has achieved particular renown for her unforgettable performances in Auckland Theatre Company productions of MASTER CLASS, VITA AND VIRGINIA, THE GRADUATE, DOUBT and FEMALE OF THE SPECIES.
 
International awarding winning actress Lisa Chappell returns to Auckland Theatre Company to play Gwendolen Fairfax. Her previous appearances for Auckland Theatre Company has seen her play a range of aristocratic leads including the devastatingly beautiful femme fatal at the centre of a ménage-a-trois in DESIGN FOR LIVING to an heroic would-be spy who helped to save the British Empire from a German attack in THE THIRTY-NINE STEPS.
 
Chappell, who is best known for her role as Claire McLeod on McLEOD’S DAUGHTERS, won the Silver Logie for the Most Popular Actress on Australian Television in 2004. She was also nominated for two Golden Logies for Best Actress on Australian Television in 2003 and 2004.
 
“In rehearsals sometimes I find myself falling out of character, just to watch Elizabeth. She is so funny and I just start cracking up, I hope Colin doesn’t see that!” says Chappell.
 
“in matters of great importance, style, not sincerity, is the vital thing,” Oscar Wilde
 
Drawing inspiration from as diverse a range of sources as The Beatles’ “Sgt Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band” to Lady Gaga, Colin McColl and creative team, Elizabeth Whiting, Tony Rabbit, John Parker and Eden Mullholland combine to create a high fashion modernization of this classic.
 
THE IMPORTANCE OF BEING EARNEST promises theatergoers a night of wit, wisdom and utterly fabulous and fashionable aristocrats behaving badly. Very badly indeed.

Bookings can be made at the Maidment Theatre, 09 308 2383 or www.atc.co.nz.


Cast
Lady Bracknell                         Elizabeth Hawthorne     
Miss Prism                               Catherine Wilkin           
Jack Worthington                    Adam Gardiner 
Algernon Moncrieff                  Ash Jones        
Gwendolen Fairfax                  Lisa Chappell
Cecily Cardew                          Laurel Devenie  
Rev. Canon Chasuble DD     Cameron Rhodes          
Lane/Merriman                         Glen Pickering  
 
Creative Team
Costumes                                 Elizabeth Whiting
Set                                              John Parker
Lighting                                     Tony Rabbit



Superb update reminder of Earnest’s importance

Review by Paul Simei-Barton 18th Mar 2010

Crisp production revels in vicious satire and dazzling wordplay at classic’s heart.

The enduring appeal of Oscar Wilde’s masterpiece stems from its remarkable ability to be all things to all people. Subtitled "a trivial comedy for serious people", it has always delighted the social class that it so mercilessly satirises and audiences can never be sure whether the play is a frothy amusement or a disturbing piece of philosophy.

A fondness for paradox enlivens the dazzling word play which has the world’s cleverest writer declaring he is sick to death of cleverness, only to find that a retreat into foolishness leads to even more sophisticated levels of cleverness.

Colin McColl’s marvellous updating of the play is grounded in a deep respect for the text and a willingness to confront the profound strangeness of the work. His crystal clear direction emphasises the collision of opposites with the town and country contrast throwing light on the deeper dichotomies between truth and fiction, style and sincerity, frivolity and earnestness. [More]
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A horny, drug-fuelled, witty trip

Review by Kate Ward-Smythe 15th Mar 2010

The Auckland Theatre Company’s production of The Importance of Being Earnest rips Oscar Wilde’s undyingly popular comedy from its late Victorian town and country setting and downloads it into a deliciously self-indulgent contemporary ‘bubble of now’.

Still terribly English in its humorous execution of ‘style over substance’, as the lead men adopt fictitious identities to shirk the social expectations of high society, you only have to look at recently murdered millionaire Herman Rockefeller’s exposed double life as an example of how relevant Wilde’s seemingly superficial play is today.

Director Colin McColl extends Wilde’s exposure of the hypocrisy of the upper class through clever language, by fully satirizing the foibles and narcissistic indulgence of his rich and idle characters through their actions as well.

They cut a line, snort cocaine, get stoned, skull regular nips of spirits and grab urgent sex when they can – all while self-assuredly going about their daily routine of superior banter and keeping up appearances, answerable to no one but themselves.

No doubt ex-model Millie Holmes thought her life-style was a similar bulletproof ride before her never-ending fall from grace began. But Earnest’s world is not one to be interrupted by grim realities such as police-raids and vengeful swingers; lord no.

Earnest takes us on a horny, drug-fuelled, witty trip to the world of “Bunburying”, endless parties, instant lust and love for the now – a place void of meaningful responsibilities and social consequence. Even the servants are high.

Each member of McColl’s design team (Set by John Parker; Costumes by Elizabeth Whiting; Lighting by Tony Rabbit and Sound by Eden Mulholland) embraces the limelight and the premise that, “It’s all about me; look at me; don’t I look fabulous and aren’t I having such a splendid time!”

John Parker’s set is a white textured canvas, like a photographer’s studio, adorned with minimal but suitably chic accessories. Parker pushes the stage out wide, giving each of Elizabeth Whiting’s awe-inspiring creations of white and chartreuse with a splash of black, a dramatic entrance on a cat-walk that Project Runway would be proud of.  

Whiting’s Gwendolen is Lady Gaga meets Victoria Beckham in ultra-modern white PVC, showing plenty of flesh. Lisa Chappell adds obsessive texting, calculated flirtations, and a touch of sexual predator, making Gwenolen a scary beast and a force to be reckoned with.

While the cast is uniformly strong, memorable and hugely entertaining to watch as an ensemble, it is the brilliant resonance and full exploitation of Wilde’s every word, that elevates Chappell and Elizabeth Hawthorne (Lady Bracknell) into a class of their own.

With costumes that are so striking that you may not need Fashion Week this year for wardrobe inspiration, plus a delicious cast and creative team, McColl’s The Importance of Being Earnest is guilt-free and fantastic. Be warned though: this production should come with an R18 classification.
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