Oscar Wilde Ncuti Gatwa Ireland Music queer STARS audience MET classical Oscar Wilde Ncuti Gatwa Ireland

Review: This ‘Importance of Being Earnest’ Is a Fabulous Romp

Reading now: 123
nytimes.com

Purists may reach for their smelling salts at the National Theater’s wild revival of “The Importance of Being Earnest,” the Oscar Wilde comedy concerned with self-identity, veiled sexuality and forming “an alliance,” as one character drolly puts it, “with a parcel.” More adventuresome audience members, however, are likely to have a blast with this (often literally) unbuttoned take on a familiar text from the director Max Webster, who was a 2023 Tony nominee for “Life of Pi.” Keeping one foot in the here and now, this “Earnest” — which runs through Jan.

25 and will be in movie theaters worldwide via National Theater Live from Feb. 20 — lands the verbal invention and wit of Wilde’s 1895 classic while incorporating contemporary music, the occasional swear word and a decidedly queer sensibility.

At times, it may indulge in one wink at the audience too many — but even then, Webster’s intention is clearly to release a time-honored comedy from the confines of period convention.

Does this sound too much? I doubt Wilde would have thought so. The Irish writer’s renegade spirit is felt here from the outset, with the introduction of a high-camp prologue that finds a gown-wearing, pink-gloved Algernon Moncrieff (Ncuti Gatwa, TV’s latest Doctor Who,) tearing into Grieg’s Piano Concerto as if he were the star attraction at Dalston Superstore, a queer East London nightlife venue that gets a passing mention.

Read more on nytimes.com
The website meaws.com is an aggregator of news from open sources. The source is indicated at the beginning and at the end of the announcement. You can send a complaint on the news if you find it unreliable.

Related News

29.11 / 20:07
film Music song career show UPS actress Does your mother know? 20 surprising facts about the beloved ‘Mamma Mia!’ movies
Mamma Mia! and its perfectly titled sequel Mamma Mia! Here We Go Again became box-office and cultural phenomenons. Between the ABBA ear-worms, the A-list ensemble, and their effervescent rom-com plots, they’ve quickly become endlessly re-watchable classics, and have pretty much earned their place in the queer cinematic canon—even if they are largely about one woman’s relationship with three different male suitors!From the fabulous to the ABBA-licious, scroll down below for 20 facts you didn’t know about the Mamma Mia! films:Director Phyllida Lloyd also directed the original show on Broadway, and Mamma Mia! became her feature film debut in 2008.
DMCA