A Wilde time with ‘Earnest’
Tom Titus
Comedy comes in many varieties, from mannered verse to baggy pants
slapstick. But few playwrights today elicit laughter with wit or
irony of the style Oscar Wilde practiced over a century ago.
Wilde employed words the way D’Artagnan used his blade -- a cut
here, a slash there and ultimately a coup de grace to the heart,
drawing the appreciation of sophisticated playgoers in Victorian
England. This advanced degree of verbal swordsmanship is most evident
in Wilde’s final work, circa 1895, “The Importance of Being Earnest.”
Such a play requires the interpretative skills and scathing
delivery of a George Sanders dropping acidic comments in “All About
Eve,” and the Newport Theater Arts Center has quite a few of these on
display in its production of “Earnest.” Director Darlene Hunter
Chaffee has instilled her cast with a proper appreciation of Wilde’s
savage wit and the performers thrust and parry with gusto.
The play, for lack of a more accurate term, is a romantic comedy
intertwined with intellectual farce, centering on two men about town
who profess to carry the name “Earnest” since each of their lady
loves adores this moniker. When their paths cross on love’s
battlefield, each has -- as Desi Arnaz would put it many years later
-- a lot of “splainin” to do.
These young men occupy the lion’s share of the play, but an
actress who is present for only two scenes devours the stage. Teri
Ciranna embodies the authoritarian dowager Lady Bracknell with a
verbal vengeance; shaping and forming each lethal dollop of
declaration with superb pace and timing, and earning deserved
applause on her initial exit.
Jack Millis richly enacts the sophisticated playboy Algernon
Moncrieff with a keen sense of irony, refusing to take himself or
anyone else very seriously. He particularly delights in zapping his
friend John Worthing, imbued with the proper degree of contrasting
stiffness by Kevin Deegan, who hews to a more traditional line of
courtship, wooing Algernon’s comely ward.
The latter role is given a nicely applied touch of mild rebellion
by Dana Osterman -- who, in a creative bit of physical casting,
towers over her swain much as Millis gazes down on his newfound love,
Cecily. This latter role is taken by Brenda Kenworthy -- beautifully
defining what is, as written, little more than a decorative
character. When these ladies meet, the sparks that ultimately fly
between them are ignited a bit too gradually, and is one of the
play’s few weaknesses.
Cynthia Jacobs effectively interprets the prim and proper
governess to Cecily, Miss Prism, whose long-held secret provides a
comical denouement. Rowland Kerr gives her befuddled cleric friend,
Rev. Chausible, a likeable, avuncular attitude.
The play’s two servants are employed in several functions, not the
least of which is shifting the venue in the three-scene play via a
revolving stage. Eldon Callaway, who doubles as stage manager, and
Ayal Willner fill these roles quite nicely.
The three Victorian settings, handsomely designed by Eckmann Stage
& Technical and dressed sumptuously by Terri Miller Schmidt, reek
with period authenticity, as do the costumes created by Donna
Fritsche. “Earnest” is not an easy vehicle to mount on a stage as
small as Newport’s, but these backstage wizards ensure its smooth
enactment.
“The Importance of Being Earnest” may not seem all that important
to 21st century audiences, but the well-crafted Newport production
demonstrates how punch lines from the 19th still are capable of
packing an intellectual wallop.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Daily Pilot. His reviews
appear Fridays.
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