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The Importance of Being Earnest
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The Importance Of Being Earnest
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Plaimont wrote: "This is one of those stories that is a yearly must read for me. Though short it packs a powerful punch & never ceases to be amusing. Like Olga, I'm only familiar with the 1952 movie. Perhaps with i..."
Lol yes, when I saw that trailer for 1952 movie, I said to myself I really have to read this book again, if not for the club then for the sake of this movie :) I remember I loved that movie when I saw it ages ago as a kid. I hope it will be equally good now when I am a wee bit older.
Lol yes, when I saw that trailer for 1952 movie, I said to myself I really have to read this book again, if not for the club then for the sake of this movie :) I remember I loved that movie when I saw it ages ago as a kid. I hope it will be equally good now when I am a wee bit older.

I have seen the movie with Rupert Everett and Colin Firth - and that was extremely cute too. I guess plays just have to be acted out for the audience to experience the real thing - just reding the lines does not work for me. Even watching the movie was MUCH better than just reading the play line-by-line! I don't have enough imagination for that :)

Oscar Wilde's life is heartbreaking. Thank heaven we live in more civilized times now.
Shelley
Rain, A Dust Bowl Story
http://dustbowlstory.wordpress.com

I'm into the second act of the play, and underlined one phrase I found ironically amusing: when Cecily is talking to Miss Prism about novels and Miss Prism tells how her novel ended:
"The good ended happily and the bad unhappily. That is what Fiction means."
Isn't that too often the truth?
I am familiar with only three adaptations, one from 1952 with Michael Redgrave, Richard Wattis and Michael Denison in the main roles, second from 1986 with Paul McGann, Rupert Frazer, Joan Plowright and Gemma Jones, and the last one from 2002 with Rupert Everett, Colin Firth, Frances O'Connor and Reese Witherspoon in the main roles. The latest edition (from 2011) is taken straight from Broadway, and one is all-black version, that might be interesting to see also.
Even 100 years later, readers and viewers still love it - if you haven't ever read it, here's your chance, it is quite an easy play to read, and afterwards you may take a look at one of its adaptations, either on screen or in the theatre, if there's any close by.