What Is In A Name-The
Film Adaptation Of Oscar Wilde’s “The Importance Of Being Earnest”(1952)-A
Review
DVD Review
By Film Critic Sandy
Salmon
The Importance Of Being
Earnest, starring Michael Redgrave, Michael Denison, Dame Edith Evans, directed
by Anthony Asquith, 1952
No question the great
late 19th century English playwright Oscar Wilde took a terrible
beating from hypercritical late Victorian society for his little ‘vice’-“the
act that dare not speak its name” to use the quant phrase used in polite
society for homosexuality. (Victorian society hypercritical since as far as the
upper crust and certainly in the literary and culture milieus there were plenty
of closeted, and not so closeted in some places, homosexuals who were tolerated
if not celebrated). Certainly today his activities would have drawn little
attention in Western society anyway but then such exposure devastated his
career.
Before Wilde’s fall,
before he took his court room beating sending him to Reading Gaol and infamy he
wrote and had produced the play upon which the film under review is based, The Importance Of Being Earnest. A play
which was a humorous sent-up of all the hypocrisy, manners and tedium of upper-crust
bourgeois society. There was not necessarily any great political message to the
work but by virtue of the truly great use of dialogue Oscar was able to drive
his spears in all the better. The film adaptation by Anthony Asquith is pretty
fateful to the original play and the acting is of a high order so we get today
a fairly decent sense of what was going on in some circles in those bygone
days.
Here’s the simple
plotline on which the fast-paced dialogue rises and falls. A couple of
free-wheeling gentleman, representing country and city, Jack and Algy having
time on their hands and wicked senses of humor carry around some assumed names,
Ernest for the former and Bunbury for the latter in order to brush off any
untoward questions or people. They both have the same problem or aspects of the
same problem. They long for female companionship, for proper marriages. Jack is
in love with Algy’s cousin the aristocratic Gwendolyn and Algy is in love with
Jack’s ward out in his country estate Cecily.Therein lies the dilemma. Jack is
caught up in a bind because having under the assumed name Ernest he has caught
Gwen’s attentions although she is fickle enough only to want to marry a man
named Ernest. Cecily by a certain sleight of hand by Algy only wants to marry a
man named Ernest as well.
With that conundrum in
mind the chase is on. Jack has to invent a younger brother Ernest whom he tries
to kill off but who shows up at the country estate door but Algy posing as
Jack’s supposedly late brother Ernest. Then Gwen, mother in tow shows up as
well to find out whether Jack, who has willingly proposed to Gwen and she has
accepted, has the correct lineage to betroth her daughter. Every social and
cultural prejudice of the day gets a work-out as in the end love conquers all once
Jack, who turned out to be a foundling, actually had been born with the name
Ernest. Nice touch. A great sent-up and great fun if not a big time look at the
foibles of late Victorian society.
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