Oscar Wilde
The
life of Oscar Wilde was as theatrical as his plays, and his downfall and
death more melodramatic than
the stage of the Victorians who first celebrated him and then condemned him.
The centenary of his death in 1900, after his release from prison,
was observed with the attention Wilde always sought -- knowing he deserved
it.
“The
Importance of Being Earnest” is not only a masterpiece, but an important
contribution to the tradition of English comedy of manners
characterized by social observation and witty dialogue,
from Shakespeare’s “Much Ado About Nothing” to Congreve’s
“The Way of the World” and Sheridan’s “The Rivals.”
Paradox
prevails in Wilde’s plays as it did in his life. That the witty remarks of his characters are
paradoxical -- seemingly trivial but actually true -- is what surprises and
delights us, with the “punch” as an inversion at the end, like “She
who hesitates is won.”
Although
many productions celebrated the centenary,
his comedies are a perennial favorite, as the recent London
production of “Lady Windermere’s Fan,” demonstrates. Directed by Peter
Hall, it stars Vanessa Redgrave and
her daughter Joely Richardson, who plays the title role.
“An Ideal Husband” is the most recent film of many of Wilde’s
works, of which the most popular on stage is ”The Importance of Being
Earnest.”
“The
Importance of Being Earnest” employs paradox in its plot as well as in
almost every line of dialogue. Interviewing
Jack to determine his suitability for marriage with her daughter, Lady
Bracknell suggests that “a man who desires to get married should know
either everything or nothing.” To
Jack’s confession that he knows nothing, she replies, “I am pleased to
hear it. I do not approve of
anything that tampers with natural ignorance. . . .The whole theory of
modern education is radically unsound. Fortunately in England, at any rate,
education produces no effect whatsoever.” She first questions him about
his income and property, and then remarks, “Now to minor matters.
Are you parents living?” Jack:
“I have lost both my parents.” Lady
B: “To lose one parent may be regarded as a misfortune—to lose both
seems like carelessness.”
Capping
a year of centenary celebrations of Wilde, the much-praised Chichester
Festival production of “The Importance” was seen at London’s Savoy
Theatre with Patricia Routledge
is Lady Bracknell. This popular production transferred from Chichester to
the Theatre Royal Haymarket, after which it toured Australia and New Zealand
before returning to England.
Oscar
Wilde was born in Dublin on October 16, 1854.
His father William was a distinguished eye doctor, consulted by
crowned heads, including Queen Victoria.
His mother campaigned for women’s rights and for Irish
independence. After attending private school and the Protestant Trinity College in Dublin,
he won a scholarship to Magdalen College, Oxford.
More than twenty years later he wrote from prison, “The two great
turning points in my life were when my father sent me to Oxford and when
Society sent me to prison.”
Graduating
with a double First in classics, he was not offered a teaching position at
Oxford, as was customary. Undeterred,
he decided to be “a poet, a writer, a dramatist.” Wilde declared: “Ill
be famous, and if I’m not famous, I’ll be notorious.”
He patterned his appearance, considered outrageous by Victorian
society, after the poet Algernon Charles Swinburne, wearing long hair,
Byronic collars, and velvet jackets.
In
the 1881 Gilbert and Sullivan comic operetta “Patience,” the
aesthete-poet Bunthorne was
actually patterned after Swinburne, but Wilde gleefully advertised himself
as the model. Not only the
public but also the Doyle Carte management accepted the identification and
sent Wilde on a lecture tour to America prior to the visit of the
opera-satire, to demonstrate to Americans what aestheticism was.
Wilde argued the thesis of the movement: the function of art is to
create beauty or harmony, not to deliver a moral or social message:
“beauty is truth, truth beauty,” he insisted, noting that Keats’
dictum marked the beginning of the English aesthetic movement, a
“renaissance” of English arts.
When
he returned to England, needing money, he embarked on a tour of Britain
lecturing on “Impressions of America.”
“Of course America had often been discovered before Columbus,” he
remarked, “but it had always been hushed up.”
Of Niagara Falls and its fame as a honeymoon spot: “The sight of
the stupendous waterfall must be one of the earliest, if not the keenest,
disappointments in American married life.” He also lectured on the
importance of art and aesthetics in home furnishings.
In
1894 he married Constance Lloyd, and they had two sons.
To support his growing family, he wrote short stories : ”It is the
duty of every father to write fairy tales for his children,” he explained.
The best known are “The Happy Prince” and “The Selfish
Giant,” published in 1888. Apart
from the fairy stories, he delighted in controversial writing, like the
essay “The Decay of Lying” in which he declares, “The nineteenth
century, as we know it, is largely an invention of Balzac.”
“Mr. Henry James,” he noted, “writes fiction as if it were a
painful duty.”
His
novel “The Picture of Dorian Gray” provoked an angry reaction from the
critics. In this variation of
the Faust theme, Dorian Gray exchanges places with his portrait, to preserve
himself as a work of art. His
portrait painted as a beautiful youth becomes more and more ravaged because
of his “strange sins,” but Gray himself appears young and handsome until
he dies, when he becomes hideous, and the portrait reverts to beauty. “Each man sees his own sins in Dorian Gray.
What Dorian Gray’s sins are no one knows,” he wrote in reply to a
harsh review. When the novel
was declared immoral because of its theme of homosexuality, Wilde defended
it as moral: “In his attempt to kill conscience, Dorian Gray kills
himself.”
Just
as Gray’s sins are secret and undefined, so in the plays, comic as they
are on the surface, there is always a secret that plagues the hero or
heroine. It may be Jack’s
being “born or at least bred” in a handbag in “The Importance of Being
Earnest” or Mrs. Erlynne’s past in “Lady Windermere’s Fan” or that
of Sir Robert Chiltern, in “An
Ideal Husband.” Is this
feature a sub-text of social criticism for Victorians who condemned in
public the sins they committed in private, or is it Wilde’s own “sin”
society was bound to punish if it were not kept secret?
Alfred
Lord Douglas, son of the Marquis of Queensberry, was Wilde’s undoing.
Slight in build, pale and blond, Douglas was not only temperamental
but petty, mean, and vindictive. Wilde’s
passion for “Bosie” Douglas began at their first meeting and Douglas was
quick to exploit it. When his
father forbade him to see Wilde, Douglas vented his hatred for his father by
ignoring his strictures. Then
Queensberry left his card at Wilde’s club with a written accusation: “To
Oscar Wilde posing Somdomite [sic]. Instead
of ignoring the insult as his friends advised, Wilde listened to Bosie (who
was delighted at the opportunity to harm his father) and swore out a warrant
for Queensberry’s arrest on the charge of libel.
As
English law requires that the defendant in a libel case present his
justification, more than twelve boys were named as being solicited by Wilde.
One of the boys to whom Bosie had given clothes, had found love
letters from Wilde to Bosie, who carelessly
had left them in the pocket, and
these were read aloud in the court. In
fact, Bosie had seduced Wilde, who refused to let the younger man testify,
although he would have enjoyed being the center of attention.
Because of the evidence presented, Wilde was then arrested for
homosexual offences.
In
an atmosphere of near-hysteria, amid press and public condemnation, Wilde
was brought to trial, found guilty, and condemned for indecent behavior and
“corruption of the most hideous kind.”
He was sentenced to two years’ imprisonment at hard labor.
In prison, his letters to the press describing his suffering under
the harsh conditions there eventually
led to prison reform, but not before his release in 1897. Composed in prison, but published afterwards, “The Ballad
of Reading Gaol,” which he signed only with his prison number, C.3.3, was
an instant success. In the
style of Coleridge’s “Ancient Mariner,” it recounts his distress and
that of the other inmates, when a fellow prisoner is hanged for murder. Also written in prison, De Profundis is a long, moving
letter to Douglas, reflecting on their relationship. Boisie did not reply.
After
his release, living in France, with little income, his wife and children
(whom he was not permitted to see) having left him and changed their names,
Wilde sought from Bosie the money that had been promised him, but not
delivered, for the trial expenses. Bosie,
who had come into an inheritance from his father, refused.
At age 46, Wilde died penniless in a cheap Paris hotel on November
30, 1900. He is buried at Pere
Lachaise cemetery in Paris, where a monument by Jacob Epstein marks the
grave.
Among
the centenary celebrations of Wilde in London are two plays in addition to
“The Importance of Being Earnest” at the Haymarket, and three exhibits,
while Ireland has issued a commemorative stamp.
The first stage event, at the Barbican, was Thomas Kilroy’s “The
Secret Fall of Constance Wilde,” presented by the Abbey Theatre of Dublin. The non-realistic work combined comedy and nightmarish
tragedy, showing “Constance battling with her own demons, the secrets of
her past, until she finally learns that ‘when one sups with the Gods, one
must pay the full price of admission’.”
At
the Royal National Theatre a double bill was presented at the Cottesloe.
“In Extremis” is a new play by Neil Bartlett, starring Corin
Redgrave who also co-directed with Trevor Nunn.
“In Extremis” takes place in March 1895 when a society palm
reader named Mrs. Robinson (Sheila Hancock) agrees to see Wilde who is
seeking advice as to whether to sue the Marquis of Queensberry for criminal
libel, as Bosie is urging, although Wilde’s friends have warned against
such a court action.
As
Bartlett sees Mrs. Robinson, she like many palmists tells Wilde what she
discerns he wants to hear, that she foresees “a very great triumph for
him.” There is comic contrast
between her tentative guesswork and Wilde’s sarcastic epigrams behind
which his panic shines through. In
the second half of the program, Redgrave is a broken Wilde, in a grey
arrow-marked prison suit,
delivering “De Profundis,”
the long, passionate, and accusatory letter written from prison to Boisie.
London
exhibitions commemorating Wilde were held at the British Library – an
exhibit which transferred in 2001 to the Morgan Library in New York – and
at the Geffrye Museum and the Barbican Gallery.
The
British Library mounted the largest Oscar Wilde exhibit ever seen,
displaying items from its own collection as well as from family and
private archives. There
are letters, first editions, playbills, illustrations, photographs, and
original manuscripts, The
exhibit presented Wilde’s dramatic life as a series of six acts, from his
Irish childhood and student days, through his lecture tour in America, his
family, and his fame as writer and social figure, followed by his fall from
grace, the trials and imprisonment, exile, social ostracism, and death at
age forty-six. Probably the
highlight of the exhibit and certainly the most moving item, was the
original manuscript of De Profundis, the long, ink-smudged letter
from prison to Boisie, in which Wilde confesses, “I let myself be lured
into long spells of senseless and sensual ease – I became the spendthrift
of my genius.” At the Morgan,
also on exhibit, was a typescript of the third and fourth acts of
“The Importance of Being Earnest,” with the author’s
alterations. British Library website: www.bl.uk.
The
Geffrye exhibited the influence of Wilde and the aesthetic movement upon the
furnishing and decoration of the domestic, middle-class home, which changed
from Victorian clutter to the simple lines of the Arts and Crafts movement
and of Japanese painting. “I
find it harder and harder every day,” said Wilde, “to live up to my blue
china.”
The
Barbican Gallery presented “The Wilde Years: Oscar Wilde and the Art of
his Time,” highlighting Wilde’s work as art critic, journalist, and
progressive political figure, illustrated by paintings, sculpture,
photographs, and drawings, including works by Edward Burne-Jones and
illustrations by Aubrey Beardsley for Wilde’s “Salome.”
Also at the Barbican,
was a season of films dealing with Wilde’s life and works, including
silent films.
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