Posted on 06/12/2008 2:30:16 PM PDT by shrinkermd
Oscar Wilde is one of most famous homosexuals in history, so it sometimes surprises people when they learn that Wilde had a wife named Constance and two children. Divorced before Wilde reached the pinnacle of his fame, Constance is one of historys forgotten women: a spirited, intelligent person in her own right, but one doomed to live in the shadow of Wildes legacy, as well as endure the humiliating consequences of his homosexual passions.
Thomas Kilroys play, The Secret Fall of Constance Wilde, now playing on the Guthries Proscenium Stage, is a moody, serious, artful exploration of the dark side of Wildes life, told through the unsympathetic eyes of the wife whose life he all but destroyed.
Since Wilde is also one of the most flamboyant characters in history, its hard to imagine how a female character could out-dramatize him, but Sarah Agnew invests Constance with so much vitality and common sense that she makes Matthew Greers Oscar look like a bit of a buffoon. Her tongue is much sharper than Wildes, and carries more sting, a contrast that makes his witticisms seem frivolous and inappropriate, like a child arguing with an adult.
For the most part, the play explores the love triangle between Constance, Oscar, and Oscars lover, Lord Alfred Douglas...But it also dares to descend into the period of Oscar Wildes life no one likes to talk abouthis two-year imprisonment for lewd behavior.
(Excerpt) Read more at msp.blogs.com ...
Later on they can always retool it as the story of Byron’s wife. There was a doormat!
Shouldn’t this playwright be prosecuted for committing a hate crime by suggesting that there is something “dark” or wrong about Wilde’s homosexuality?
And this reporter should be prosecuted, too, for portraying this bigoted anti-homosexual play sympathetically. I’m surprised that anything like this should be staged in such a center for political correctness as Minneapolis.
Wilde has to be the quintessential self-loathing homosexual, flying in the face of convention until it had no other choice but to censure him, then lamenting at length about his doleful straits.
However, his life story ended on a happy note, since he repented of his homosexual acts and died a convert to the Catholic church.
If this was only Canada, then "the love that dares not speak its name" would be afforded due protections and Wilde would be vindicated. The playwright could go to jail along with Styne.
Last warning: never mention Mrs. McGreavey on this site again!
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