The Importance of Being Earnest by
Oscar Wilde.
Directed by Jarrad West assisted
by Steph Roberts and Joel Horwood. Stage manager Alice Ferguson. Technical
director Nikki Fitzgerald. Property design Marya Glyn-Daniel. Lighting design
Nathan Sciberras. Sound design Nathan Patrech. Costume design Fiona Leach.
Costume realization Fiona Leach. Tanya Taylor Sandy Cassidy Lucy Jones. ACT HUB. December 8-17 2022
Reviewed by Peter Wilkins
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The Downlows- Louiza Blomfield and Dave Collins
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Jarrad West’s stunningly
imaginative cabaret version of The Importance
of Being Earnest is Wilde at his wickedest. It’s the perfect Christmas
gift- wildly satirical, hilariously witty and a festive theatrical treat and fitting
gift for the Silly Season. In the madcap cabaret setting of the Bunbury Tea
Club, West and his brilliant cast of oh so silly characters treat the audience,
seated at tables in ACT HUB’s theatre to Oscar Wilde’s irreverent comedy of manners.
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Steph Roberts as Algernon and Joel Horwood as Ernest
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For anyone unfamiliar with Wilde’s
perplexing confusion of mixed up identities, it’s really quite simple. Ernest,
who is really John but called Jack (performed with delicious folly by Joel Horwood) visits his friend Algernon,
who is played with a witty sense of certainty by Steph Roberts. Jack has
invented Ernest while he is at his Belgrave Square residence in the city and to
attest to his love for Gwendolen (Shae Kelly), the daughter of the rather
intimidating Lady Bracknell played as a younger but no less commanding figure
by Lainie Hart. Ernest, who is really Jack loves Lady Bracknell's niece Gwendolen Fairfax, played in this
production by Kelly in drag. Gwendolen will
only marry someone called Ernest and abhors the name Jack. Things aren’t going
well for poor Jack who is Ernest. And then there is Algernon’s imaginary friend
Bunbury. But that just adds to the confusion.
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Shae Kelly as Gwendolen and Holly Ross as Cecily
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Meanwhile Algernon arrives in the
country and instantly falls in love with Jack Worthing’s ward Cecily Cardew (Holly
Ross). Cicely meets Gwendolen and reveals that she is engaged to Ernest who is
really Algernon. Gwendolen reveals that she is engaged to Earnest and thereby
hangs more confusion and a fan-flicking stand off. It’s the kind of confusion that only the British Upper class could create. And what
about Cecily’s companion Miss Prism (Victoria Dixon) and the venerable Dr.
Chasuble (a jolly bumptious somewhat Dickensian performance by Janie Lawson),
who is in love with Prism? The contagious confusion continues! Merrilane the Butler and Manservant, played with insouciant
detachment by Blue Hyslop in holey fishnet stockings and tails observes the
riotous carry-ons with the air of impartial servitude and silent disdain.
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Blue Hyslop as Merrilane. Lainie Hart as Lady Bracknell and Louiza Blomfield
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In less imaginative hands, Oscar
Wilde’s wildly successful satire on the Upper class could just be another faithful
period piece. West has turned the play into a delectable cabaret production
while remaining true to Wilde’s scintillating text and ridiculous but likeable
characters. Cabaret artists, The Downlows, Louiza Blomfield and Dave Collins
introduce the evening with Liza Minelli’s The
Singer and throughout the performance each character has their moment at
the microphone with appropriately chosen numbers from Celine Dion to Backstreet
Boys to Peter Allen with a grand finale when confusion becomes clear and John Paul
Young’s Love is in the Air rings through the theatre. Jack has won his
Gwendolen, Algernon his Cecily, Chasuble his Prism and a happy end heralds a
life as vacuous as before. By partially casting against gender and type, West
has stripped back the artifice to reveal the shallowness of Upper class
society. Cabaret is the art of exposure
and West’s re-imagining exposes the past to reveal the universal present.
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Steph Roberts. Lainie Hart and Holly Ross as Cecily
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Though the purist may frown at
this production’s gay abandonment of traditional staging, the more discerning
audience will revel in the fresh approach and faithful observance of Wilde’s
wit and satirical observance. On a more sombre note, Blue Hyslop’s non-binary
identity terms in the programme give cause to reflect on the injustice suffered
by Wilde as a victim of his homophobic past and the society he satirized.
Vanity may have been his downfall. Cruelty and shame was the price he had to
pay.
A highly talented cast embrace
the spirit of West’s vision and the facile superficiality of Wilde’s
self-absorbed characters. Each actor brings a distinct absurdity to the role.
Holly Ross’s unique performance in the role of the girlish, frivolous Cecily deserves
special commendation. In a company of excellent performers, Ross exudes star
quality. Keep an eye out for this young emerging actor. She has a bright future
ahead of her. West’s direction keeps the
audience engaged as actors play out their scenes throughout the theatre. No fourth
wall will intrude on the audience’s engagement and immense enjoyment .
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Janie Lawson as Dr. Chasuble. Victoria Dixon as Miss Prism
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Jarrad West, assisted by Joel
Horwood and Steph Roberts, has created an original and highly entertaining production of The Importance of Being Earnest. It is a sparkling jewel in the
crowning achievement of ACT HUB’s 2022 programme. In a season that has seen
such highlights as Alchemy Artistic’s The Boys, Free Rain’s Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf, Chaika’s
Collected Stories, and Everyman
Theatre’s Hand To God The Bunbury Tea
Club Cabaret production of The Importance
of Being Earnest is the perfect choice to round off a stellar year of first
class theatre.
Photos by Janelle McMenamin