The Importance of Being Earnest is rather like a newfound interest in jazz, you must โunlearnโ the four-beat pop you’re accustomed to, to fully appreciate it. You have to rewind, temporarily forget Rick Mayall and Ade Edmondson, forgo all farcical comedy from The Goon Show to Charlie Chaplin, and leave your Tardis in late Victorian England, then, you will laugh.โฆ.in a hoity-toity kinda fashion!
Opening Monday, it’s a sell-out at the Wharf Theatre in Devizes already, assuring me you know the plot and backstory; though I caught last night’s dress rehearsal, I’m not sure I need review it, only to assure ticket-holders theyโre in for a good night, express, once again, why you gotta love our communal and hospitable town’s theatre, and maybe attempt to convince you Iโm an intellectual!
One of the few plays Iโve read, Iโm reminded how ironic and sardonic towards pomposity Oscar Wilde was, and how much trouble he got from it; surely making The Importance of Being Earnest a Victorian Men Behaving Badly, albeit written by a genius of twisting narrative the like I find unable to make a modern comparable.
I find myself wondering how, or even if itโs possible, to modernise it, as they did with Brewsterโs Millions, for example. For it lambasts the snobbery of Victorian social etiquette as nonsensical, ridiculing the formalities of gentry as preposterous folly, and though it suggests insincerity and fabrications should be morally neutral, our protocols to be so feigned with social interactions has drastically improved through equality since, making this feel somewhat lost in time. Such is its ex-post facto beauty, concluding some things are best left the way they are.
This leaves the happy ending scene questionable by todayโs standards. In an unfeasible modern twist itโs surely likely both Jack and Algernon wouldโve been victims of their own circumstance; akin to a double-act of Basil Fawlty and Basil Fawlty. A modernisation of the play would end (spoiler alert) with the penultimate scene, where the ladies discover Earnest was a big, fat double-whammy fib to get in their knickers, and the boys wouldโve been summoned to punishment for their deceptions, liable to sharp kicks to their respective groin-areas!
True, isnโt it? Modern girls wouldn’t have given these unsuitable and practically unhinged suitors the time of day! Theyโd receive only a two-finger salute, probably de-friended and condemned on Facebook, and theyโd both be rung out to dry on Tinder, no matter how loaded they are! It is then, with a curiosity of Victorian ethics which makes this play so endearingly comical, classic and impossible to modernise; go tell Disney!

Though, with a line in the play ironically defuncting happy endings I hadnโt picked up on till last nightโs fantastic dramatisation of it, I strongly suspect that is precisely what Wilde was getting at, only leaving me ponder what he would think of our era today. Thereโs far more connotations to encrypt from this play than first meets the eye, but at least he wouldnโt be threatened with a bouquet of rotten vegetables from his boyfriendโs pop and in his attempt to sue the Lord, get banged up in the big house for it. More likely the Lord would get a wrap on the knuckles for a hate-crime; proving how far weโve emancipated and why this play is so intriguing and poignant, if outmoded comically.
And itโs played out wonderfully, Rob Finlay plays steadfast Jack Worthing, Oliver Beech makes the perfect punster Algernon Moncrieff, and their conflicting characters ricochet off each other like they were performing this in Melkshamโs Bounce House!
Sophie Kerr plays Gwendolen Fairfax, and Anna McGrail is Cecily Cardew, elegantly defining the constricted mannerisms of Victorian ladies, and Wildeโs attempts to satirise it. Comic gold from Debby Wilkinson as Lady Bracknell and Jess Bone as Miss Prism, particularly when the two finally clash. Rob Gill is the bumbling reverend, Tony Luscombe and Ian Diddams make the perfect butlers.
Lewis Cowen is one dedicated director who has made this play shine beyond the rafters of the Wharf. I think youโll love it, being far more intellectual than me, and I finish with an oxymoron Oscar Wilde might be proud of me for; oh, awfully witty, what-what! Photographer Chris Watkins was there, trying to grab some images from him to illustrate this with, for now, I apologise for not taking photos, but guarantee you, itโs yet another stunning performance.


Trending….
An Endless Summer with Braydon-Leeโs New Single
If, inspired by the likes of Ed Sheeran and James Arthur, the majority of Gen Z loves a good power ballad, the beginnings ofโฆ
Tour Des Frites: Four Dauntseysโ Sixth-Formers Awarded Travel Scholarship Cycle from School to Bonn, Germany
Four Dauntsey’s Sixth-Formers have been awarded travel scholarships, and plan to cycle all the way from their school to Bonn in Germany, shortly afterโฆ
Wiltshire Business Leader to Host Free International Womenโs Day AI Webinar to Prevent Women Being โLeft Behindโ in Tech Shift
Leading Wiltshire digital entrepreneur Natalie Luckham, AI Educator and founder of award-winning Wiltshire social media consultancy Naturally Social is hosting a free โIntroduction toโฆ
The Return of The Fold Music Venue in Devizes
If your average Tuesday night in Devizes might feel like The Day The Earth Stood Still, it certainly felt this way for me yesterday;โฆ
Dulcet Tones Rock Back to Bassett!
You’re a teenage Tom Cruise, at least you wish you were, but stay with me on this! Your parents are away, you’re home aloneโฆ
Talk in Code Headlined Devizes Winter of Festive Ales
Devizes Outdoor Celebratory Arts key into the town’s majority demographic for its first annual event of the year, mature couples, with an affection forโฆ
The Munster Returns to Slam-Dunk Wiltshire Council Budget!
Well, I admit, the Black Dog Crossroads has reopened with shiny new traffic lights and looks pretty groovy, as far as road junctions lookโฆ
Wiltshire Music Awards 2026 Announces New Organisers and Major Event Upgrade
The Wiltshire Music Awards 2026 entered an exciting new era when Stone Circle Music Events announced was as official sponsor and organiser. Backed byโฆ
Live Music in Trowbridge; Still Pumping! The Sunnies, Between The Lines and Meg at The Pump
Images from KieshaFilms I confess my motivation to venture out this winter stagnated, like sludge in a drain. Akin to a hedgehog, I pokedโฆ
REVIEW โ Wakeman & Son @ The Corn Exchange, Devizes โ Saturday 21st February 2026
Yes! Wakemansโ Journey To The Centre of Devizes! by Andy Fawthrop Rumours are swirling round that D-Town is about to launch a bid toโฆ