ShmoopTube
Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.
Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos
Society and Class Videos 40 videos
Historical fiction novels like The Help can whisk you back to a place and time that you may have only read about in history books. Or... a place an...
Meet Emma Woodhouse of Jane Austen's Emma. She’s a rich young woman with a good social life living in 18th-century England. We bet she has an aw...
Great Expectations by Charles Dickens is about a young blacksmith boy (Pip) and his two dreams: becoming a gentleman and marrying the beautiful Est...
The Importance of Being Earnest 35627 Views
Share It!
Description:
Oscar Wilde was a beast when it came to wordplay. Oh, maybe that's why Shmoop loves him so much—we're pretty wilde, too.
Transcript
- 00:04
The Importance of Being Earnest, a la Shmoop. Everyone wants a little variety in their life.
- 00:10
31 flavors of ice cream. Underpants for each day of the week. And something other than
- 00:15
tuna casserole for dinner.
- 00:17
But isn’t there anything to be said for “same old, same old?”
- 00:21
In the satire, The Importance of Being Earnest, Oscar Wilde keeps it green by recycling his
Full Transcript
- 00:28
characters. Sort of.
- 00:31
Best buds Jack and Algernon <Al-jer-non> have a lot in common. They’re both rich, they’re
- 00:36
both in love, and they both make the same lame-brained mistakes.
- 00:41
Exhibit A: Jack creates a fake brother named “Ernest,” as a handy alibi for weekend
- 00:47
benders.
- 00:48
Exhibit B: Algernon also pretends to be Ernest, so he can meet ladies.
- 00:54
Which brings us to Exhibit C: Jack and Algernon’s better halves end up thinking they’re in
- 00:58
love with the same man… Ernest. Having a little trouble keeping the characters
- 01:06
straight?
- 01:06
Yeah, us too.
- 01:08
Did Oscar Wilde just copy and paste the same character?
- 01:11
Why does he make Jack and Algernon so similar? Maybe it was for comedic effect.
- 01:16
Algernon and Jack don’t take any bowling balls to the family jewels, but they still
- 01:22
manage some Youtube-worthy gaffes.
- 01:24
Plus, they’re both big on talking, which is an excuse for Wilde to whip out his witty
- 01:28
one-liner epigrams.
- 01:31
Wilde really enjoys a good farce.
- 01:33
Jack and Algernon’s shenanigans include fighting over pastries, flirting with each
- 01:37
other’s female relatives, and that whole “fake person” scam.
- 01:41
One “Ernest” is pushing it, but here we’re talkin’ a seriously, Ernest-happy alternate
- 01:46
universe. Or maybe Wilde was trying to say that one
- 01:49
of these things is NOT like the other.
- 01:51
Jack and Algernon seem like twin BFFs, but when they argue, we see that each is crazy
- 01:56
in his own special way.
- 01:58
Sure, Jack invented an imaginary sibling to help him escape responsibility, but at least
- 02:03
he worries about the future. Algernon? Not so much.
- 02:05
And while Jack tries to look like a role model, Algernon concentrates on looking sharp. And
- 02:10
making trouble.
- 02:12
Algernon and Jack are foils for each other—and we don’t mean the kind you use to cover
- 02:17
the lasagna.
- 02:18
More like the compare/contrast kind. With less ricotta.
- 02:22
Here’s a third perspective… maybe Wilde cloned his characters to make a statement
- 02:27
about the snobby Victorian upper classes… it’s not you, it’s them.
- 02:33
Names are everything in this play. “Ernest” is much less attractive when he turns out
- 02:38
to be plain old Jack and/or Algernon. Well, okay, Algernon’s still pretty fancy.
- 02:42
And Jack could be Brad Pitt for all Lady Bracknell cares… if he wants to marry Gwendolen, he’d
- 02:48
better scrounge up a family tree to prove his worth. …
- 02:50
A handbag isn’t going to cut it.
- 02:51
It also helps if you’re made of money. Lady Bracknell isn’t super-thrilled with Algernon’s
- 02:56
fiancée, Cecily, until she hears that cash cowbell.
- 03:01
No one in this play seems to care too much about personality.
- 03:03
It doesn’t matter if Jack cuts in line at Disneyland, and Algernon finally buys that
- 03:08
puppy-kicking machine… money and pedigree will get them what they want.
- 03:12
So why did Wilde make Jack and Algernon almost-but-not-quite the same?
- 03:17
Is he aiming for our funny bones?
- 03:19
Is he a fan of the foil?
- 03:21
Or is he picking a fight with British society?
- 03:23
We earnestly want to know.
- 03:26
Shmoop amongst yourselves.
Related Videos
This video defines utopias and dystopias, and investigates how a utopia might become a dystopia. Can a seemingly perfect world actually be a dystop...
They say that honesty is the best policy, but Jack lies about his identity and still gets the girl. Does that mean we should all lie to get what we...
Ever wish you could remember everything that you ever studied? How about everything that everyone has ever studied? Yeah, pretty sure our brains ju...
Ralph Ellison's Invisible Man is an American classic. Hope you're not expecting any exciting shower scenes though. It's not that kind of book.
Do not go gentle into that good night. In fact, if it's past your curfew, don't go at all into that good night. You just stay in your good bed and...