The “ Importance of Being Oscar ” by Irish playwright Micheál mac Líammóir, not to be confused with “The Importance of Being Ernest”, was written in the late 1950s and was first performed in 1960 by Mr. mac Líammóir himself. Actor Paul Rapsey performed this challenging play in Cobourg and Warkworth Ontario in 2017 to great acclaim. The play is a monologue in two Acts about the magnificent but tragic life of Oscar Wilde (1854 – 1900). Wilde was an Irish playwright, novelist, essayist and poet in the late Victorian period. He achieved fame at a very young age, but it was notoriety that was his downfall. Wilde had a very public and torrid relationship with the son of an aristocrat, the 9 th Marquis of Queensbury, whose name is given to the rules of boxing. Queensbury set out to destroy Oscar Wilde with the aid of the English establishment, which had taken umbrage at Wilde’s witty, very public and literary critique of their outdated social norms and moral hypocr...
This blog is for the purpose of reporting on past and future shows I have or will be performing in. Since 2019, these plays are monologues that I have written. Theatre on a shoe-string budget requires all the help it can get from social media. I trained as an actor and performed professionally in the 1970s before becoming a lawyer in the 1980s. In the 1990s and early 2000s, I performed occasionally , taking up theatre (monologues) again after my retirement from the practice of law in 2015.