Eve Best stars in Dominic Dromgoole’s production of Oscar Wilde’s play. But what have critics been saying about it? 

A woman of no importance

An earnest young American woman, a louche English lord, and an innocent young chap join a house party of fin de siecle fools and grotesques. Nearby a woman lives, cradling a long buried secret. Wilde’s marriage of glittering wit and Ibsenite drama create a vivid new theatrical voice.

The Guardian: *** ” It will never be anyone’s favourite Wilde play but at least it establishes the dramatist’s feminist credentials and, in Dromgoole’s revival, takes the mothballs out of the melodrama.”

The Telegraph: *** “Dromgoole and designer Jonathan Fensom don’t make things easy for their cast (16 in all) by placing them in a cluttered, confining, chocolate-boxy set that requires the actors to manoeuvre very precisely about the place to avoid, as it were, bumping into the other confectionery.”

Radio Times: *** “It’s not a perfect start to a year of Wilde, but the quality of a top-notch cast ensures this is nothing less than entertaining.”

WhatsOnStage: *** “the words fly around happily and it’s all quite amusing if a little arch. But it does go on, slightly aimlessly, for nearly two acts.”

Broadway World: **** “this is a confident opener to Classic Spring’s season – in which the Wilde greatest hits are yet to come.”

Time Out: *** “Dromgoole presents a fairly trad production that wouldn’t have half as much impact without Best.”

Evening Standard: *** “whatever other issues there might be, at least this play offers a refreshingly ringing endorsement of mould-breaking female behaviour.”

London Theatre.co.uk: *** “It is the latest bold initiative of former Globe artistic director Dominic Dromgoole, who has established a new commercial and classical theatre company called Classic Spring.”

British Theatre Guide: “Dominic Dromgoole ensures that the evening is packed with humour, although occasionally he can be a little too keen to add his own witty flourishes to a finely tuned drama, already packed with sparkling repartee.”

The Times:**** “A nice enough excuse for some swish costumes and world-class one-liners.”

Theatre Cat: “But it bounces along, director Dominic Dromgoole allowing absurdity (borderline clowning at times) to keep the mood moving.”

Johnny Fox: *** “The staging is crude, too many characters are ranged in an angular line across the acting area, one man drags off a deckchair for no apparent reason, and in an important and intimate moment with Harry Lister Smith as her son Gerald, Best is obliged to sit beside him on a doorstep where they look like a ventriloquist act.”

A Woman of No Importance will play at the Vaudeville Theatre until the 30th December. To book tickets visit: Discount Theatre.comSee Tickets.com , Love Theatre.com,Theatre People.co.uk and Love London Love Culture

 

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