The Importance of Being Earnest - Patron feedback

The Importance of Being Earnest was a hit with our audience! It was the second performance in our 10x10 Arts Series, and the first play we have ever had in the series. After these reviews, we will certainly be looking to offer more plays in the 10x10, and to work with Aquila Theatre again. They were brilliant!

Here are just some of the many comments from our Earnest audience:

  • Very good job of refreshing a period piece. I especially liked the scene changes. Still funny after all these years!
  • Excellent! Happy! Joyous! Grateful for sharing the show with you!
  • Well Done! Great production- acting direction, and segue’s from one scene to the next. We liked the way it was updated as well! Good job!
  • Great Acting, great comedy and I enjoyed the modern spin. Put me in such a better mood! Oddly fit difficulties of life.
  • Loved the show! It was hilarious and I am so grateful for the 10x10 series.
  • This is my second play that I have been to, never really thought much about them. My wife drags me to them, must say I’m starting to enjoy them. This show was wonderful and funny. I have grown to like plays. Thank you!

Thanks to everyone that came out and enjoyed the show! We had just as much fun as you! Our next 10x10 show will be January 20, 2012 with Poncho Sanchez and his Latin Jazz Band.

The Importance of Being Earnest - Part 2

Yesterday we had a q & a with Peter F Gardiner who plays Jack Worthing (Earnest) and Merriman in Aquila Theatre's "The Importance of Being Earnest." The play will be at Walton Arts Center this Saturday, November 5 at 8pm, and is part of our 10x10 Arts Series in which most of our tickets are only $10. Yes, you heard me right, $10!! Quick, hop over here and purchase tickets now!

Ok, on with the rest of the story. Today, we've got a q & a with Guy Oliver-Watts who plays Algernon in Earnest. He definitely had a different perspective on some of the questions, and it was great to see how he and Peter differed in their answers. Read on for some intriguing facts on Guy. 

1.       "I don't play accurately - anyone can play accurately - but I play with wonderful expression." ---How are you wonderfully expressive?

2.       “Oh! it is absurd to have a hard and fast rule about what one should read and what one shouldn't. More than half of modern culture depends on what one shouldn't read.”---What have you read recently but shouldn’t? 

3.       One of the characters pretends to have a friend in the country that he can ‘visit’ anytime he wants to get away from social engagements…where would you go if you could visit anywhere?

4.       If you could switch identities with one well-known/famous character for a day, who would it be? Why?

5.       The New York Times describes Aquila as “modernly hip” – what two words would you use to describe YOURSELF?

6.       Can you think of a time you got caught bending the truth?

 

7.       If you could uproot any classic what time period would you place it in and why?

 

 

Responses from Guy Oliver-Watts who plays Algernon 

 

1. When I am at my least self conscious and able to articulate or focus on something/some character outside of myself.

i.e.  When I write songs, sing, act or when I express my love to my wife and children, most of the time at least I leave them in no doubt about it.

2. A Terry Pratchett novel...amusingly written etc... but fundamentally an utter waste of several hours of my life when nothing was learnt.

Other than that, my mothers choice of English newspaper 'The Daily Mail'. It has an editorial that I find abhorant.

3. India or Africa because I've never been... or Rome & New York because I never tire of them

4. Obama...so I could triple the funding for the arts.. or Scarlet Johansson (I'm only human).

5. Occasionally inspired

6. not for a while...I'm a good liar.

7. Off the top of my head...Dr. Faustus in some present day political scenario.

Thank you Guy for some great answers to our questions! Judging by the responses from Guy and Peter, "The Importance of Being Earnest" is sure to be an entertaining show this weekend. Come on out Saturday night and party with us at the second performance of our 10x10 Arts Series. There will be a pre-show creative conversation with some of the actors, and after the show there's a party in our lobby, complete with music and a specialty cocktail. We hope to see you there!

The Importance of Being Earnest

Aquila Theatre will be performing Oscar Wilde's "The Importance of Being Earnest" this Saturday, November 5 at 8pm as part of our 10x10 Arts Series. Earnest is such a witty and fun play, and there are so many fabulous quotes, like, "Never speak disrespectfully of Society, Algernon. Only people who can't get into it do that," and "Well, I know, of course, how important it is not to keep a business engagement, if one wants to retain a sense of beauty of life." 

We thought it would be fun to get to know some of the actors from Aquila Theatre, so we went sent them some interesting questions to answer. Here are the questions & their answers are below: 

1.       A quote from the play: "I don't play accurately - anyone can play accurately - but I play with wonderful expression." ---How are you wonderfully expressive?

2.       “Oh! it is absurd to have a hard and fast rule about what one should read and what one shouldn't. More than half of modern culture depends on what one shouldn't read.”---What have you read recently but shouldn’t? 

3.       One of the characters pretends to have a friend in the country that he can ‘visit’ anytime he wants to get away from social engagements…where would you go if you could visit anywhere?

4.       If you could switch identities with one well-known/famous character for a day, who would it be? Why?

5.       The New York Times describes Aquila as “modernly hip” – what two words would you use to describe YOURSELF?

6.       Can you think of a time you got caught bending the truth?

7.       If you could uproot any classic what time period would you place it in and why?

Responses from Peter F. Gardiner who plays Jack Worthing (or Earnest) and Merriman 

1. I express myself through my acting (in 'The Importance of Being Earnest' and 'Macbeth' I get to play 8 different roles and that's just in 2 shows). Since my first play in 1991 ('Tess of the D'Urbervilles') I've played hundreds of roles and I find that this is one of the greatest ways for me to express myself. I also write and play songs on the guitar I find this a very satisfying way of expressing myself. I have written 3 full-length plays, I really enjoy expressing myself through play-writing. Socially I enjoy telling stories, telling jokes and 'playing the fool' so I also find this is a daily way of expressing myself in an informal way.

2. I bought a novel 'Matterhorn' 3 months ago. It's a great book and yet I've only read a quarter of it because I'm not a big reader. So I don't read the good stuff, let alone waste my time by reading stuff I shouldn't! Also in the last 12 months I've been in 5 different plays so I find myself learning and revising my lines, so - again I don't have the time to read stuff I shouldn't - I'm too busy getting on top of my lines. 

3. Italy. I've heard it's beautiful, the food's great, it's full of history and I've never been there before, and it's warmer than where I live in Britain. 

4. I'd love to be Han Solo for the day. A lot of people don't realize that he's a real person who helped bring peace, prosperity and love to a galaxy under threat from a great evil. I love the Star Wars movies and apparently Harrison Ford's a really big fan of my early work.

5. Expressive and Fun. But also Scottish and Short. Also Jealous and Ambitious. Also Artistic and Creative.

6. The last time I bent the truth a little bit was probably after the last time I stayed at my parents house. We always eat too much, stay up late, drinking, playing poker and partying into the wee wee hours, so come the next day my girlfriend and I just want to get home, lie on the couch in front of the TV and recover. So I might have told the odd white lie about needing to get home 'the morning after' for sundry weighty reasons; 'To meet people', 'To have lunch with someone', 'To prepare a chicken we've already bought' etc.......

7. I'd uproot 'Hamlet' and place him in a Modern Urban Scottish Setting, complete with drugs, drink, clubs, violence, family histories, distrust, friends, romances and rapier duels - a bit like a 'Shakespearean Trainspotting', or 'Hamlet in Hamilton',  perhaps 'The Dane in Dundee', or 'The Prince of Paisley', 'Deep-Fried Hamlet', these are just a few of the titles I'm playing with. I've also got an idea for a very good 40 year old Scottish actor to play the lead role in the version I've just described - in fact he's perfect! 

Great answers from Peter!! Check back tomorrow for another round with Guy Oliver-Watts who plays Algernon in "The Importance of Being Earnest."