Tuesday, 16 February 2010

Today's idea - Oscar Wilde's 'Lord Arthur Savile's Crime



Today 'that curly haired bloke' from the Joseph 'Any Dream Will Do' BBC show and other assorted cast members are performing Oscar Wilde's 'Lord Arthur Savile's Crime.' Having seen the Dorian Grey film last night (hmmm) I'd be keen to see more plays by the author. Admittedly the curly haired man is not to all tastes, but the play sounds really rather good.

There's been a couple of very well received performances of Oscar Wilde's plays about Brighton, and today - and until Saturday the 20th February - they're set to continue. By very good, I mean "critically acclaimed."

"Lord Arthur Savile is deliriously happy: a pillar of Victorian society, he’s on the verge of marriage to the lovely Sybil. Then an encounter with a clairvoyant reveals that he is destined to commit murder, and Arthur decides that to protect his future wife, he must commit this bloody deed before he marries. As he sets about deciding which of his family and friends could be most conveniently eliminated, chaos predictably ensues…

This delightfully daffy comedy has a deceptive vein of black humour, sprinkled with Wilde’s inimitable one-liners."


It's at the Theatre Royal, lasts 2hours, has a break for snacks and drinks and intellectual airs and graces, and begins at 7:45. Tickets are £13-28 depending on where you sit and are available from here - and yes, we're keeping our eyes out for cheaper plays about too, although for this much money you do get "all-star cast is led by the legendary Gary Wilmot, (‘Chitty Chitty Bang Bang’, ‘Me and My Girl’), Kate O'Mara (‘Dynasty’, ‘Bad Girls’), David Ross (‘The Green Green Gras’s). Derren Nesbitt (‘Special Branch’, ‘Where the Eagles Dare’) and Louisa Clein (‘Judge John Deed’)".

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