Synopses & Reviews
Synopsis
This critically loved continuation to Oscar Wilde's The Importance of Being Earnest finds Gwendolen and Cecily miserably ensconced in happy marriages to Jack and Algernon, but upon beginning to suspect their husbands of having extra-marital affairs, they set-off to spy on them in the guise of brother-attorneys Earnest and Earnest by joining their men's club, The Rhymers of Eldridge, but once there, a series of miscommunications find our husbands inviting our lady infiltrators back to their home for tea and to meet their always there and faithful wives, setting the scene for a uproarious final act, critics have called Thoroughly Stupid Things: "You're unfamiliar with Montserrat Mendez, you say? Oh my dear, then you must go off to your garrulous Google or your yappy Yahoo and absorb all you can about him He is - and I say this with envy - a perfectly marvelous playwright, and his Thoroughly Stupid Things, a sequel to Oscar Wilde's The Importance of Being Earnest, is a comic masterwork." - Leonard Jacobs - Backstage Time Out NYC said: ****(four stars) Montserrat Mendez's follow-up to Oscar Wilde's The Importance of Being Earnest is the rare sequel that doesn't disappoint. The upper classes remain frivolous and atwitter as Mendez picks up Wilde's story. The endearing Gwendolen (Emma Gordon) and Cecily (Amy Forney) suspect their husbands are having affairs-so, as any good wife would do, they disguise themselves as men and spy on their spouses at a gentlemen's club, slipping in and out of their false identities to choruses of laughter from the audience. Mendez's script weaves a lattice of clever wordplay, and has great fun blowing up and rebuilding the fourth wall. Barely pausing to inhale, the fine cast reels off Mendez's verbiage with aplomb, in accents whose tongue-in-cheek snootiness is perfectly matched to the wry smile that Mendez flashes at Wilde. - Ashley Hoffman