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The Importance of Being Earnest. By Oscar Wilde. John 'Jack' (Ernest) Worthing: Play’s protagonist; leads a double life. In country, he is known as Jack; He has invented a fictitious brother “Ernest” who lives in London and whom he visits frequently. In London Jack is known as Ernest.
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The Importance of Being Earnest By Oscar Wilde
John 'Jack' (Ernest) Worthing: • Play’s protagonist; leads a double life. • In country, he is known as Jack; • He has invented a fictitious brother “Ernest” who lives in London and whom he visits frequently. • In London Jack is known as Ernest. • As a baby, Jack was discovered in a handbag in the cloakroom by an old man who adopted him • Is guardian to Cecily Cardew. • Jack is in love with his friend Algernon’s cousin, Gwendolen Fairfax. Characters
Cecily Cardew: • Jack’s ward, the granddaughter of the old gentlemen who found and adopted Jack when Jack was a baby. • She is obsessed with the name Ernest, but she is even more intrigued by the idea of wickedness. This idea, rather than the virtuous-sounding name, has prompted her to fall in love with Jack’s “brother” Ernest in her imagination and to invent an elaborate romance and courtship between them. Characters
Algernon “Algy” Moncrieff: • Algernon is a charming, nephew of Lady Bracknell, cousin of Gwendolen Fairfax, and best friend of Jack Worthing, whom he has known for years as Ernest. • He has invented a fictional friend, “Bunbury,” an very sick man whose frequent sudden illness allow Algernon to get out of unpleasant or dull social obligations. • In the city he is Algernon; in the country he is Ernest. • Falls in love with Cecily Characters
Gwendolyn Fairfax: • Algernon’s cousin and Lady Bracknell’s daughter. • Gwendolen is in love with Jack, whom she knows as Ernest. • Gwendolen is fixated on the name Ernest and says she will not marry a man without that name. Characters
Lady Augusta Bracknell: • Algernon’s snobbish, mercenary, and domineering aunt and Gwendolen’s mother. • Lady Bracknell married well, and her primary goal in life is to see her daughter do the same. She has a list of “eligible young men” and a prepared interview she gives to potential suitors. • . She is cunning, narrow-minded, and authoritarian. Characters
Dr. Frederick Chasuble: • The rector on Jack’s estate. • Both Jack and Algernon approach Dr. Chasuble to request that they be christened “Ernest.” • Dr. Chasuble entertains secret romantic feelings for Miss Prism. Characters
Miss Laetitia Prism: • Cecily’s governess. • Miss Prism is an endless source of clichés. She highly approves of Jack’s presumed respectability and harshly criticizes his “unfortunate” brother. • Despite her rigidity, Miss Prism seems to have a softer side. • She speaks of having once written a novel whose manuscript was “lost” or “abandoned.” • Also, she entertains romantic feelings for Dr. Chasuble. Characters
Algernon (lives in London, the city); he will go to the country and woo Cecily as “Ernest” Jack (lives in country); he wants to marry Gwendolyn but wants to “change” his name from Ernest to Jack Cecily lives with Jack; he is her guardian; she is 18; she “loves” Jack’s wicked younger brother, Ernest Gwendolyn lives in the city; she is the cousin of Algernon; she loves Ernest when he comes to the city Bunbury is a “sick friend” Algernon has invented when he wants to excuse himself from engagements; he is always sick! Ernest is the “wicked younger brother” of Jack who lives in the city; Jack goes to see this brother to bail him out of trouble; really Jack “becomes” Ernest when in the city
Earnest: Marked by or showing deep sincerity or seriousness; Of an important or weighty nature; grave; with a purposeful or sincere intent; serious; determined. What is the double meaning behind the title The Importance of Being Earnest? Why is it important to be earnest and Ernest by the end of the play?