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An Ideal Husband

An Ideal Husband is a four-act play by Oscar Wilde that revolves around blackmail and political corruption, and touches on the themes of public and private honour. It was first produced at the Haymarket Theatre, London in 1895 and ran for 124 performances. It has been revived in many theatre productions and adapted for the cinema, radio and television.

Act II: Mrs Cheveley, centre, denounces Sir Robert Chiltern to his wife, 1895 premiere

Background and first production

 
Lewis Waller as Sir Robert Chiltern

In June 1893, with his second drawing room play, A Woman of No Importance, running successfully at the Haymarket Theatre, Oscar Wilde began writing An Ideal Husband for the actor-manager John Hare. He completed the first act while staying at a house he had taken at Goring-on-Thames, after which he named a leading character in the play.[1] Between September 1893 and January 1894 he wrote the remaining three acts. Hare rejected the play, finding the last act unsatisfactory;[2] Wilde then successfully offered the play to Lewis Waller, who was about to take temporary charge of the Haymarket in the absence in America of its usual manager, Herbert Beerbohm Tree.[1]

The play was put into rehearsal in December 1894 and opened on 3 January 1895, billed as "A new and original play of modern life". It ran at the Haymarket for 111 performances, regarded as a good run at the time.[n 1] In April, on the last day of the Haymarket run, Wilde was arrested for gross indecency; his name was removed from the playbills and programmes when the production transferred to the Criterion Theatre, where it ran for a further 13 performances, from 13 to 27 April.[4] The play could have run longer at the Criterion, but the theatre was required by its proprietor, Charles Wyndham, for a new production.[5]

The play was published in 1899 in an edition of 1000 copies; Wilde's name was not printed: the work was published as "By the author of Lady Windermere's Fan".[6] It is dedicated to Frank Harris, "A slight tribute to his power and distinction as an artist, his chivalry and nobility as a friend".[7] The published version differs slightly from the performed play, as Wilde added many passages and cut others. Prominent additions included written stage directions and character descriptions. Wilde was a leader in the effort to make plays accessible to the reading public.[8]

Original cast

 
1895 programme
  • The Earl of Caversham, KG – Alfred Bishop
  • Viscount Goring (his son) – Charles Hawtrey
  • Sir Robert Chiltern (under-secretary for foreign affairs) – Lewis Waller
  • Vicomte de Nanjac (attaché at the French embassy in London) – Cosmo Stuart
  • Mr Montford – Henry Stanford
  • Phipps (Lord Goring's servant) – Charles Brookfield
  • Mason (butler to Sir Robert Chilton) – H. Deane
  • James (footman at Lord Goring's) – Charles Meyrick
  • Harold (footman at Sir Robert Chilton's) – Charles Goodhart
  • Lady Chiltern – Julia Neilson
  • Lady Markby – Fanny Brough
  • Countess of Basildon – Vane Featherston
  • Mrs Marchmont – Helen Forsyth
  • Miss Mabel Chiltern (Sir Robert's sister) – Maude Millett
  • Mrs Cheveley – Florence West
Source: Playscript and The London Stage.[9]

Plot

Act I

The Octagon Room in Sir Robert Chiltern's house in Grosvenor Square
 
Lord Caversham, Mabel Chiltern and Lord Goring, 1895 premiere

Sir Robert – a member of the House of Commons and junior government minister – and his wife, Lady Chiltern, are hosting a gathering that includes his friend Lord Goring, a dandified bachelor, Chiltern's sister Mabel and other guests. During the party, Mrs Cheveley, an enemy of Lady Chiltern from their schooldays, attempts to blackmail Sir Robert into supporting a fraudulent scheme to build a canal in Argentina. Her late mentor and lover, Baron Arnheim, induced the young Chiltern to sell him a Cabinet secret – which enabled Arnheim to buy shares in the Suez Canal Company three days before the British government announced its purchase of the company. Arnheim's payoff was the basis of Sir Robert's fortune, and Mrs Cheveley has Robert's letter to Arnheim as proof of his crime. Fearing the ruin of both career and marriage, Sir Robert submits to her demands. When Mrs Cheveley pointedly informs Lady Chiltern of Sir Robert's change of heart regarding the canal scheme, the morally inflexible Lady Chiltern, unaware of both her husband's past and the blackmail plot, insists that Sir Robert renege on his promise to Mrs Cheveley. For Lady Chiltern, their marriage is predicated on her having an "ideal husband"—that is, a model spouse in both private and public life whom she can worship; thus, Sir Robert must remain unimpeachable in all his decisions. Sir Robert complies with her wishes and apparently seals his doom.

Toward the end of Act I, Mabel and Lord Goring come upon a diamond brooch that Goring gave someone many years ago. He takes the brooch and asks Mabel to tell him if anyone comes to retrieve it.[10]

Act II

Morning room in Sir Robert Chiltern's house

Goring urges Chiltern to fight Mrs Cheveley and admit his guilt to his wife. He also reveals that he and Mrs Cheveley were once engaged. After finishing his conversation with Chiltern, Goring engages in flirtatious banter with Mabel. He also takes Lady Chiltern aside and obliquely urges her to be less morally inflexible and more forgiving. Once Goring leaves, Mrs Cheveley appears, unexpected, in search of a brooch she lost the previous evening. Incensed at Chiltern's reneging on his promise, she exposes him to his wife. Lady Chiltern denounces her husband and refuses to forgive him.[11]

Act III

The library of Lord Goring's house in Curzon Street
 
Lord Goring burns the incriminating letter

Goring receives a letter from Lady Chiltern asking for his help – a letter that could be misinterpreted as a compromising love note. Just as Goring receives this note, his father, Lord Caversham, drops in and demands to know when his son will marry. A visit from Chiltern, who seeks further counsel from Goring, follows. Meanwhile, Mrs Cheveley arrives unexpectedly and, misrecognised by the butler as the woman Goring awaits, is ushered into Lord Goring's drawing room. While she waits, she finds Lady Chiltern's letter. Chiltern discovers Mrs Cheveley in the drawing room and, convinced of an affair between these two former lovers, he storms out of the house.

When Mrs Cheveley and Lord Goring confront each other, she makes a proposal. Claiming to still love Goring from their early days of courtship, she offers to exchange Chiltern's letter for her old beau's hand in marriage. Lord Goring declines, accusing her of defiling love by reducing courtship to a vulgar transaction and ruining the Chilterns' marriage. He then springs his trap. Removing the diamond brooch from his desk drawer, he binds it to Cheveley's wrist with a hidden lock. Goring then reveals how the item came into her possession: she stole it from his cousin, Mary Berkshire, years ago. To avoid arrest, Cheveley must trade the incriminating letter for her release from the bejewelled handcuff. After Goring obtains and burns the letter, Mrs Cheveley steals Lady Chiltern's note from his desk. Vengefully she plans to send it to Chiltern as, ostensibly, a love letter from Lady Chiltern to Goring. Mrs Cheveley exits the house in triumph.[12]

Act IV

Same as Act II

Lord Goring proposes to and is accepted by Mabel. Lord Caversham tells his son that Chiltern has denounced the Argentine canal scheme in the House of Commons. Lady Chiltern appears, and Lord Goring tells her that Chiltern's letter has been destroyed but that Mrs Cheveley has stolen her note and plans to use it to destroy her marriage. At that moment, Chiltern enters while reading Lady Chiltern's letter, but as the letter does not have the name of the addressee, he assumes it is meant for him, and reads it as a letter of forgiveness. The two reconcile. Lady Chiltern initially agrees to support Chiltern's decision to renounce his career in politics, but Goring dissuades her from allowing her husband to resign. When Chiltern refuses Goring his sister's hand in marriage, still believing he has taken up with Mrs Cheveley, Lady Chiltern is forced to explain last night's events and the true nature of the letter. Chiltern relents, and Goring and Mabel are permitted to marry. Lady Chiltern reaffirms her love for her husband and says, "For both of us a new life is beginning".[13]

Reception

In The Pall Mall Gazette, H. G. Wells wrote of the play:

It is not excellent; indeed, after Lady Windermere's Fan and The Woman of No Importance, it is decidedly disappointing. But worse have succeeded, and it was at least excellently received. … But, taking it seriously, and disregarding any possibly imaginary tendency towards a new width of treatment, the play is unquestionably very poor.[14]

William Archer wrote, "An Ideal Husband is a very able and entertaining piece of work, charmingly written, wherever Mr. Wilde can find it in his heart to sufflaminate his wit. There are several scenes in which the dialogue is heavily overburdened with witticisms, not always of the best alloy. ... An Ideal Husband, however, does not positively lack good things, but simply suffers from a disproportionate profusion of inferior chatter".[15] A. B. Walkley called the play "a strepitous, polychromatic, scintillant affair, dexterous as a conjurer's trick of legerdemain, clever with a cleverness so excessive as to be almost monstrous and uncanny". He found the plot unbelievable, and thought that although the play, "by sheer cleverness, keeps one continually amused and interested", Wilde's work was "not only poor and sterile, but essentially vulgar".[16] Bernard Shaw praised the play: "In a certain sense Mr Wilde is to me our only thorough playwright. He plays with everything: with wit, with philosophy, with drama, with actors and audience, with the whole theatre. Such a feat scandalizes the Englishman…".[17]

In 1996 the critic Bindon Russell wrote that An Ideal Husband is "the most autobiographical of Wilde's plays, mirroring, as it does, his own situation of a double life and an incipient scandal with the emergence of terrible secrets. Whilst Lord Goring is a character with much of Wilde's own wit, insight and compassion, Gertrude Chiltern can be seen as a portrait of Constance [Wilde]".[18]

Production history

 
Lord Goring confronts Mrs Cheveley. From a 1901 collected edition of Wilde's work

Britain

The first West End revival was presented by George Alexander in May 1914 at the St James's Theatre, and featured Arthur Wontner as Sir Robert Chiltern, Phyllis Neilson-Terry as Lady Chiltern, Hilda Moore as Mrs Cheveley and Alexander as Lord Goring. The play was next staged in London at the Westminster Theatre in 1943–44, with Manning Whiley as Sir Robert Chiltern, Rosemary Scott as Lady Chiltern, Martita Hunt as Mrs Cheveley, Roland Culver as Lord Goring and Irene Vanbrugh as Lady Markby.[19]

A London revival in 1965–66 ran at three West End theatres in succession; it starred Michael Denison as Sir Robert Chiltern, Dulcie Gray as Lady Chiltern, Margaret Lockwood as Mrs Cheveley and Richard Todd as Lord Goring. The play was again seen at the Westminster in 1989 in a short-lived revival, and in 1992 a new production was presented at the Globe Theatre which was subsequently seen in four other London theatres and on Broadway between November 1992 and March 1999. It was directed by Peter Hall, and the original cast featured David Yelland as Sir Robert Chiltern, Hannah Gordon as Lady Chiltern, Anna Carteret as Mrs Cheveley, Martin Shaw as Lord Goring, Michael Denison as Lord Caversham and Dulcie Gray as Lady Markby. The various stagings of the production ran for an aggregate three years, the longest running production of a Wilde play.[n 2]

A production at the Vaudeville Theatre, London in 2010–11 featured Alexander Hanson as Sir Robert Chiltern, Rachael Stirling as Lady Chiltern, Samantha Bond as Mrs Cheveley and Elliot Cowan. A revival at the same theatre in 2018 featured Nathaniel Parker and Sally Bretton as the Chilterns, the father and son combination of Edward Fox as Lord Caversham and Freddie Fox as Lord Goring, and Frances Barber as Mrs Cheveley, and Susan Hampshire as Lady Markby.[19]

International

The play was seen in the US in March 1895, running on Broadway for 40 performances.[20] It was revived on Broadway in 1918 with a cast including Norman Trevor and Beatrice Beckley as the Chilterns, Julian L'Estrange as Lord Goring and Constance Collier as Mrs Cheveley.[21] The next (and at 2021 the most recent) Broadway presentation was Peter Hall's production, seen at the Ethel Barrymore Theatre in 1996–97, featuring its original West End lead players, except for the Lady Chiltern, now played by Penny Downie.[22]

An Ideal Husband was produced in Australia in April 1895 by the Brough-Boucicault company;[23] they gave the play its New Zealand premiere later in the same year.[24] The Irish premiere was in Dublin in 1896, given (with no mention of the author's name) by a touring company managed by Hawtrey, at the Gaiety Theatre. The cast included Alma Stanley as Mrs Cheveley and Cosmo Stuart, promoted from his small role in the London production, as Lord Goring.[25]

A French translation was given in Geneva in 1944.[26] The first performance in France recorded by Les Archives du spectacle was in 1955; the site records seven French productions between then and 2016.[26]

Settings

Rex Whistler designs for the 1943-44 London revival:

 
Act I
 
Acts II and IV
 
Act III

Commemoration

To mark the centenary of the first production, Sir John Gielgud unveiled a plaque at the Haymarket Theatre in January 1995, in the presence of, among many others, Wilde's grandson Merlin Holland and the Marquess of Queensberry.[27]

Adaptations

Films

There have been at least five adaptations of the play for the cinema, in 1935 – a German film directed by Herbert Selpin and starring Brigitte Helm and Sybille Schmitz; 1947 – a British adaptation produced by London Films and starring Paulette Goddard, Michael Wilding and Diana Wynyard; 1980 – a Soviet version starring Ludmila Gurchenko and Yury Yakovlev; 1999 – a British film starring Julianne Moore, Minnie Driver, Jeremy Northam, Cate Blanchett and Rupert Everett; and 2000 – a British film starring James Wilby and Sadie Frost.

Radio and television

The BBC has broadcast seven radio adaptations since its first, in 1926: a 1932 version starring Leslie Perrins and Kyrle Bellew; a radio version of the 1943 Westminster Theatre production; a Bristol Old Vic version in 1947 featuring William Devlin, Elizabeth Sellars, Catherine Lacey and Robert Eddison; a 1950 production with Griffith Jones, Fay Compton and Isabel Jeans; a 1954 version produced by Val Gielgud; a 1959 adaptation starring Tony Britton and Faith Brook; a 1970 version with Noel Johnson, Ronald Lewis, Jane Wenham and Rosemary Martin; and a 2007 adaption with Alex Jennings, Emma Fielding, Janet McTeer and Jasper Britton.[28]

BBC television adaptations were broadcast in 1958 (with Ronald Leigh-Hunt, Sarah Lawson, Faith Brook and Tony Britton)[29] and 1969 (with Keith Michell, Dinah Sheridan, Margaret Leighton and Jeremy Brett).[30]

A television version (Ein Idealer Gatte) in German was broadcast in June 1958 by Nord und Westdeutscher Rundfunkverband (NWRV) with Marius Goring as Lord Goring and Albert Lieven as Sir Robert Chiltern.[31]

Notes, references and sources

Notes

  1. ^ According to Who's Who in the Theatre an average of 12 new productions a year ran in the West End for more than 100 performances in the decade 1890– 1899, including plays, operettas, burlesques and other genres.[3]
  2. ^ The longest continuously running Wilde production was John Gielgud's 1945 production of Lady Windermere's Fan which run for 18 months at the Haymarket.[19]

References

  1. ^ a b Jackson, p. xxxvi
  2. ^ Raby, p. 156
  3. ^ Parker, pp. 1135– 1153
  4. ^ Wearing, p. 452
  5. ^ Seeney, Michael . "An Ideal Husband", The Wildean , No. 44 (January 2014), p. 13 (subscription required)
  6. ^ Wilde (1899), title page
  7. ^ Wilde (1899), unnumbered introductory page
  8. ^ Jackson, p. xliii
  9. ^ Wilde (1966), p. 149–150; and Wearing, p. 452
  10. ^ Wilde (1966), pp. 153–179
  11. ^ Wilde (1966), pp. 180–204
  12. ^ Wilde (1966), pp. 205–225
  13. ^ Wilde (1966), pp. 226–244
  14. ^ Wells, H. G. Unsigned review in The Pall Mall Gazette, 4 January 1895, p. 3, quoted in Beckson, p. 195
  15. ^ Archer, William. Pall Mall Budget, 10 January 1895, quoted in Beckson, p. 198
  16. ^ Walkley, A. B. Review in Speaker, 12 January 1895, quoted in Beckson, pp. 203–205
  17. ^ Shaw, Bernard. Review in The Saturday Review, 12 January 1895, quoted in Beckson, p. 199
  18. ^ Russell, Bindon. "An Ideal Husband: At the Theatre Royal, Haymarket". The Wildean, No. 9 (July 1996), pp. 36–37 (subscription required)
  19. ^ a b c "An Ideal Husband", This is Theatre. Retrieved 16 April 2021
  20. ^ "An Ideal Husband", Internet Broadway Database. Retrieved 16 April 2021
  21. ^ "An Ideal Husband", Internet Broadway Database. Retrieved 16 April 2021
  22. ^ "An Ideal Husband", Internet Broadway Database. Retrieved 16 April 2021
  23. ^ "An Ideal Husband at the Lyceum, The Daily Telegraph, 13 April 1895, p. 6
  24. ^ "The Brough and Boucicault Company", New Zealand Herald, 16 October 1895, p. 5
  25. ^ "Gaiety Theatre", The Freeman's Journal, 26 October 1896, p. 4; and "'An Ideal Husband' at the Theatre Royal", Edinburgh Evening News, 20 October 1896, p. 2
  26. ^ a b "Un mari idéal", Les Archives du spectacle. Retrieved 16 April 2021
  27. ^ Russell, Bindon "Commemorative Plaque at the Theatre Royal, Haymarket", The Wildean, No. 7 (July 1995), pp. 9–13 (subscription required)
  28. ^ "An Ideal Husband", BBC Genome. Retrieved 16 April 2021
  29. ^ "BBC Programme Index". genome.ch.bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 12 April 2023.
  30. ^ "BBC Programme Index". genome.ch.bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 12 April 2023.
  31. ^ "Ein Idealer Gatte", IMDb. Retrieved 14 December 2021

Sources

  • Beckson, Karl (2003). Oscar Wilde: The Critical Heritage. London: Routledge. ISBN 978-1-13-472286-0.
  • Ellmann, Richard (1988). Oscar Wilde. London: Hamish Hamilton. ISBN 978-0-24-112392-8.
  • Jackson, Russell (1993). "Introduction". An Ideal Husband. London: A & C Black. ISBN 978-0-71-363789-2.
  • Parker, John, ed. (1922). Who's Who in the Theatre (fourth ed.). London: Sir Isaac Pitman and Sons. OCLC 473894893.
  • Raby, Peter (1997). "Wilde's Comedies of Society". In Raby, Peter (ed.). The Cambridge Companion to Oscar Wilde. London: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-52-147987-5.
  • Wearing, J. P. (1976). The London Stage, 1890–1899: A Calendar of Plays and Players. Metuchen: Scarecrow Press. ISBN 978-0-81-080910-9.
  • Wilde, Oscar (1899). An Ideal Husband. London: L. Smithers. OCLC 1046540480.
  • Wilde, Oscar (1966). Plays. London: Penguin. OCLC 16004478.

External links

  • An Ideal Husband at Standard Ebooks
  • An Ideal Husband at Project Gutenberg
  •   An Ideal Husband public domain audiobook at LibriVox
  • 1952 Theatre Guild on the Air radio adaptation at Internet Archive

ideal, husband, this, article, about, play, various, film, adaptations, disambiguation, four, play, oscar, wilde, that, revolves, around, blackmail, political, corruption, touches, themes, public, private, honour, first, produced, haymarket, theatre, london, 1. This article is about the play For the various film adaptations see An Ideal Husband disambiguation An Ideal Husband is a four act play by Oscar Wilde that revolves around blackmail and political corruption and touches on the themes of public and private honour It was first produced at the Haymarket Theatre London in 1895 and ran for 124 performances It has been revived in many theatre productions and adapted for the cinema radio and television Act II Mrs Cheveley centre denounces Sir Robert Chiltern to his wife 1895 premiere Contents 1 Background and first production 2 Original cast 3 Plot 3 1 Act I 3 2 Act II 3 3 Act III 3 4 Act IV 4 Reception 5 Production history 5 1 Britain 5 2 International 5 3 Settings 5 4 Commemoration 6 Adaptations 6 1 Films 6 2 Radio and television 7 Notes references and sources 7 1 Notes 7 2 References 7 3 Sources 8 External linksBackground and first production Edit Lewis Waller as Sir Robert Chiltern In June 1893 with his second drawing room play A Woman of No Importance running successfully at the Haymarket Theatre Oscar Wilde began writing An Ideal Husband for the actor manager John Hare He completed the first act while staying at a house he had taken at Goring on Thames after which he named a leading character in the play 1 Between September 1893 and January 1894 he wrote the remaining three acts Hare rejected the play finding the last act unsatisfactory 2 Wilde then successfully offered the play to Lewis Waller who was about to take temporary charge of the Haymarket in the absence in America of its usual manager Herbert Beerbohm Tree 1 The play was put into rehearsal in December 1894 and opened on 3 January 1895 billed as A new and original play of modern life It ran at the Haymarket for 111 performances regarded as a good run at the time n 1 In April on the last day of the Haymarket run Wilde was arrested for gross indecency his name was removed from the playbills and programmes when the production transferred to the Criterion Theatre where it ran for a further 13 performances from 13 to 27 April 4 The play could have run longer at the Criterion but the theatre was required by its proprietor Charles Wyndham for a new production 5 The play was published in 1899 in an edition of 1000 copies Wilde s name was not printed the work was published as By the author of Lady Windermere s Fan 6 It is dedicated to Frank Harris A slight tribute to his power and distinction as an artist his chivalry and nobility as a friend 7 The published version differs slightly from the performed play as Wilde added many passages and cut others Prominent additions included written stage directions and character descriptions Wilde was a leader in the effort to make plays accessible to the reading public 8 Original cast Edit 1895 programme The Earl of Caversham KG Alfred Bishop Viscount Goring his son Charles Hawtrey Sir Robert Chiltern under secretary for foreign affairs Lewis Waller Vicomte de Nanjac attache at the French embassy in London Cosmo Stuart Mr Montford Henry Stanford Phipps Lord Goring s servant Charles Brookfield Mason butler to Sir Robert Chilton H Deane James footman at Lord Goring s Charles Meyrick Harold footman at Sir Robert Chilton s Charles Goodhart Lady Chiltern Julia Neilson Lady Markby Fanny Brough Countess of Basildon Vane Featherston Mrs Marchmont Helen Forsyth Miss Mabel Chiltern Sir Robert s sister Maude Millett Mrs Cheveley Florence WestSource Playscript and The London Stage 9 Plot EditAct I Edit The Octagon Room in Sir Robert Chiltern s house in Grosvenor Square Lord Caversham Mabel Chiltern and Lord Goring 1895 premiere Sir Robert a member of the House of Commons and junior government minister and his wife Lady Chiltern are hosting a gathering that includes his friend Lord Goring a dandified bachelor Chiltern s sister Mabel and other guests During the party Mrs Cheveley an enemy of Lady Chiltern from their schooldays attempts to blackmail Sir Robert into supporting a fraudulent scheme to build a canal in Argentina Her late mentor and lover Baron Arnheim induced the young Chiltern to sell him a Cabinet secret which enabled Arnheim to buy shares in the Suez Canal Company three days before the British government announced its purchase of the company Arnheim s payoff was the basis of Sir Robert s fortune and Mrs Cheveley has Robert s letter to Arnheim as proof of his crime Fearing the ruin of both career and marriage Sir Robert submits to her demands When Mrs Cheveley pointedly informs Lady Chiltern of Sir Robert s change of heart regarding the canal scheme the morally inflexible Lady Chiltern unaware of both her husband s past and the blackmail plot insists that Sir Robert renege on his promise to Mrs Cheveley For Lady Chiltern their marriage is predicated on her having an ideal husband that is a model spouse in both private and public life whom she can worship thus Sir Robert must remain unimpeachable in all his decisions Sir Robert complies with her wishes and apparently seals his doom Toward the end of Act I Mabel and Lord Goring come upon a diamond brooch that Goring gave someone many years ago He takes the brooch and asks Mabel to tell him if anyone comes to retrieve it 10 Act II Edit Morning room in Sir Robert Chiltern s houseGoring urges Chiltern to fight Mrs Cheveley and admit his guilt to his wife He also reveals that he and Mrs Cheveley were once engaged After finishing his conversation with Chiltern Goring engages in flirtatious banter with Mabel He also takes Lady Chiltern aside and obliquely urges her to be less morally inflexible and more forgiving Once Goring leaves Mrs Cheveley appears unexpected in search of a brooch she lost the previous evening Incensed at Chiltern s reneging on his promise she exposes him to his wife Lady Chiltern denounces her husband and refuses to forgive him 11 Act III Edit The library of Lord Goring s house in Curzon Street Lord Goring burns the incriminating letter Goring receives a letter from Lady Chiltern asking for his help a letter that could be misinterpreted as a compromising love note Just as Goring receives this note his father Lord Caversham drops in and demands to know when his son will marry A visit from Chiltern who seeks further counsel from Goring follows Meanwhile Mrs Cheveley arrives unexpectedly and misrecognised by the butler as the woman Goring awaits is ushered into Lord Goring s drawing room While she waits she finds Lady Chiltern s letter Chiltern discovers Mrs Cheveley in the drawing room and convinced of an affair between these two former lovers he storms out of the house When Mrs Cheveley and Lord Goring confront each other she makes a proposal Claiming to still love Goring from their early days of courtship she offers to exchange Chiltern s letter for her old beau s hand in marriage Lord Goring declines accusing her of defiling love by reducing courtship to a vulgar transaction and ruining the Chilterns marriage He then springs his trap Removing the diamond brooch from his desk drawer he binds it to Cheveley s wrist with a hidden lock Goring then reveals how the item came into her possession she stole it from his cousin Mary Berkshire years ago To avoid arrest Cheveley must trade the incriminating letter for her release from the bejewelled handcuff After Goring obtains and burns the letter Mrs Cheveley steals Lady Chiltern s note from his desk Vengefully she plans to send it to Chiltern as ostensibly a love letter from Lady Chiltern to Goring Mrs Cheveley exits the house in triumph 12 Act IV Edit Same as Act IILord Goring proposes to and is accepted by Mabel Lord Caversham tells his son that Chiltern has denounced the Argentine canal scheme in the House of Commons Lady Chiltern appears and Lord Goring tells her that Chiltern s letter has been destroyed but that Mrs Cheveley has stolen her note and plans to use it to destroy her marriage At that moment Chiltern enters while reading Lady Chiltern s letter but as the letter does not have the name of the addressee he assumes it is meant for him and reads it as a letter of forgiveness The two reconcile Lady Chiltern initially agrees to support Chiltern s decision to renounce his career in politics but Goring dissuades her from allowing her husband to resign When Chiltern refuses Goring his sister s hand in marriage still believing he has taken up with Mrs Cheveley Lady Chiltern is forced to explain last night s events and the true nature of the letter Chiltern relents and Goring and Mabel are permitted to marry Lady Chiltern reaffirms her love for her husband and says For both of us a new life is beginning 13 Reception EditIn The Pall Mall Gazette H G Wells wrote of the play It is not excellent indeed after Lady Windermere s Fan and The Woman of No Importance it is decidedly disappointing But worse have succeeded and it was at least excellently received But taking it seriously and disregarding any possibly imaginary tendency towards a new width of treatment the play is unquestionably very poor 14 William Archer wrote An Ideal Husband is a very able and entertaining piece of work charmingly written wherever Mr Wilde can find it in his heart to sufflaminate his wit There are several scenes in which the dialogue is heavily overburdened with witticisms not always of the best alloy An Ideal Husband however does not positively lack good things but simply suffers from a disproportionate profusion of inferior chatter 15 A B Walkley called the play a strepitous polychromatic scintillant affair dexterous as a conjurer s trick of legerdemain clever with a cleverness so excessive as to be almost monstrous and uncanny He found the plot unbelievable and thought that although the play by sheer cleverness keeps one continually amused and interested Wilde s work was not only poor and sterile but essentially vulgar 16 Bernard Shaw praised the play In a certain sense Mr Wilde is to me our only thorough playwright He plays with everything with wit with philosophy with drama with actors and audience with the whole theatre Such a feat scandalizes the Englishman 17 In 1996 the critic Bindon Russell wrote that An Ideal Husband is the most autobiographical of Wilde s plays mirroring as it does his own situation of a double life and an incipient scandal with the emergence of terrible secrets Whilst Lord Goring is a character with much of Wilde s own wit insight and compassion Gertrude Chiltern can be seen as a portrait of Constance Wilde 18 Production history Edit Lord Goring confronts Mrs Cheveley From a 1901 collected edition of Wilde s work Britain Edit The first West End revival was presented by George Alexander in May 1914 at the St James s Theatre and featured Arthur Wontner as Sir Robert Chiltern Phyllis Neilson Terry as Lady Chiltern Hilda Moore as Mrs Cheveley and Alexander as Lord Goring The play was next staged in London at the Westminster Theatre in 1943 44 with Manning Whiley as Sir Robert Chiltern Rosemary Scott as Lady Chiltern Martita Hunt as Mrs Cheveley Roland Culver as Lord Goring and Irene Vanbrugh as Lady Markby 19 A London revival in 1965 66 ran at three West End theatres in succession it starred Michael Denison as Sir Robert Chiltern Dulcie Gray as Lady Chiltern Margaret Lockwood as Mrs Cheveley and Richard Todd as Lord Goring The play was again seen at the Westminster in 1989 in a short lived revival and in 1992 a new production was presented at the Globe Theatre which was subsequently seen in four other London theatres and on Broadway between November 1992 and March 1999 It was directed by Peter Hall and the original cast featured David Yelland as Sir Robert Chiltern Hannah Gordon as Lady Chiltern Anna Carteret as Mrs Cheveley Martin Shaw as Lord Goring Michael Denison as Lord Caversham and Dulcie Gray as Lady Markby The various stagings of the production ran for an aggregate three years the longest running production of a Wilde play n 2 A production at the Vaudeville Theatre London in 2010 11 featured Alexander Hanson as Sir Robert Chiltern Rachael Stirling as Lady Chiltern Samantha Bond as Mrs Cheveley and Elliot Cowan A revival at the same theatre in 2018 featured Nathaniel Parker and Sally Bretton as the Chilterns the father and son combination of Edward Fox as Lord Caversham and Freddie Fox as Lord Goring and Frances Barber as Mrs Cheveley and Susan Hampshire as Lady Markby 19 International Edit The play was seen in the US in March 1895 running on Broadway for 40 performances 20 It was revived on Broadway in 1918 with a cast including Norman Trevor and Beatrice Beckley as the Chilterns Julian L Estrange as Lord Goring and Constance Collier as Mrs Cheveley 21 The next and at 2021 the most recent Broadway presentation was Peter Hall s production seen at the Ethel Barrymore Theatre in 1996 97 featuring its original West End lead players except for the Lady Chiltern now played by Penny Downie 22 An Ideal Husband was produced in Australia in April 1895 by the Brough Boucicault company 23 they gave the play its New Zealand premiere later in the same year 24 The Irish premiere was in Dublin in 1896 given with no mention of the author s name by a touring company managed by Hawtrey at the Gaiety Theatre The cast included Alma Stanley as Mrs Cheveley and Cosmo Stuart promoted from his small role in the London production as Lord Goring 25 A French translation was given in Geneva in 1944 26 The first performance in France recorded by Les Archives du spectacle was in 1955 the site records seven French productions between then and 2016 26 Settings Edit Rex Whistler designs for the 1943 44 London revival Act I Acts II and IV Act III Commemoration Edit To mark the centenary of the first production Sir John Gielgud unveiled a plaque at the Haymarket Theatre in January 1995 in the presence of among many others Wilde s grandson Merlin Holland and the Marquess of Queensberry 27 Adaptations EditFilms Edit There have been at least five adaptations of the play for the cinema in 1935 a German film directed by Herbert Selpin and starring Brigitte Helm and Sybille Schmitz 1947 a British adaptation produced by London Films and starring Paulette Goddard Michael Wilding and Diana Wynyard 1980 a Soviet version starring Ludmila Gurchenko and Yury Yakovlev 1999 a British film starring Julianne Moore Minnie Driver Jeremy Northam Cate Blanchett and Rupert Everett and 2000 a British film starring James Wilby and Sadie Frost Radio and television Edit The BBC has broadcast seven radio adaptations since its first in 1926 a 1932 version starring Leslie Perrins and Kyrle Bellew a radio version of the 1943 Westminster Theatre production a Bristol Old Vic version in 1947 featuring William Devlin Elizabeth Sellars Catherine Lacey and Robert Eddison a 1950 production with Griffith Jones Fay Compton and Isabel Jeans a 1954 version produced by Val Gielgud a 1959 adaptation starring Tony Britton and Faith Brook a 1970 version with Noel Johnson Ronald Lewis Jane Wenham and Rosemary Martin and a 2007 adaption with Alex Jennings Emma Fielding Janet McTeer and Jasper Britton 28 BBC television adaptations were broadcast in 1958 with Ronald Leigh Hunt Sarah Lawson Faith Brook and Tony Britton 29 and 1969 with Keith Michell Dinah Sheridan Margaret Leighton and Jeremy Brett 30 A television version Ein Idealer Gatte in German was broadcast in June 1958 by Nord und Westdeutscher Rundfunkverband NWRV with Marius Goring as Lord Goring and Albert Lieven as Sir Robert Chiltern 31 Notes references and sources EditNotes Edit According to Who s Who in the Theatre an average of 12 new productions a year ran in the West End for more than 100 performances in the decade 1890 1899 including plays operettas burlesques and other genres 3 The longest continuously running Wilde production was John Gielgud s 1945 production of Lady Windermere s Fan which run for 18 months at the Haymarket 19 References Edit a b Jackson p xxxvi Raby p 156 Parker pp 1135 1153 Wearing p 452 Seeney Michael An Ideal Husband The Wildean No 44 January 2014 p 13 subscription required Wilde 1899 title page Wilde 1899 unnumbered introductory page Jackson p xliii Wilde 1966 p 149 150 and Wearing p 452 Wilde 1966 pp 153 179 Wilde 1966 pp 180 204 Wilde 1966 pp 205 225 Wilde 1966 pp 226 244 Wells H G Unsigned review in The Pall Mall Gazette 4 January 1895 p 3 quoted in Beckson p 195 Archer William Pall Mall Budget 10 January 1895 quoted in Beckson p 198 Walkley A B Review in Speaker 12 January 1895 quoted in Beckson pp 203 205 Shaw Bernard Review in The Saturday Review 12 January 1895 quoted in Beckson p 199 Russell Bindon An Ideal Husband At the Theatre Royal Haymarket The Wildean No 9 July 1996 pp 36 37 subscription required a b c An Ideal Husband This is Theatre Retrieved 16 April 2021 An Ideal Husband Internet Broadway Database Retrieved 16 April 2021 An Ideal Husband Internet Broadway Database Retrieved 16 April 2021 An Ideal Husband Internet Broadway Database Retrieved 16 April 2021 An Ideal Husband at the Lyceum The Daily Telegraph 13 April 1895 p 6 The Brough and Boucicault Company New Zealand Herald 16 October 1895 p 5 Gaiety Theatre The Freeman s Journal 26 October 1896 p 4 and An Ideal Husband at the Theatre Royal Edinburgh Evening News 20 October 1896 p 2 a b Un mari ideal Les Archives du spectacle Retrieved 16 April 2021 Russell Bindon Commemorative Plaque at the Theatre Royal Haymarket The Wildean No 7 July 1995 pp 9 13 subscription required An Ideal Husband BBC Genome Retrieved 16 April 2021 BBC Programme Index genome ch bbc co uk Retrieved 12 April 2023 BBC Programme Index genome ch bbc co uk Retrieved 12 April 2023 Ein Idealer Gatte IMDb Retrieved 14 December 2021 Sources Edit Beckson Karl 2003 Oscar Wilde The Critical Heritage London Routledge ISBN 978 1 13 472286 0 Ellmann Richard 1988 Oscar Wilde London Hamish Hamilton ISBN 978 0 24 112392 8 Jackson Russell 1993 Introduction An Ideal Husband London A amp C Black ISBN 978 0 71 363789 2 Parker John ed 1922 Who s Who in the Theatre fourth ed London Sir Isaac Pitman and Sons OCLC 473894893 Raby Peter 1997 Wilde s Comedies of Society In Raby Peter ed The Cambridge Companion to Oscar Wilde London Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 52 147987 5 Wearing J P 1976 The London Stage 1890 1899 A Calendar of Plays and Players Metuchen Scarecrow Press ISBN 978 0 81 080910 9 Wilde Oscar 1899 An Ideal Husband London L Smithers OCLC 1046540480 Wilde Oscar 1966 Plays London Penguin OCLC 16004478 External links Edit Wikisource has original text related to this article An Ideal Husband Wikimedia Commons has media related to An Ideal Husband An Ideal Husband at Standard Ebooks An Ideal Husband at Project Gutenberg An Ideal Husband public domain audiobook at LibriVox 1952 Theatre Guild on the Air radio adaptation at Internet Archive Portals Literature Theatre Film Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title An Ideal Husband amp oldid 1149476636, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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