Essays on Theater and the Arts

From New York Press, July 4, 2000

Wilde’s plays presented saints who purported to be sinners—or rather good men who liked to pretend to pretend to be bad. For Wilde’s protagonists, the affectation of affectation was a moral imperative. On another level, they really were “sinners”—in society’s view—if you were hip enough to get the subtext.

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§57 · July 4, 2000 · Popular Culture · (No comments) · Tags: , ,