Arab Times

Paris finally bows to importance of Wilde

‘Hugely touching’

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PARIS, Sept 28, (Agencies): It has taken more than a century, but France is finally paying fulsome tribute to Oscar Wilde, the writer who died penniless in a fleapit Paris hotel saying, “My wallpaper and I are fighting a duel to the death. One of us has got to go.”

The first major exhibition in the French capital on the Irish wit and playwright opens on Wednesday.

Its “hugely touching” final rooms chart his tragic end in the city, exiled and disgraced aged only 46.

Wilde fled to Paris in 1897 after being hounded out of England having served two years in jail with hard labour for his doomed love for Lord Alfred Douglas.

His grandson Merlin Holland, who has helped put the show together, said it is “still very hard to read” some of his letters written on blue prison paper “where Oscar is on his knees” begging for clemency.

“To see him have to plead like is quite hard to take. Having to say that he was ‘suffering from the most horrible form of erotomania... which left him the prey of the most revolting passions’ was just not Oscar. It showed how desperate he was,” Holland told AFP.

Wilde

The show at the Petit Palais also includes the misspelt calling card left by Douglas’ father, the Marquess of Queensberr­y, which led to Wilde’s fall.

The fiery aristocrat, who wrote the rules of modern boxing, scrawled on front, “For Oscar Wilde posing”.

Disastrous­ly as it turned out, Wilde sued Queensberr­y for criminal libel.

“A man cannot be too careful in the choice of his enemies,” Wilde once wrote. And Queensberr­y was a vicious adversary.

He hired a team of private detectives to trawl the London underworld for evidence of the writer’s “depravity”, and Wilde’s Dublin university contempora­ry Edward Carson as a barrister to bait him in court.

The original court transcript of the trial shows the very moment Wilde’s world collapsed.

Pressed over whether he had kissed a young man, Wilde fatally played to the gallery by saying, “No, never in my life. He was a peculiarly plain boy.”

The writer had been at the height of his powers with his masterpiec­e “The Important of Being Earnest” playing to packed houses in London. But his downfall was instant and terrible. “It is hard to overestima­te how much he was razed from society,” Holland added. “He became an untouchabl­e overnight.”

As he left court a warrant was issued for his arrest on charges of sodomy and gross indecency. He was quickly tried and the Paris show, which runs till January 15, also has the handbill advertisin­g the sale of his possession­s, including “Moorish and Oriental curiositie­s”, which had been seized by the court. “They left him with nothing,” said Holland. Wilde wrote the “Ballad of Reading Gaol” under the pseudonym of his prisoner number, C33, after fleeing to France.

“It was only in the fifth edition that the publishers dared put his name on it, and then it was only inside in brackets,” said Holland.

The show also includes photos of the bedroom in the Hotel d’Alsace on Paris’ Left Bank where he spent his final days on credit from its kindly owner.

Wilde’s tomb is still one of the most visited in the city’s Pere Lachaise cemetery.

But the greater part of the exhibition is dedicated to Wilde cutting a swathe through London and Paris society and his barnstormi­ng tour of America. It also brings out his passion for art, which Holland told AFP “he believed was the civilising influence in the world”.

The show also includes several Pre-Raphaelite paintings Wilde wrote about in 1877 and 1879 as well as work by his friend Aubrey Beardsley, who famously illustrate­d “Salome”, the play Wilde wrote in French for the era’s leading lady, Sarah Bernhardt.

Curator Dominique Morel said a major Wilde show was long overdue in France. He said it “contains many unseen and extremely hard to acquire material” thanks to the help of the Turkish philanthro­pist and Wilde expert Omer Koc, who loaned some of his “astonishin­g collection” of the writer’s letters and papers.

LOS ANGELES:

Fall

Also:

Tony Awards, a Pulitzer, “Star Wars”: Lin-Manuel Miranda has had a damn good year. With everything that’s so obviously gone swimmingly for him, it seems like few people think to ask him what the hardest thing about the megasucces­s of “Hamilton” has been.

“That’s a good question,” he said during an interview he conducted for the cover story in Variety’s 2016 Gotham Issue. He took a few moments to form a response.

“There were tough days,” he said at last. “There were days of fatigue. I think one of the toughest things was managing the attention and expectatio­ns of an exponentia­lly increased public. I’m on Twitter, with 20,000 or 40,000 people following me prior to ‘Hamilton’ exploding, and now it’s a bajillion.” (It’s 808,000, as of Sept 27.) “Your tweets to your friends become — Everything is a loudspeake­r. Every tweet could become an article, and you see it happen in real time.”

“The way that manifests itself outside the theater got very tough towards the end,” he admitted. “I started to get very nervous about approachin­g the theater and leaving the theater. It got to the point where I couldn’t sign at the stage door, even though I love signing at the stage door. The secret exits in and out of the theater got to be very tough. And it’s not anyone’s fault. It’s like, well, fans are excited, but suddenly there are so many more that you’re creating an unsafe situation outside the theater. I knew I couldn’t come out, because whatever kid was in the front was going to get crushed by everyone pressing forward.”

Miranda ultimately has a sanguine sense of humor about all the new attention he gets in the twitterver­se. “One of the weird things with the success of ‘Hamilton’ is people confer titles on you,” said. “Anytime I tweet something dumb, someone’s like, ‘Pulitzer winner!’ And I’m like: That doesn’t not give me the right to say dumb things too. I don’t stop being a person because I won a thing. ‘Here’s a MacArthur genius winner, and he’s tweeting about He-Man!’”

He continued, “I think the trap is in getting caught up in the importance of those titles and letting that make you think you’re important. I try very hard to fight against that. And you fight for the right to remain yourself. I have friends who are very happy to remind me that I’m myself. I am roasted by Tommy Kail [the director of ‘Hamilton’] every time I talk to him.

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