The Importance of Being Earnest - April 03 - April 05, 2014

Vandergrift High School

 End Notes 

The University Interscholastic League (UIL) exists to provide educational extracurricular academic, athletic, and music contests. The UIL was created by The University of Texas at Austin in 1910 and has grown into the largest inter-school organization of its kind in the world.

 

 

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History of the UIL ONE-ACT PLAY

 

     The League's One-Act Play Contest, founded in 1927, is the largest high school play production contest or play festival in the world. More than 14,000 Texas high school students in more than 1,000 plays participate in 300 plus contests, which take place from the beginning of March through the three-day, 40-production State Meet One-Act Play Contest. The One-Act Play Contest is supported by more than 200 college and university faculty members serving as critic judges. The League's theatre program is considered by historians to be the foundation of educational and community theatre in Texas. It continues to be a major factor motivating increasing numbers of schools to offer theatre arts as an academic subject.

 

     The UIL One-Act Play contest is a competition where similarly sized Texas schools present an 18-40 minute play and may be adjudicated by a panel of three judges or a single judge. The contest is held on a single day and open to the public. There are five possible levels of competition: Zone, District, Area, Region, and State. At each level of competition a judge awards individual acting awards as well as selecting two productions to advance to the next level of competition. After the awards are announced a Judge gives an oral critique to each of the schools. Because of the wide participation and diversity of plays produced certain rules and guidelines have been adopted by the State One-Act Play Office. These rules are in place to ensure safety, allow for equity, satisfy legal standards, and make the running of the contest practical. — from UIL website: http://www.uiltexas.org/theatre

 

 

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Oscar Wilde’s The Importance of Being Earnest

 

SYNOPSIS

 

     First performed on February 14, 1895 at the St. James Theatre in London, The Importance of Being Earnest is Oscar Wilde's most enduringly popular play. Through witty dialogue, the play explores the serious institutions of marriage and Victorian society. The action is centered on a young gentleman, named Jack Worthing, who invents a fictitious brother, ‘Ernest.’ This clever ruse affords Jack an excuse to leave his country home and journey to London to visit his close friend, Algernon Moncrieff. Algernon uncovers Jack’s true reason for visiting so frequently: Jack is in love with Algernon’s cousin Gwendolyn Fairfax.  Algernon seriously complicates Jack’s life when he decides to visit Jack in the country posing as his long lost ‘wicked’ brother, Ernest. —  adapted from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Importance_of_Being_Earnest

 

 

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