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  1. A short summary of Oscar Wilde's The Importance of Being Earnest. This free synopsis covers all the crucial plot points of The Importance of Being Earnest.

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    The play opens in the morning room of Algernon Moncrieffs flat in the fashionable Mayfair section of Londons West End. As the curtain rises, Algernons butler, Lane, is onstage laying out afternoon tea while Algernon, offstage, plays the piano badly. Before long, the music stops and Algernon enters talking about his playing, but Lane says ironically...

    The cigarette case, when it arrives, causes Jack some consternation and Algernon much glee. Jack seems to have forgotten that the case bears an inscription from little Cecily to her dear Uncle Jack. Algernon forces Jack to explain what the inscription means, and Jack admits his name isnt really Ernest at allits Jack. Algernon pretends to be incense...

    Jack says that anyone placed in the position of legal guardian must have moral views about everything, and since the utmost morality doesnt bring great happiness, he has always pretended to have a troublesome younger brother named Ernest who lives at the Albany Hotel and who frequently gets in trouble. This false brother gives Jack an excuse to go ...

  2. Read the free full text, the full play summary, an in-depth character analysis of Lady Bracknell, and explanations of important quotes from The Importance of Being Earnest.

  3. In the city, Jack can let loose and enjoy himself, so he pretends to have an unruly younger brother named “ Ernest,” whose antics in the city compel him to rush off to London frequently. Jack’s explanation establishes the symbolic role of town and country.

  4. Jack’s real name is indeed Ernest; he has found a family name in Moncrief, a name and bloodline he shares with his real younger brother Algernon; and he has learned the “vital importance” of living up to his family name, as he embraces his betrothed.

  5. Jack and Algernon do not bemoan the loss of their fiancées, but the loss of a good alibi for Bunburying—“Ernest.” Without “Ernest” their double lives in the country and city can no longer live on.

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  7. It is the ninth film to feature the character Ernest P. Worrell, and the eighth film in the Ernest series, after Slam Dunk Ernest (1995). In the film, Ernest unknowingly comes into the possession of stolen jewels and is kidnapped and brought to Africa where he must rescue the woman he loves.

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