Oscar Wilde's letter to Mary Prescott
This letter sheds light on Wilde's involvement in the production details of his first play, despite the play receiving largely negative reviews from critics
In August 1883, Oscar Wilde's debut play, "Vera; Or, the Nihilists," loosely based on the life of Russian revolutionary Vera Zasulich, premiered at New York's Union Square Theater. Despite high expectations, the play, featuring Kentucky-born actress Marie Prescott, was a critical and commercial flop, closing after just one week.
Interestingly, months before the disastrous premiere, Wilde had written a letter to Prescott, portions of which were strategically published in the New York Herald a week prior to opening night. This letter, ( reprinted below), now viewed in the context of the play's failure and Wilde's swift return to Ireland, offers a fascinating glimpse into the playwright's mindset and ambitions leading up to the ill-fated production.
IF IT IS NOT THOUGHT OUT, IT IS NOTHING
Oscar Wilde to Marie Prescott March–April 1883
“My dear Miss Prescott, I have received the American papers and thank you for sending them. I think we must remember that no amount of advertising will make a bad play succeed, if it is not a good play well acted. I mean that one might patrol the streets of New York with a procession of vermilion caravans twice a day for six months to announce that Vera was a great play, but if on the first night of its production the play was not a strong play, well acted, well mounted, all the advertisements in the world would avail nothing. My name signed to a play will excite some interest in London and America. Your name as the heroine carries great weight with it. What we want to do is to have all the real conditions of success in our hands. Success is a science; if you have the conditions, you get the result. Art is the mathematical result of the emotional desire for beauty. If it is not thought out, it is nothing. As regards dialogue, you can produce tragic effects by introducing comedy. A laugh in an audience does not destroy terror, but, by relieving it, aids it. Never be afraid that by raising a laugh you destroy tragedy. On the contrary, you intensify it. The canons of each art depend on what they appeal to. Painting appeals to the eye, and is founded on the science of optics. Music appeals to the ear and is founded on the science of acoustics. The drama appeals to human nature, and must have as its ultimate basis the science of psychology and physiology. Now, one of the facts of physiology is the desire of any very intensified emotion to be relieved by some emotion that is its opposite. Nature’s example of dramatic effect is the laughter of hysteria or the tears of joy. So I cannot cut out my comedy lines. Besides, the essence of good dialogue is interruption. All good dialogue should give the effect of its being made by the reaction of the personages on one another. It should never seem to be ready made by the author, and interruptions have not only their artistic effect but their physical value. They give the actors time to breathe and get new breath power. I remain, dear Miss Prescott, your sincere friend.”
OSCAR WILDE
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