000 01468nam a2200277 a 4500
001 abn87264401
005 20240223110449.0
020 _a 0140482091
020 _a9780140482096
035 _a N004 680 758
040 _a XCC
_c XCC
_d NUN
082 0 _a 822.8
_2 19
100 1 _a Wilde, Oscar,
_d 1854-1900.
245 0 0 _a The importance of being earnest, and other plays
_c Oscar Wilde.
260 _a Harmondsworth, England :
_b Penguin
_c 1986.
300 _a 347 p. :
_b 19 cm.
490 0 _a Penguin plays.
505 0 _a Lady Windemere's fan -- A woman of no importance -- An ideal husband -- The importance of being earnest --Salomé
520 _aFive of Oscar Wilde's witties and best-known plays, including Lady Windermere's Fan, his first great stage success, and Lord Alfred Douglas's translation of Salomé, which Wilde originally wrote in French. Of The Importance of Being Ernest, his most famous play, Wilde wrote: 'It is exquisitely trivial, a delicate bubble of fancy, and it has its philosophy . . . that we should treat all the trivial things of life seriously, and all the serious things of life with sincere and studied triviality.'
653 _atheater
700 1 _a Wilde, Oscar,
_d 1854-1900.
_t Lady Windermere's fan.
700 1 _a Wilde, Oscar,
_d 1854-1900.
_t Woman of no importance.
700 1 _a Wilde, Oscar,
_d 1854-1900.
_t Ideal husband.
700 1 _a Wilde, Oscar,
_d 1854-1900.
_t Salomé
942 _2ddc
999 _c4178
_d4178