It’s 1900 and Lillie Langtry, the most famous actress of her time and a great Victorian beauty, awaits a crucial telegram from her dearest friend Oscar Wilde.
In Edinburgh, while on tour, she plans a play presenting all his most illustrious female characters – Cecily, Salomé, Mrs Cheveley, Lady Windermere and naturally, Lady Bracknell.
It’s an audacious scheme to revive Lillie’s own fading stardom and restore the reputation of Wilde who has endured sickness and disgrace after being sentenced to a brutal two years of hard labour for “gross indecencies” resulting from his affair with Lord Alfred “Bosie” Douglas.
Now, 125 years on, premiering at the Edinburgh Fringe, Wilde Women is a one woman show by US actor, writer, director and academic Krista Scott.
Full of wit and insight into two of the most influential figures in the arts world of their day, the solo play emphasises the transformative impact of Wilde’s writing on the presentation of women in theatre and literature.
She says: “Oscar Wilde had a profound effect on the representation of women onstage in the modern age.
“He launched the trend to feature strong, independent women as protagonists in dramas and in comedies, a trend picked up by George Bernard Shaw, Henrik Ibsen, August Strindberg and others.
“Without Lady Windermere’s Fan, a play he wrote for Lillie Langtry, G.B. Shaw would’ve never written Mrs. Warren’s Profession, which in turn examined the propagation of prostitution.
“Much of the development of psychologically complex women’s roles in today’s theatre can be traced back to Wilde’s work.
“I also hope the audiences will come to appreciate the dazzling wit and beguiling irony embedded in his rhetoric and want to find out more about Oscar Wilde after seeing the play.”
Scott started researching Wilde and the roles he created for women nine years ago – as she discovered more about his life she grew increasingly interested in his relationship with Langtry.
Both were regarded as highly unconventional figures, sometimes feted by fashionable society and at other times damned.
Langtry was the mistress of the Prince of Wales, later King Edward VII, sometimes sharing a “love nest” in Scotland.
She became the first socialite to appear on the professional stage, starring in She Stoops to Conquer in 1881.
Her career was strongly encouraged by Wilde and she became a celebrated star in the UK and USA.
Scandals and the squandering of huge sums of money saw her fortunes fading as the dawn of the 20thcentury beckoned.
The production is a chance to enjoy some of the finest moments and most remarkable characters created by Wilde, seen through the eyes of a friend whose real life and character were as dramatic as anything in his writing.
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Notes for editors
• Interviews available – just get in touch.
Listings Details
• Venue: Fern Studio, Greenside @ George Street (Venue 236)
• Time: 14:00
• Dates: 1-16 August (not 10 August)
• Duration: 50 mins
• Ticket prices: £15.00; 2for1 tickets are available for Fringe Friends
• Suitability: 14+
• Tickets: https://tickets.edfringe.com
Cast and creatives
• Company: Stagewright Productions / Krista Scott
• Performers: Krista Scott
• Director: Jennifer Engler
• Writer: Krista Scott
About the creative team
Krista Scott is the writer and performer of the solo performance play, Wilde Women, presented by Stagewright Productions at the 2025 Edinburgh Festival Fringe. Krista is a well-known actor, director and dialect coach in the DFW metroplex as well as a Professor of Theatre at Texas Christian University. Recent stage roles include the titular role in The Hatmaker’s Wife at Fort Worth’s Circle Theatre, and Texas Governor Ann Richards in the one-woman play, ANN at Water Tower Theatre in Dallas. Her adaptation of A Christmas Carol was produced for eight seasons at the Metropolis Performing Arts Centre in Chicago and for 10 seasons at the New Tradition Theatre Company which she co-founded with her husband Brian Martinson in St. Cloud, MN. She is an associate member of the Society for Stage Directors and Choreographers, an associate editor for the International Dialects of English Archive, a certified associate teacher of Fitzmaurice Voicework and co-founder of ActingAccents.com.
Jennifer Engler has directed Krista in two productions at Circle Theatre in Fort Worth, TX (Luna Gale and Kodachrome) and is also an actor an academic (Professor of Theatre, TCU).