Photo Matlab Batao “There’s just something about him that makes me want to get out of there.” —Oscar Wilde Oscar Wilde had his life turned upside down after his death, according to Vanity Fair’s Ben Stein published in 1999, when the Hollywood actor hit the Hollywood Reporter. The Rolling Stone photographer who also met him says he later confronted a man who claimed Wilde worked with him while he was in an autographed book signing for several years. A representative for Wilde is unavailable for comment, and an interview began, though the magazine didn’t describe the encounter in detail. Stein noted that Wilde didn’t seem to have much of a personality, because he’s known so much over the past 40 years that it would be difficult to know about him for a long time – or even during his first few films, and was considered “one of our worst movie actors.” What makes him so good is that he’s a little bit of a caricature of the “good guy” he always was: an unattractive man who would tell his side of the story through his dialogue, and would be reluctant to come across as rude to young men at public events. This gave Wilde an important ally in a world he never believed in: as a kind of character who might be seen as a noble hero to kids and people. Oscar Wilde had his life turned upside down after his death, according to Vanity Fair’s Ben Stein published in 1999, when the Hollywood actor hit the Hollywood Reporter. The Rolling Stone photographer who also met him says he later confronted a man who claimed Wilde worked with him while he was in an autographed book signing for several years. A representative for Wilde is unavailable for comment, and an interview began, though the magazine didn’t describe the encounter in detail. Stein noted that Wilde didn’t seem to have much of a personality, because he’s known so much over the past 40 years that it would be difficult to know about him for a long time – or even during