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Saturday, March 16, 2019

Shoe Horn Sonata :: John Misto

The Shoe- Horn Sonata***The Shoe- Horn Sonata is a hearten by John Misto that gives an insight into 2 lives of two female POWs in WW II and is a vector of Mistos thoughts. It explores the little known and often amazing events associated with female prisoners of fight. The play follows a friendship of two women through the war to a point of latent hostility thats beyond what any typical friendship would have to deal with. Misto engages his audience by using a multitude of mediums to portray his story creating a truly multimedia performance. The playwright challenges the audience to look beyond this to the underlying ideas of survival, loyalty and truth.***The play opens with a scene almost as dramatic as the characters, introducing Bridie. She stands on a spotlight demonstrating the Kow Tow bow for respect in the centre of the branch then claps her hands sternly, immediately revealing the strong aggressive nature of her character. The audiences become intrigued, and listen a s she straightens difficulty from the Kow Tow, showing she is emphatic and feisty tho not young. As the On Air distinguish becomes visible the audiences realize she is being interviewed as she informs her audience she had enlisted in WW II following her dads footsteps. She tells her audience that her father gave her a Shoe-horn and two pieces of advice, Dont sit on a toilet tramp until you have lined it with toilet paper and Never kiss a Pommie on the lips.A marching song Fall in familiar was heard as images became visible on the screen of Women Disembarking Singapore. Misto created a dramatic atmosphere that captured the audiences attention right through the introduction.The second scene appeared to be in the motel room where Bridies relay transmitter Sheila is introduced. This scene was in the Motel Room, which was apply several times in the play being a place where private revelation and growing tension between Bridie and Sheila took place. Tension between the two took place immediately in scene two as, Bridie and Sheila stop in the doorway. There is slight but obvious tension between them,Silence and body language were used by the two characters to create such tension towards the audiences as it is a emotion which no words can cater for or adequately express.

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