
In this brisk, forty‑five‑minute comedy, the stage opens on the cluttered front room of Mr. Wilson’s ladies’ shoe shop. Father and son hustle between boxes of boots, swapping a tongue‑in‑cheek sales manual that reads like a set of rules for swindling a customer out of a few extra pennies. Their rapid, rhyme‑spiced instructions are punctuated by jaunty welcome and closing songs that set a light‑hearted, almost musical tone. As Jack steps up for his first solo shift, the audience gets a taste of the shop’s chaotic charm and the generational rivalry that fuels the laughs.
Enter Betty Moffat, the shop’s most fashionable client and the titular “dearest thing in boots.” Her breezy confidence meets a parade of contrasting opinions—Miss Firmrock’s militant suffragette swagger and Mrs. Atkins’s staunch anti‑suffragette disdain—while Mrs. O’Brien adds a dash of practical socialism. Their banter crackles with wit, exposing early‑twentieth‑century debates through the lens of a shoe‑fitting room. Listeners will enjoy clever wordplay, lively character sketches, and a playful peek at how a simple purchase can turn into a spirited social showdown.
Language
en
Duration
~40 minutes (39K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Emmy, MFR and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)
Release date
2016-11-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Best known for writing short works for young performers and readers, this early 20th-century author published lively pieces such as Snowbound for Christmas, Susan Gets Ready for Church, The Dearest Things in Boots, and That Awful Letter.
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