Twenty Minutes with Mrs Oakentubb
Twenty Minutes with Mrs Oakentubb
Q1. Explain
the importance of the label on Mrs. Oakentubb’s suitcase. Why does she hide it?
Ans. In the melodrama ‘Twenty Minutes with
Mrs. Oakentubb’, the male character, whose name remains unknown throughout,
enters the railway waiting room and glances at the tie-on label attached to the
suitcase of a lady who was already sitting there. She is Mrs. Judy Oakentubb,
the very lady he is going to see in Stainthorpe. Mrs. Oakentubb killed this
man’s wife and daughter in a car accident and he wants to avenge their
“murder”. If the man had not seen the label, he would have remained oblivion of
her identity and the murder would not have taken place. The development of the
plot would have taken different lines. Realizing the malicious intention of the
man, she deems it appropriate to hide the label so that the man might not know
who she is. In addition, if she had escaped, she might have taken protective
measures and her murder might never have taken place.
Q2.
What motive has the man for murdering her?
Ans. Revenge was the clear motive
behind the murder of Mrs. Oakentubb. As the male character in Frank
Arthur’s play ‘Twenty Minutes with Mrs. Oakentubb’, whose name
remains unknown throughout, thinks that eighteen months’ imprisonment was
not the sufficient punishment for crushing life out of his wife and
daughter. Mrs. Oakentubb’s lawyer advised her to tell to the court that she
had not seen them before the accident. As a matter of fact, she was drunk
and driving criminally fast for a bet. One of her friends wagered her five
pounds that she could not go from Stainthorpe Cross to the coast in
fifteen minutes. That is why the man thinks that killing for his wife and
daughter in the accident was not manslaughter, but “plain deliberate
heartless cruel murder”, and that the punishment for such a murder should
be death “in the most painful way.”
Q3.
In this melodrama, the author keeps on building up the tension and then
relaxing it, until the final moment of tension when the murder is done.
Briefly describe the chief moments of tension and what follows after
each one?
Ans. The first moment of tension comes
when the man describes the death of his wife and daughter in an accident
and speaks of his intention to kill Mrs. Oakentubb who was responsible for
that terrible accident. The second moment of tension is when he takes out
the revolver and tells the lady in the waiting room that he is going to
shoot her as she herself is Mrs. Oakentubb. The last and final moment of
tension is when he comes back, opens the door and finds her putting
her fingers to the nose at him, takes out the revolver and shoots
her dead.
Q4.
Write a brief character sketch of Mrs. Oakentubb?
Ans. Mrs. Oakentubb is the central character
in Frank Arthur’s play ‘Twenty Minutes with Mrs. Oakentubb’. She
appears to be in her early middle age as she has mouse-brown hair, well
streaked with grey. She is deceptively respectful. However, her villainous
character is soon exposed when we come to know that her daredevil attitude
has claimed two innocent lives. She was drunk when she was driving
criminally fast for a bet. In an attempt to avoid a head-on collision, she
swerved onto the pavement and killed two innocent pedestrians.
Unscrupulous as she is, Mrs. Oakentubb tells a lie in court to reduce her
crime to manslaughter, and gets away with only eighteen months in prison.
Another sly and deceitful aspect of her personality is revealed when she
keeps up the pretence of being regretful. As soon as the vengeful man
leaves the room thinking that the unremitting mental anguish is her real
punishment, Mrs. Oakentubb rises to her feet and puts her fingers to her
nose at him. The man suddenly re-enters the waiting room, sees her
offensive gesture, and shoots her. Thus, Mrs. Oakentubb in rightly
punished for the wrong she did.
Q2: At what point in the play do we
become certain that the man knows that the woman in the waiting room is Mrs.
Oakentubb? When, in fact do you think he discovered her identity?
Ans: When the man takes her coat and throws it on the bench his glance
falls on the table of the suitcase he becomes certain that the lady is the
waiting room in Mrs Oakentubb.
When she tries to
hide her identity by hiding the label with a flap it confirms that the man has
discovered her identity.
Q3: When is the audience likely to suspect
she might be Mrs. Oakentubb?
Ans: The man talks the lady of his tragic story, happened in the
Q6: Why, in your opinion, does the anther
make the porter a humorous character?
Ans: Suspense, humor and romance are the essentials parts of a thrill. In
this play the porter gives relief in the tense and gloomy atmosphere. He
relaxes the audience by his humour.
Q7: Suspense is an important element in a
thriller. Briefly show how the anther keeps the audience in suspense for the
answer to two questions will he find out who she is? Will he kill her?
Ans: The author keeps the readers in suspense and delaying the murder. He
wants to kill the lady in a painful way. The author keeps the audience in
suspense they are compelled to think weather he will find out who she is. And
when he identifies her he prolongs the murder and it took place when the play
ends.
Q8: Write a brief character sketch of Judy
Oakentubb.
Ans: Mrs Oakentubb is a gay lady. She is a drunken lady and attends cocktail
parties. She does not care even a fig of others life and drives her car in a
rash manner and kills the wife and daughter of the man. In the waiting room
again she tries to cheat the man by her cunningness but the man discloses her
reality and kills her.
Q9: Write a brief character sketch of the
porter.
Ans: Although Porter is not a major character like Mrs. Oakentubb and the
man but he also plays a significant role in the drama. By his simple, romantic
and humorous nature he amuses the audience. He also relaxes the tense
situation. He addresses the lady as love and chuckles at her. He looks after
the passengers and serves them.
Q10: Briefly discuss whether the play would
have had a more satisfying ending if the man had not come back through the
door, seen Mrs Oakentubb vulgar and impenitent (rude) gestures and shot her
that is to say if it had ended in Mrs Oakentubb collapsing with genuine remorse
(regret) and the man’s decision that he would be adequately revenged if she
went on living.
Ans: I think the play would not have had a more satisfying ending if the
lady was to be saved. It was inevitable to kill her because of her vulgarity
and impertinent gestures. If the murderer goes set free the aim of justice is
violated. Justice demands that punishment should be proportionate to crime.
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