Elements of this story might distress readers.
The Shoe-Horn Sonata (1995), a controversial play telling the harrowing story of Australian nurses captured by the Japanese in World War II, and of their own country’s attempts to write them out of history, returns to Canberra (Mill Theatre at Dairy Road, 10 to 27 April) โ the first time the work has been staged here since the nineties.
Half a century after their liberation from Japanese POW camps in Sumatra, two women โ Bridie Cartwright (Andrea Close), an Aussie battler and member of the Australian Army nursing corps, and Sheila Richards (Zsuzsi Soboslay), a British citizen who moved to Fremantle after the war โ are interviewed for a television documentary. They confront both the Australian Governmentโs secrets โ and a secret one of them has kept for 50 years.
It is, director Lexi Sekuless says, โa beautiful storyโ about the โremarkable resilienceโ of World War II nurses.
โItโs a very important Australian story,โ playwright John Misto said. โThey were sent off to fight for their country and defend it, and they got no thanks for itโฆ These are the heroes nobody wants. The awful thing was they died, knowing no-one wanted them, and their struggles had been useless. We owe it to their memory to make sure theyโre not crushed by history and pushed into a footnote.โ
In 1945, 24 Australian army nurses were rescued from three and a half years of captivity in Japanese POW camps on Sumatra, at Muntok and Belalau. They had endured starvation, torture, and disease in conditions worse than Changi. They were forced to eat grass and ferns, rats and snakes, and glue to survive, and to pull rusting nails out of the wall, boil them, and drink that water to get iron. When they were released, a month after the end of the war, they weighed less than 32 kilograms.
They were the survivors. Sixty-five nurses had been evacuated after the fall of Singapore in February 1942. Twelve died when the Vyner Brooke was bombed and sunk; 21 (and one civilian) were raped and killed in the Bangka Island massacre; and eight died in captivity.
โI canโt think of any military group that suffered as much as these women,โ Mr Misto said. โSixty-five went out, 24 came home, many of them with life-threatening illnesses, all of them with massive post-traumatic stress. โIf theyโd been men,โ one of them said to me, โif I picked up a gun and shot a Japanese, there would be suburbs named after me.โโ
But the army and successive Australian governments did not want to know. The nurses, Mr Misto said, were denied disability pensions, because the government declared they had suffered no permanent damage; instead, they were paid sixpence a day for each day of their captivity. They were told not to march on Anzac Day, because they had contributed nothing to the war effort. They were told they would be dead within a decade, and not to marry; some lived for another half-century.
They were prevented from telling their stories: the army destroyed their diaries, which they had risked their lives to keep secret, and the government ordered Vivian Bullwinkel, the only survivor of the Bangka Island massacre, not to testify to the 1946 war crimes tribunal that she and the women killed that day had been raped.
Decades later, the government rejected their requests for commemorative postage stamps (1993) and for a memorial (1994), and foreign affairs minister Gareth Evans lobbied (1995) against ex-POWs suing the Japanese government for damages. (An Indonesian businessman, meanwhile, paid for a memorial on Radji Beach, Bangka Island.)
The nurses, Mr Misto says, were โcrushedโ by what happened to them.
โWe knew the Japanese would treat us badly,โ one told him. โIt was war; we expected that. We did not expect our country to turn against us when we came home.โ
Partly, Mr Misto says, it was shame: โThey were embarrassed that they left these women, and that many of them had been raped and murdered.โ
The British Empire had thought that Singapore could not be taken, and left it almost defenceless; the evacuation of the nurses from Singapore was delayed until the last moment; and two army majors fled in an ambulance, abandoning the nurses โ a โshocking betrayalโ for which those officers were never punished.
Partly it was the establishmentโs view of what women should do: be โministering angelsโ rather than operate under gunfire.
โThe army never wanted them; it didnโt believe that women should be near the frontline of battle,โ Mr Misto said. โAnd that was it. In many senses โฆ they regarded them as getting the punishment they deserved.โ
And after the war, the Australian and British governments โwere eager to reassert themselves in Southeast Asia, and so they didnโt want any ugly publicity,โ Mr Misto said.
โThe government response [was] these people were expendable. Itโs Realpolitik, itโs Machiavellianโฆ
โI donโt think anythingโs changed. If the government felt it was in their interest to crush a new group of people, theyโd do it without hesitation.โ
Finally, in 1999, the Australian War Memorial unveiled a memorial to Australian service nurses on Anzac Parade, and last year, a statue of Lt.-Col. Vivian Bullwinkel โ the first statue of a nurse, or indeed a woman, at the Memorial.
Mr Mistoโs play was instrumental: he had written The Shoe-Horn Sonata as part of a campaign for a memorial to the nurses. Audiences started a petition that received 20,000 signatures, and he donated his $20,000 prize money to a fund for the memorial.
The story had fascinated him ever since his school days when he read White Coolies (1954), survivor Betty Jeffreyโs memoir, a heavily censored account based on her diary.
But the subject matter was controversial, many theatre companies refused to stage it, and there was hostility to the play when it opened, Mr Misto said.
Nevertheless, The Shoe-horn Sonata won both the Australia Remembers National Play Competition (1995) and the Play Award for the NSW Premierโs Literary Awards. The Sydney Morning Herald recognised it as โa modern Australian classicโ, and The Daily Telegraph as โtruly a masterpiece by a sensitive and intuitive Australian playwrightโ. It sold 60,000 copies, and was on the NSW syllabus for two decades; Mr Misto visited schools with one of the survivors, who talked about how she forgave the Japanese. When the Queensland Theatre Company staged it, Mr Misto says, audiences refused to leave the theatre after it was over: โThey demanded that the actresses come back onstage and explain why these women had been written out of history.โ
โThe general public wants to know about [the nurses],โ Mr Misto said. โAll the schools we spoke to and the teachers were incredibly supportive of the play. They said: โWe canโt let these women be forgotten. Why should they be forgotten because they were women?โ Thatโs it, reallyโฆ Women werenโt important in the overall military picture, even if they were officers and fighting for their country.โ
But Mr Misto was blacklisted. Several government-funded theatre companies told him that as part of his punishment for writing The Shoe-Horn Sonata, they would never stage his future plays, he said. (He finds it ironic that he now relies on productions of his work in Eastern Europe, including Moscow.)
Even today, the play strikes a nerve: Ms Sekuless says that the RSL ACT sub-branch rejected her invitation to the play, and that the War Memorial showed little interest. Conversely, the Japanese Embassy had been โamazingโ; the cultural attachรฉ came to rehearsals and helped to make sure the cast pronounced certain words accurately.
โThe point of the play is not really about what the Japanese guards did,โ Ms Sekuless said. โItโs about the pitiful compensation; itโs about the fact that there are still bodies; and it was an Indonesian businessman who paid for the memorial [on Bangka Island]. The massive embarrassment is even more reason why itโs a play that should be done.โ
The Shoe-Horn Sonata is, the programme notes say, a work โin which unspeakable brutality was punctuated by moments of heroism, tenderness and even a gentle humourโ.
โWe have this Australian ideal of mateship,โ Mr Misto says. โBut โฆ women have a stronger bond of mateship than men. That was one of the things I tried to bring out in this play, that the myth of mateship doesnโt just attach itself to men. Also, we choose our heroes very carefully. Simpson and his donkey were wonderful, but what these army nurses did was, for my money, 100 times better: saving lives under fire, getting shot, being massacred โ they really did serve their country, and they paid a terrible price for it.โ
Ms Sekuless wants to open theatre to different audiences; this play is for the defence and veteran communities โ and Mr Misto believes those groups should see it.
โHow much has changed, really?โ Mr Misto wondered. โPeople, institutions will always act in self-interest. I think every female soldier should go and see this play, just to know what sheโs possibly likely to encounter, should life get difficult in the services. Everyone in the army should see it โ and the higher up, the better.โ
The Shoe-Horn Sonata had its previews last week, and audiences have been enthusiastic.
โWONDERFUL,โ Professor Kim Rubenstein, law expert and human rights advocate, wrote on Facebook. โThe actors are brilliant, the play is so moving and a reminder of womenโs profound experiences during war. Itโs a MUST โ go book tickets if you can!โ
The Shoe-Horn Sonata, 3 to 27 April, Mill Theatre, Building 3.3, 1 Dairy Road, Fyshwick. Tickets $40 to $50, from Humanitix.