The Bald Soprano

by

Eugène Ionesco

Mrs. Smith Character Analysis

Mrs. Smith is the first character to speak in The Bald Soprano, rattling off an oddly thorough assessment of her dinner that evening. This sets the tone for the unnatural, surrealistic dialogue to follow. She and Mr. Smith live together in the middle-class suburbs of London, apparently with children, although she only mentions the children once. She shows herself to be somewhat independently minded when she stands up to her husband during the doorbell dispute, holding firm to her conclusion that the doorbell ringing means no one is there. In all, however, Mrs. Smith embodies a certain bourgeois stuffiness, manifesting in her condescension to her maid, Mary, and her distaste at seeing Mary’s uninhibited display of affection for the Fire Chief. This stuffiness ironically collapses in the chaos of the play’s final scene.

Mrs. Smith Quotes in The Bald Soprano

The The Bald Soprano quotes below are all either spoken by Mrs. Smith or refer to Mrs. Smith. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Logic, Reality, and the Absurd Theme Icon
).
The Bald Soprano Quotes

MRS. SMITH: There, it’s nine o’clock. We’ve drunk the soup, and eaten the fish and chips, and the English salad. The children have drunk English water. We’ve eaten well this evening. That’s because we live in the suburbs of London and because our name is Smith.

Related Characters: Mrs. Smith (speaker), Mr. Smith
Related Symbols: The Clock
Page Number: 9
Explanation and Analysis:

MR. SMITH [still reading his paper]: Tsk, it says here that Bobby Watson died.

MRS. SMITH: My God, the poor man! When did he die?

MR. SMITH: Why do you pretend to be astonished? You know very well that he's been dead these past two years. Surely you remember that we attended his funeral a year and a half ago.

MRS. SMITH: Oh yes, of course I do remember. I remembered it right away, but I don't understand why you yourself were so surprised to see it in the paper.

MR. SMITH: It wasn't in the paper. It's been three years since his death was announced. I remembered it through an association of ideas.

Related Characters: Mr. Smith (speaker), Mrs. Smith (speaker)
Related Symbols: The Clock
Page Number: 11
Explanation and Analysis:

It is his wife that I mean. She is called Bobby too, Bobby Watson. Since they both had the same name, you could never tell one from the other when you saw them together. It was only after his death that you could really tell which was which.

Related Characters: Mrs. Smith (speaker), Mr. Smith
Page Number: 12
Explanation and Analysis:

How bizarre, curious, strange! Then, madam, we live in the same room and we sleep in the same bed, dear lady. It is perhaps there that we have met!

Related Characters: Mr. Martin (speaker), Mr. Smith, Mrs. Martin, Mrs. Smith
Page Number: 18
Explanation and Analysis:

MR. MARTIN: Don't you feel well? [Silence.]

MRS. SMITH: No, he's wet his pants. [Silence.]

MRS. MARTIN: Oh, sir, at your age, you shouldn't. [Silence.]

MR. SMITH: The heart is ageless. [Silence.]

MR. MARTIN: That's true. [Silence.] MRS. SMITH: So they say. [Silence.]

MRS. MARTIN: They also say the opposite [Silence.]

MR. SMITH: The truth lies somewhere between the two [Silence.]

MR. MARTIN: That’s true. [Silence]

Related Characters: Mr. Martin (speaker), Mrs. Smith (speaker), Mrs. Martin (speaker), Mr. Smith (speaker)
Page Number: 20-21
Explanation and Analysis:

MR. SMITH: As for me, when I go to visit someone, I ring in order to be admitted. I think that everyone does the same thing and that each time there is a ring there must be someone there.

MRS. SMITH: That is true in theory. But in reality things happen differently. You have just seen otherwise.

Related Characters: Mr. Smith (speaker), Mrs. Smith (speaker)
Page Number: 23
Explanation and Analysis:

FIRE CHIEF: I am going to reconcile you. You both are partly right. When the doorbell rings, sometimes there is someone, other times there is no one.

MR. MARTIN: This seems logical to me.

MRS. MARTIN: I think so too.

FIRE CHIEF: Life is very simple, really.

Related Characters: Mr. Martin (speaker), Fire Chief (speaker), Mrs. Martin (speaker), Mrs. Smith, Mr. Smith
Page Number: 26-27
Explanation and Analysis:

Oh, charming! [He either kisses or does not kiss Mrs. Smith.]

Related Characters: Mr. Martin (speaker), Mrs. Smith, Fire Chief
Page Number: 32
Explanation and Analysis:

MRS. SMITH: We don't have the time, here.

FIRE CHIEF: But the clock?

MR. SMITH: It runs badly. It is contradictory, and always indicates the opposite of what the hour really is.

Related Characters: Mrs. Smith (speaker), Mr. Smith (speaker), Fire Chief (speaker)
Related Symbols: The Clock
Page Number: 34
Explanation and Analysis:

MR. MARTIN: If that is the case...dear friends...these emotions are understandable, human, honorable...

MRS. MARTIN: All that is human is honorable.

MRS. SMITH: Even so, I don't like to see it... here among us...

MR. SMITH: She's not been properly brought up...

Related Characters: Mr. Martin (speaker), Mrs. Martin (speaker), Mrs. Smith (speaker), Mr. Smith (speaker), Mary, Fire Chief
Page Number: 35
Explanation and Analysis:

The polypoids were burning in the wood
A stone caught fire
The castle caught fire
The forest caught fire
The men caught fire
The women caught fire
The birds caught fire
The fish caught fire
The water caught fire
The sky caught fire
The ashes caught fire
The smoke caught fire
The fire caught fire
Everything caught fire,
Caught fire, caught fire.

Related Characters: Mary (speaker), Fire Chief (speaker), Mrs. Smith
Related Symbols: Fire
Page Number: 36-36
Explanation and Analysis:

MRS. MARTIN: Bazaar, Balzac, bazooka!

MR. MARTIN: Bizarre, beaux-arts, brassieres!

MRS. SMITH: A,e,i,o,u, a,e,i,o,u, a,e,i,o,u, i!

MRS. MARTIN: B, c, d, f g, 1, m, n, p, r, s, t, v, w, x, z!

Related Characters: Mrs. Smith (speaker), Mr. Martin (speaker), Mrs. Martin (speaker), Mary, Fire Chief, Mr. Smith
Page Number: 41
Explanation and Analysis:

[The words cease abruptly. Again, the lights come on. Mr. and Mrs. Martin are seated like the Smiths at the beginning of the play. The play begins again with the Martins who say exactly the same lines as the Smiths in the first scene, while the curtain softly falls.]

Related Characters: Mr. Smith, Mrs. Martin, Mr. Martin, Mrs. Smith
Page Number: 42
Explanation and Analysis:
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Mrs. Smith Quotes in The Bald Soprano

The The Bald Soprano quotes below are all either spoken by Mrs. Smith or refer to Mrs. Smith. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Logic, Reality, and the Absurd Theme Icon
).
The Bald Soprano Quotes

MRS. SMITH: There, it’s nine o’clock. We’ve drunk the soup, and eaten the fish and chips, and the English salad. The children have drunk English water. We’ve eaten well this evening. That’s because we live in the suburbs of London and because our name is Smith.

Related Characters: Mrs. Smith (speaker), Mr. Smith
Related Symbols: The Clock
Page Number: 9
Explanation and Analysis:

MR. SMITH [still reading his paper]: Tsk, it says here that Bobby Watson died.

MRS. SMITH: My God, the poor man! When did he die?

MR. SMITH: Why do you pretend to be astonished? You know very well that he's been dead these past two years. Surely you remember that we attended his funeral a year and a half ago.

MRS. SMITH: Oh yes, of course I do remember. I remembered it right away, but I don't understand why you yourself were so surprised to see it in the paper.

MR. SMITH: It wasn't in the paper. It's been three years since his death was announced. I remembered it through an association of ideas.

Related Characters: Mr. Smith (speaker), Mrs. Smith (speaker)
Related Symbols: The Clock
Page Number: 11
Explanation and Analysis:

It is his wife that I mean. She is called Bobby too, Bobby Watson. Since they both had the same name, you could never tell one from the other when you saw them together. It was only after his death that you could really tell which was which.

Related Characters: Mrs. Smith (speaker), Mr. Smith
Page Number: 12
Explanation and Analysis:

How bizarre, curious, strange! Then, madam, we live in the same room and we sleep in the same bed, dear lady. It is perhaps there that we have met!

Related Characters: Mr. Martin (speaker), Mr. Smith, Mrs. Martin, Mrs. Smith
Page Number: 18
Explanation and Analysis:

MR. MARTIN: Don't you feel well? [Silence.]

MRS. SMITH: No, he's wet his pants. [Silence.]

MRS. MARTIN: Oh, sir, at your age, you shouldn't. [Silence.]

MR. SMITH: The heart is ageless. [Silence.]

MR. MARTIN: That's true. [Silence.] MRS. SMITH: So they say. [Silence.]

MRS. MARTIN: They also say the opposite [Silence.]

MR. SMITH: The truth lies somewhere between the two [Silence.]

MR. MARTIN: That’s true. [Silence]

Related Characters: Mr. Martin (speaker), Mrs. Smith (speaker), Mrs. Martin (speaker), Mr. Smith (speaker)
Page Number: 20-21
Explanation and Analysis:

MR. SMITH: As for me, when I go to visit someone, I ring in order to be admitted. I think that everyone does the same thing and that each time there is a ring there must be someone there.

MRS. SMITH: That is true in theory. But in reality things happen differently. You have just seen otherwise.

Related Characters: Mr. Smith (speaker), Mrs. Smith (speaker)
Page Number: 23
Explanation and Analysis:

FIRE CHIEF: I am going to reconcile you. You both are partly right. When the doorbell rings, sometimes there is someone, other times there is no one.

MR. MARTIN: This seems logical to me.

MRS. MARTIN: I think so too.

FIRE CHIEF: Life is very simple, really.

Related Characters: Mr. Martin (speaker), Fire Chief (speaker), Mrs. Martin (speaker), Mrs. Smith, Mr. Smith
Page Number: 26-27
Explanation and Analysis:

Oh, charming! [He either kisses or does not kiss Mrs. Smith.]

Related Characters: Mr. Martin (speaker), Mrs. Smith, Fire Chief
Page Number: 32
Explanation and Analysis:

MRS. SMITH: We don't have the time, here.

FIRE CHIEF: But the clock?

MR. SMITH: It runs badly. It is contradictory, and always indicates the opposite of what the hour really is.

Related Characters: Mrs. Smith (speaker), Mr. Smith (speaker), Fire Chief (speaker)
Related Symbols: The Clock
Page Number: 34
Explanation and Analysis:

MR. MARTIN: If that is the case...dear friends...these emotions are understandable, human, honorable...

MRS. MARTIN: All that is human is honorable.

MRS. SMITH: Even so, I don't like to see it... here among us...

MR. SMITH: She's not been properly brought up...

Related Characters: Mr. Martin (speaker), Mrs. Martin (speaker), Mrs. Smith (speaker), Mr. Smith (speaker), Mary, Fire Chief
Page Number: 35
Explanation and Analysis:

The polypoids were burning in the wood
A stone caught fire
The castle caught fire
The forest caught fire
The men caught fire
The women caught fire
The birds caught fire
The fish caught fire
The water caught fire
The sky caught fire
The ashes caught fire
The smoke caught fire
The fire caught fire
Everything caught fire,
Caught fire, caught fire.

Related Characters: Mary (speaker), Fire Chief (speaker), Mrs. Smith
Related Symbols: Fire
Page Number: 36-36
Explanation and Analysis:

MRS. MARTIN: Bazaar, Balzac, bazooka!

MR. MARTIN: Bizarre, beaux-arts, brassieres!

MRS. SMITH: A,e,i,o,u, a,e,i,o,u, a,e,i,o,u, i!

MRS. MARTIN: B, c, d, f g, 1, m, n, p, r, s, t, v, w, x, z!

Related Characters: Mrs. Smith (speaker), Mr. Martin (speaker), Mrs. Martin (speaker), Mary, Fire Chief, Mr. Smith
Page Number: 41
Explanation and Analysis:

[The words cease abruptly. Again, the lights come on. Mr. and Mrs. Martin are seated like the Smiths at the beginning of the play. The play begins again with the Martins who say exactly the same lines as the Smiths in the first scene, while the curtain softly falls.]

Related Characters: Mr. Smith, Mrs. Martin, Mr. Martin, Mrs. Smith
Page Number: 42
Explanation and Analysis: