Four Star Playhouse: Sound Off, My Love (1953)
Season 1, Episode 11
8/10
Oddly, I had some trouble hearing this one!
23 July 2013
Despite the original idea of using four rotating stars in each of the episodes (David Niven, Ida Lupino, Charles Boyer and Dick Powell), soon other actors and actresses were brought in to replace these original four. When it came to the women, the turnover was especially high--with quite a few different women taking on this role during the series' run. In the case of "Sound Off, My Love", Merle Oberon plays the female lead.

The show begins with Martha (Oberon) at an audiologist. While she thinks she might be slightly hard of hearing, she's lying to herself and the ear specialist informs her she has become deaf and needs a hearing aid. However, Martha is rather vain and refuses. However, once home she nearly gets herself killed because she cannot hear her husband's car coming down the driveway--so she returns to the audiologist and gets the hearing aid! However, something peculiar soon occurs. Martha does not tell others she's wearing it and she hides it quite well--and because of this she learns what lots of people have been saying behind her back. And, it's not just catty nonsense--something truly evil is afoot! I'd say more, but it would spoil the suspense.

I was particularly interested in this episode because I am hard of hearing and have worn hearing aids--plus my youngest daughter is deaf. Because my hearing is not great, I actually found myself a bit frustrated with "Sound Off, My Love" because the sound quality was not good--how ironic. It's not just that the volume is a bit low--it also has a muffled quality that hearing aids won't improve upon. Perhaps it would have sounded better had I watched it on TV and not my laptop. Regardless, it IS worth seeing even with this limitation, as the script was very creative and suspenseful.

FYI--Although they have Martha reading lips very well in the beginning of the show in order to compensate for her hearing loss, this is NOT an easy thing to do and it's VERY imprecise. Many deaf and hard of hearing folks simply cannot do it and almost no one can do it consistently well. Just thought you might want to know.
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