The 14-year-old girl conceded that Clinton was a 'womanizer,' but brushed it off – although her mom was slower to dismiss concerns about the famous political

Former U.S. President Bill Clinton made his first solo campaign appearance in support of his wife's White House bid on Monday in Nashua, New Hampshire, but the female voters standing behind him on stage – and one eighth-grader – were stone-faced and unimpressed.

They stood on risers through his 28-minute speech at Nashua Community College, alternating between frowns, grimaces and eye-rolls, even looking uninterested as they applauded a few of Clinton's lines.

While a largely appreciative audience hung on Bill's every word, an elderly woman at the edge of the stage cast her eyes downward and looked like she was having trouble staying awake.

And a young woman standing in the back against a Hillary 'Fighting for us' backdrop closed her eyes for significant stretches of time as TV cameras rolled and a girl in front of her scowled and fought off a yawn.

The New Hampshirites standing on stage with Bill were all smiles as he was introduced, but quickly seemed bored once he began talking.

NOT IMPRESSED: Women and young girls on Monday in New Hampshire looked like they would rather be anywhere else than on stage with former President Bill Clinton

AWKWARD: The teen behind Bill looked at times like she was having trouble taking him seriously

THE NEW MCKAYLA MARONEY? One female voter standing behind Clinton was not impressed

RESTING MY EYES: One woman appeared to be taking a well-earned rest as the former president spoke

LUKEWARM: There was a less than ecstatic round of applause for the would-be president's husband

Two of the glum-looking females, a mother-daughter pair, spoke to Daily Mail Online after Clinton wrapped up his remarks. They said they were shocked to know how apathetic they looked on television.

'We weren't aware. I wasn't aware!' said Deanne Martin, a surgical nurse stood on stage behind her 14-year-old daughter Mary.

'I've never been to one of these before,' she offered as she gave permission for her child to be interviewed.

Mary was even more shocked, mouthing an 'Oh, no!' at the news of her apparent detachment.

The young girl said someone from the Clinton campaign recruited her and her mom to stand behind Bill.

'We were nervous,' she explained, and then abruptly shifted into the role of enthusiastic Hillary supporter.

'I was ecstatic!' the girl insisted, quickly painting on a go-getter's grin, even though pictures told a different story.

'I want to be the first female president – well, now the second,' she said.

NEEDS COFFEE? The younger women hand-picked to be on stage with Bill weren't the only ones to appear uninterested in what he had to say

GOLF CLAPS: Even in moments of applause, Clinton's female backdrop showed little enthusiasm

HAND-SELECTED: 14-year-old Mary Martin (4th from right) said along with her mother Deanne (3rd from right) that they and others on stage were picked by Hillary Clinton's advance staff

TROUBLE IN CLINTONWORLD: Some Republicans are openly questioning the wisdom of sending Bill, a famous womanizer who was accused of sexual harrasment by Paula Jones out to campaign for his wife – who aims to be a champion for women's right as president

TOUGH TALK: Republican front-runner Donald Trump on Monday called Bill Clinton 'one of the great woman abusers of all time' and said his wife Hillary was an 'enabler' who allowed him to get away with it

TV IS FOREVER: CNN's camera caught one girl in the back row looking at the backs of her eyelids while Clinton spoke

DailyMail.com delicately asked Deanne if she has told her daughter about Bill's reputation with women during his White House years.

Young Mary jumped in and cut her mom off with a 'so what' shrug.

'Oh, I'm aware,' she said. 'Yeah. He's a womanizer.'

'I think that that's his social life,' the eighth-grader said of the famous political Lothario. 'And his work should be separate from that.'

Asked if she agreed, Deanne rolled her eyes left, then right, and sighed.

'Um – I guess,' she said at last.

Past allegations of sexual abuse leveled against Bill have become campaign fodder on the political right as Republican front-runner Donald Trump has declared that Hillary's status as an 'enabler' makes the subject reasonable ground to cover during a presidential campaign.

THAT MOMENT JUST BEFORE YOU STIFLE A CLOSED-MOUTH YAWN: One unnamed woman had appeared to have trouble staying focused as the former president talked up his wife's presidential qualifications

GOOD START: The stage scene was all smiles when Bill Clinton was introduced, but quickly changed to mass-boredom once he got going

POWER COUPLE: Hillary Clinton has been first lady, a U.S. senator and secretary of state, and how she aims to be president with the help of her White House veteran husband – but his baggage might come back to haunt her

'There certainly were a lot of abuse[s] of women,' he said last week on NBC's 'Today' show. 'You look at whether it's Monica Lewinsky or Paula Jones, or any of them, and that certainly will be fair game.'

'I don't really care about Monica Lewinsky,' Trump clarified Monday morning on CNN, 'other than I think Hillary was an enabler and a lot of things happened that were obviously very seedy.'

'I mean, he was impeached for heaven's sake. He was impeached over this!'

And bill, Trump said, is 'one of the great woman abusers of all time.'

After speaking, Bill Clinton ignored a question from an NBC reporter about Trump's attacks, as he worked a rope line and posed for selfies.