Pygmalion
- Episode aired Dec 27, 1981
- 1h 30m
Can Professor Higgins transform cockney flower girl Eliza Dolittle into a great lady?Can Professor Higgins transform cockney flower girl Eliza Dolittle into a great lady?Can Professor Higgins transform cockney flower girl Eliza Dolittle into a great lady?
- Nominated for 1 BAFTA Award
- 1 nomination total
Photos
- Bystander
- (as Doug Roe)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe original Broadway production of "Pygmalion" opened at the Park Theater opening October 12, 1914 and ran for 72 performances. The play premiered in a German translation at the Hofburg Theatre in Vienna on October 16, 1913 and in English at His Majesty's Theatre in London on April 11, 1914 and starred 'Mrs Patrick Campbell'.
- Quotes
Professor Henry Higgins: Eliza, you are to live here for the next six months, learning how to speak beautifully like a lady in a florist's shop. If you are good and do whatever you're told, you shall sleep in a proper bedroom and have lots to eat and money to buy chocolates and take rides in taxis. If you are naughty and idle, you will sleep in the back kitchen among the black beetles and be walloped by Mrs. Pearce with a broomstick. At the end of six months you shall go to Buckingham Palace in a carriage, beautifully dressed. If the King finds out you're not a lady, you will be taken by the police to the Tower of London where your head will be cut off as a warning to other presumptuous flower girls. If you are not found out, you shall be given a present of seven-and-sixpence to start life with as a lady in a shop. If you refuse this offer you will be a most ungrateful, wicked girl and the angels will weep for you.
[to Pickering]
Professor Henry Higgins: Now, satisfied Pickering?
[to Mrs. Pearce]
Professor Henry Higgins: Can I put it more plainly and fairly than that, Mrs. Pearce?
- ConnectionsVersion of Kanske en gentleman (1935)
This version misfires on all levels. Robert Powell is too young and too pleasant as Higgins. You can't imagine he is *really* so uncaring as to see Eliza as a mere object of an experiment in phonetics. Twiggy is both too old and too lightweight an actress to convey Eliza's anguish when she has the speech of a lady but is still essentially a common Cockney flower girl.
This version seems to have been put together because Pygmalion is a popular play and would pull in the viewers. It fails to do justice to its source material and even 'My Fair Lady' (the musical travesty which made the whole thing a love story) is preferable.
- vaughan-birbeck
- Oct 12, 2004
- Permalink
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