Thursday, May 21, 2020

The Musical, My Fair Lady Directed By George Cukor

Critical Review This critical review is about the musical, My Fair Lady, directed by George Cukor based on the play Pygmalion by George Bernard Shaw. This musical altered some of the scenes and added new ones. The basic storyline of the text is about a young flower girl that runs into a phonetics teacher who claims that he could sell her as a duchess. The flower girl, which is later known to be Eliza, takes up the offer and starts speech lessons with the teacher, Mr. Higgins. He coachers her night and day to prepare her for a race and an embassy ball where she will meet royalty. Mr. Higgins is also acquainted in the beginning with one of his respected colleagues who also specialize in phonetics, Colonel Pickering. Although, Higgins treats her as â€Å"baggage† he soon gets attached to her and her ways. Colonel Pickering however, treats her as a respectable lady. She has a great success at the ball but is not recognized for it, which disappoints her. She decides to run away to Mrs. Higgins hou se where she found by Higgins and Pickering. She organizes her thoughts with Higgins and says she will never come back to them but at the end of the movie, not the play, she comes back to Higgins and Pickering. The main play and musical is based off of a similar storyline which goes something like this: There is a young flower girl who has a cockney accent which prevents her from getting a nice high paying job. Her dream is to work in a flower shop as an assistant. She runs into a phoneticsShow MoreRelatedPygmalion and My Fair Lady3190 Words   |  13 PagesDiscuss the different ways of representing class conflicts. Pygmalion, Bernard Shaw, 1914 My Fair Lady, George Cukor, 1964 â€Å"As the purpose of comedy is to correct the vices of men, I see no reason why anyone should be exempt.† This famous quotation of French playwright Molià ¨re proves how powerfully theater and social criticism are linked, and how in its different genres, drama as well as comedy, theater can, and maybe must, be a way of communicating and expressing the human and society’s flawsRead More The Death of the ‘Authorlessness Theory’? Essay6470 Words   |  26 Pagesreality, was narrated. After seeing a handpainted plate at an antique shop in 1971, she became fascinated with the technique that created the plate. She had originally conceived of the The Dinner Party as a series of plates, to be titled â€Å"Great Ladies.† She writes, â€Å"Since plates are associated with eating, I thought images on plates would convey the fact that the women I planned to represent had been swallowed up and obscured by history instead of being recognized and honoredà ¢â‚¬  (8). Originally

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