Pygmalion

16th - 19th October 2019

(by George Bernard Shaw) The author took the title of his play ’Pygmalion’ from a character in a Greek myth who fell in love with one of his own sculptures. First performed in 1913, the play follows the quest of Professor Henry Higgins after taking on a bet offered by a fellow linguist to pass off Eliza Doolittle as a Duchess within six months. There’s just a small problem: Eliza is a common Covent Garden flower seller whom Higgins describes as a ’squashed cabbage leaf’ and her manner of speech is somewhat far removed from that of genteel. Teaching Eliza to speak properly is one thing, teaching her how to be a lady is quite another.

More generally known from its adaptation into the musical ‘My Fair Lady’, this classic play is a comedy of manners and a sharp lampoon of the rigid British class system of the day and a commentary on the growing struggle for women’s independence.

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