Film Review
The definitive screen adaptation of George Bernard Shaw's popular play
Pygmalion is assuredly one of the
high points of British cinema in the 1930s. Anthony Asquith
directed many great films but the ones for which he is best remembered
are his adaptations of noteworthy stage plays, including
The Browning Version (1951) and
The Importance of Being Earnest
(1952), as well as his superlative
Pygmalion.
Bernard Shaw's
Pygmalion had
been a hit ever since it was first performed on the London stage in
1914, with Mrs Patrick Campbell (aged 49) playing the upwardly mobile
Eliza Doolittle. It was Shaw who suggested Wendy Hillier for the
part of Eliza in the film, having seen her in a stage production of his
play
Saint Joan. Shaw's
preference for the part of Professor Higgins was Charles Laughton,
although producer Gabriel Pascal instead opted for Leslie Howard, a far
more imaginative choice.
Shaw contributed to the screenplay adaptation but was thoroughly
dismayed with the happy ending which Pascal insisted on.
This revised version of the play was the basis for the stage musical
My Fair Lady by Lerner and Loewe,
first performed in 1956, which was itself adapted for cinema in 1964,
directed by George Cukor and starring Rex Harrison and Audrey
Hepburn. As impressive as Cukor's film is, it is not a patch on
Asquith's
Pygmalion.
Leslie Howard is as perfect for the part of the tyrannical and brutish
Professor Henry as Wendy Hiller is in the various guises of Eliza
Doolittle. "You squashed cabbage leaf!" Howard snarls
contemptuously, making it abundantly clear that he considers women to
be somewhat lower down on the evolutionary scale than the humble pet
goldfish. Hiller makes the transformation from Cockney flower
girl to well-mannered young lady with conviction and aplomb and is
hilarious in her intermediate state at the legendary tea party
scene. "It's my belief they done the old woman in..." Lady Eliza
declares in her newly acquired received pronunciation, before dropping
enough social clangers to sink the entire British navy.
Pygmalion is the greatest of
Shaw's social satires and a superlative comedy of manners, but Anthony
Asquith's film adaptation gives it substance and character that no
stage production could ever match. Harry Stradling's slick and
inventive photography vividly evokes the bygone era in which the film
is set and is particularly effective in the montage sequences where
Higgins's relentless drilling of Eliza takes on the character of an
expressionistic nightmare. But it is ultimately the performances
that sell this film - and not just those from the impeccable
leads. Wilfrid Lawson, Marie Lohr and Scott Sunderland are
equally deserving of praise and give as much entertainment value.
This is a classic, in every sense of the word.
© James Travers 2009
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Anthony Asquith film:
Cottage to Let (1941)
Film Synopsis
Henry Higgins is a professor of phonetics for whom the rich variety of
London accents holds a particular fascination. Whilst navigating
Covent Garden one evening, he encounters a flower girl, Eliza
Doolittle, and is amused by her strong Cockney accent. He bets
his friend Colonel Pickering that he can transform her into a lady,
merely by changing the way she speaks. Keen to make a new start
in life, Eliza willingly subjects herself to a series of torturous
lessons which, in the end, have the desired result. But although
Eliza may talk like a lady, her conversation leaves much to be desired,
as Henry discovers when he takes her to tea at his mother's...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.