PYGMALION
George Bernard Shaw
Context
Born in Dublin in 1856 to a middle-class Protestant family bearing
pretensions to nobility (Shaw's embarrassing alcoholic father claimed to be
descended from Macduff, the slayer of Macbeth), George Bernard Shaw grew to
become what some consider the second greatest English playwright, behind only
Shakespeare. Others most certainly disagree with such an assessment, but few
question Shaw's immense talent or the play's that talent produced. Shaw died at
the age of 94, a hypochondriac, socialist, anti-vaccinationist, semi-feminist
vegetarian who believed in the Life Force and only wore wool. He left behind
him a truly massive corpus of work including about 60 plays, 5 novels, 3
volumes of music criticism, 4 volumes of dance and theatrical criticism, and
heaps of social commentary, political theory, and voluminous correspondence.
And this list does not include the opinions that Shaw could always be counted
on to hold about any topic, and which this flamboyant public figure was always
most willing to share. Shaw's most lasting contribution is no doubt his plays,
and it has been said that "a day never passes without a performance of
some Shaw play being given somewhere in the world." One of Shaw's greatest
contributions as a modern dramatist is in establishing drama as serious
literature, negotiating publication deals for his highly popular plays so as to
convince the public that the play was no less important than the novel. In that
way, he created the conditions for later playwrights to write seriously for the
theater.
Of all of Shaw's plays, Pygmalion is without the doubt the most beloved
and popularly received, if not the most significant in literary terms. Several
film versions have been made of the play, and it has even been adapted into a
musical. In fact, writing the screenplay for the film version of 1938 helped
Shaw to become the first and only man ever to win the much coveted Double: the
Nobel Prize for literature and an Academy Award. Shaw wrote the part of Eliza
in Pygmalion for the famous actress Mrs. Patrick Campbell, with whom Shaw was
having a prominent affair at the time that had set all of London abuzz. The
aborted romance between Professor Higgins and Eliza Doolittle reflects Shaw's
own love life, which was always peppered with enamored and beautiful women,
with whom he flirted outrageously but with whom he almost never had any further
relations. For example, he had a long marriage to Charlotte Payne-Townsend in
which it is well known that he never touched her once. The fact that Shaw was
quietly a member of the British Society for the Study of Sex Psychology, an
organization whose core members were young men agitating for homosexual
liberation, might or might not inform the way that Higgins would rather focus
his passions on literature or science than on women. That Higgins was a
representation of Pygmalion, the character from the famous story of Ovid's
Metamorphoses who is the very embodiment of male love for the female form,
makes Higgins sexual disinterest all the more compelling. Shaw is too
consummate a performer and too smooth in his self- presentation for us to
neatly dissect his sexual background; these lean biographical facts, however,
do support the belief that Shaw would have an interest in exploding the typical
structures of standard fairy tales.
Summary
Two old gentlemen meet in the rain one night at Covent Garden. Professor
Higgins is a scientist of phonetics, and Colonel Pickering is a linguist of
Indian dialects. The first bets the other that he can, with his knowledge of
phonetics, convince high London society that, in a matter of months, he will be
able to transform the cockney speaking Covent Garden flower girl, Eliza
Doolittle, into a woman as poised and well-spoken as a duchess. The next
morning, the girl appears at his laboratory on Wimpole Street to ask for speech
lessons, offering to pay a shilling, so that she may speak properly enough to
work in a flower shop. Higgins makes merciless fun of her, but is seduced by
the idea of working his magic on her. Pickering goads him on by agreeing to
cover the costs of the experiment if Higgins can pass Eliza off as a duchess at
an ambassador's garden party. The challenge is taken, and Higgins starts by
having his housekeeper bathe Eliza and give her new clothes. Then Eliza's
father Alfred Doolittle comes to demand the return of his daughter, though his
real intention is to hit Higgins up for some money. The professor, amused by
Doolittle's unusual rhetoric, gives him five pounds. On his way out, the
dustman fails to recognize the now clean, pretty flower girl as his daughter.
For a number of months, Higgins trains Eliza to speak properly. Two
trials for Eliza follow. The first occurs at Higgins' mother's home, where
Eliza is introduced to the Eynsford Hills, a trio of mother, daughter, and son.
The son Freddy is very attracted to her, and further taken with what he thinks
is her affected "small talk" when she slips into cockney. Mrs. Higgins
worries that the experiment will lead to problems once it is ended, but Higgins
and Pickering are too absorbed in their game to take heed. A second trial,
which takes place some months later at an ambassador's party (and which is not
actually staged), is a resounding success. The wager is definitely won, but
Higgins and Pickering are now bored with the project, which causes Eliza to be
hurt. She throws Higgins' slippers at him in a rage because she does not know
what is to become of her, thereby bewildering him. He suggests she marry
somebody. She returns him the hired jewelry, and he accuses her of ingratitude.
The following morning, Higgins rushes to his mother, in a panic because
Eliza has run away. On his tail is Eliza's father, now unhappily rich from the
trust of a deceased millionaire who took to heart Higgins' recommendation that
Doolittle was England's "most original moralist." Mrs. Higgins, who
has been hiding Eliza upstairs all along, chides the two of them for playing
with the girl's affections. When she enters, Eliza thanks Pickering for always
treating her like a lady, but threatens Higgins that she will go work with his
rival phonetician, Nepommuck. The outraged Higgins cannot help but start to
admire her. As Eliza leaves for her father's wedding, Higgins shouts out a few
errands for her to run, assuming that she will return to him at Wimpole Street.
Eliza, who has a lovelorn sweetheart in Freddy, and the wherewithal to pass as
a duchess, never makes it clear whether she will or not.
Characters
Professor Henry Higgins - Henry Higgins is a professor of
phonetics who plays Pygmalion to Eliza Doolittle's Galatea. He is the author of
Higgins' Universal Alphabet, believes in concepts like visible speech, and uses
all manner of recording and photographic material to document his phonetic
subjects, reducing people and their dialects into what he sees as readily
understandable units. He is an unconventional man, who goes in the opposite
direction from the rest of society in most matters. Indeed, he is impatient
with high society, forgetful in his public graces, and poorly considerate of
normal social niceties--the only reason the world has not turned against him is
because he is at heart a good and harmless man. His biggest fault is that he
can be a bully.
Eliza Doolittle - "She is not at all a romantic
figure." So is she introduced in Act I. Everything about Eliza Doolittle
seems to defy any conventional notions we might have about the romantic
heroine. When she is transformed from a sassy, smart-mouthed kerbstone flower
girl with deplorable English, to a (still sassy) regal figure fit to consort
with nobility, it has less to do with her innate qualities as a heroine than
with the fairy-tale aspect of the transformation myth itself. In other words,
the character of Eliza Doolittle comes across as being much more instrumental
than fundamental. The real (re-)making of Eliza Doolittle happens after the
ambassador's party, when she decides to make a statement for her own dignity
against Higgins' insensitive treatment. This is when she becomes, not a
duchess, but an independent woman; and this explains why Higgins begins to see
Eliza not as a mill around his neck but as a creature worthy of his admiration.
Colonel Pickering - Colonel Pickering, the author of Spoken
Sanskrit, is a match for Higgins (although somewhat less obsessive) in his
passion for phonetics. But where Higgins is a boorish, careless bully,
Pickering is always considerate and a genuinely gentleman. He says little of
note in the play, and appears most of all to be a civilized foil to Higgins'
barefoot, absentminded crazy professor. He helps in the Eliza Doolittle
experiment by making a wager of it, saying he will cover the costs of the
experiment if Higgins does indeed make a convincing duchess of her. However,
while Higgins only manages to teach Eliza pronunciations, it is Pickering's
thoughtful treatment towards Eliza that teaches her to respect herself.
Alfred Doolittle - Alfred Doolittle is Eliza's father, an
elderly but vigorous dustman who has had at least six wives and who "seems
equally free from fear and conscience." When he learns that his daughter
has entered the home of Henry Higgins, he immediately pursues to see if he can
get some money out of the circumstance. His unique brand of rhetoric, an
unembarrassed, unhypocritical advocation of drink and pleasure (at other
people's expense), is amusing to Higgins. Through Higgins' joking
recommendation, Doolittle becomes a richly endowed lecturer to a moral reform
society, transforming him from lowly dustman to a picture of middle class
morality--he becomes miserable. Throughout, Alfred is a scoundrel who is
willing to sell his daughter to make a few pounds, but he is one of the few
unaffected characters in the play, unmasked by appearance or language. Though
scandalous, his speeches are honest. At points, it even seems that he might be
Shaw's voice piece of social criticism (Alfred's proletariat status, given
Shaw's socialist leanings, makes the prospect all the more likely).
Mrs. Higgins - Professor Higgins' mother, Mrs. Higgins is a
stately lady in her sixties who sees the Eliza Doolittle experiment as idiocy,
and Higgins and Pickering as senseless children. She is the first and only
character to have any qualms about the whole affair. When her worries prove
true, it is to her that all the characters turn. Because no woman can match up
to his mother, Higgins claims, he has no interest in dallying with them. To
observe the mother of Pygmalion (Higgins), who completely understands all of
his failings and inadequacies, is a good contrast to the mythic proportions to
which Higgins builds himself in his self-estimations as a scientist of
phonetics and a creator of duchesses.
Freddy Eynsford Hill - Higgins' surmise that Freddy is a
fool is probably accurate. In the opening scene he is a spineless and
resourceless lackey to his mother and sister. Later, he is comically bowled
over by Eliza, the half-baked duchess who still speaks cockney. He becomes
lovesick for Eliza, and courts her with letters. At the play's close, Freddy
serves as a young, viable marriage option for Eliza, making the possible path
she will follow unclear to the reader.
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