A snobbish phonetics professor agrees to a wager that he can take a flower girl and make her presentable in high society.
Audrey Hepburn
Eliza Doolittle
Rex Harrison
Professor Henry Higgins
Stanley Holloway
Alfred P. Doolittle
Wilfrid Hyde-White
Colonel Hugh Pickering
Gladys Cooper
Mrs. Higgins
Jeremy Brett
Freddy Eynsford-Hill
Theodore Bikel
Zoltan Karpathy
Mona Washbourne
Mrs. Pearce
Isobel Elsom
Mrs. Eynsford-Hill
John Holland
Butler
Marni Nixon
Eliza Doolittle (singing voice) (uncredited)
Colin Kenny
Ad Lib at Church (uncredited)
Bert Stevens
Gentleman (uncredited)
Frank Baker
Gentleman (uncredited)
Marjorie Bennett
Cockney with Pipe (uncredited)
Betty Blythe
Lady at Ball (uncredited)
Arthur Tovey
Singer (uncredited)
Al Bain
Cockney (uncredited)
William Beckley
Footman (uncredited)
Lillian Kemble-Cooper
Lady Ambassador (uncredited)
Henry Daniell
Ambassador (uncredited)
Brendan Dillon
Leading Man (uncredited)
Iris Bristol
Flower Girl (uncredited)
Geoffrey Steele
Taxi Driver (uncredited)
Charles Fredericks
King George V (uncredited)
Maurice Dallimore
Selsey Man (uncredited)
John Alderson
Jamie - Doolittle's crony (uncredited)
John McLiam
Harry (uncredited)
John Mitchum
Ad Lib at Church (uncredited)
Alan Napier
Gentleman Escorting Eliza to the Queen (uncredited)
Christopher Riordan
Suitor at Ball (uncredited)
Michael St. Clair
Bartender (uncredited)
Grady Sutton
Ascot Extra / Guest at Ball (uncredited)
Stuart Hall
Gentleman (uncredited)
Sam Harris
Guest at Ball (uncredited)
Director
George Cukor
Book, Lyricist, Musical, Screenplay
Alan Jay Lerner
Musical
Frederick Loewe
Theatre Play
George Bernard Shaw
January 5, 2020
9
The difference between a lady and a flower girl is not how she behaves, but how she is treated.
Upper crust phonetics Professor Henry Higgins (Rex Harrison) agrees to a wager that he can make brash London speaking flower girl Eliza Doolittle (Audrey Hepburn) presentable in high society.
Lerner and Loewe's Broadway version of George Bernard Shaw's play "Pygmalion" comes to the big screen and is an utter joy. A winner of 8 well deserved Oscars, pic boasts top line performances, songs that either gladden or melt the heart, gorgeous costumes (Cecil Beaton) and in director George Cukor the venture had a man who knew how to blend together the theatrical with the core basics of human interactions.
Julie Andrews had played Eliza Doolittle on the stage and it was something of a sore point to many that Hepburn got the gig for this filmic version. It really doesn't matter, Andrews went off and made another ode to joy in "Mary Poppins", while here Hepburn (dubbed by the wonderful Marni Nixon for the musical numbers) absolutely lights up the screen by being funny, heart warming and simply gorgeous in equal measures.
Not for everyone of course, it asks for a lot of patience since it runs at 170 minutes, while some back story issues (which I care not a jot to write about) irk others. Yet to me this is never one where I find myself looking at the clock, I'm too busy tapping my feet and being beguiled by it all. If you buy into it the first time you ever watch it? then you will find it's a love that lasts forever. Bloomin Loverly! 9/10
Status:
Released
Original Language:
English
Budget:
$17,000,000.00
Revenue:
$72,661,442.00