My Fair Lady Study Guide
My Fair Lady Study Guide
My Fair Lady Study Guide
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The Cleveland Play House
Founded in 1915, the Play House is the oldest professional regional theatre in the
United States. Paul Newman, Joel Grey and Jack Weston are among the many
actors whose careers began at the Play House, which also operates the nation’s
oldest community-based theatre education programming. In the early 1900s,
Cleveland theatre featured mostly vaudeville, melodrama, burlesque and light
entertainment, but a select group of Clevelanders sought plays of substance on
timely topics. Together they formed The Cleveland Play House and founded a
home in a farmhouse donated by Cleveland industrialist Francis Drury.
Ultimately, Drury helped fund its permanent home at East 85th and Euclid
Avenue. The original Play House was built in 1927 to house two theatres. In
1949 the Play House opened the 77th Street Theatre in a converted church, which
featured America’s first open stage – the forerunner of the thrust stage that was
popularized in the 1950s and 1960s. In 1983 the 77th Street Theatre closed and
Philip Johnson’s addition to the original facility opened, making The Cleveland
Play House the largest regional theatre in the country.
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My Fair Lady
EXPLORING THE PLAY
BRIGADOON (1947)
PAINT YOUR WAGON (1951)
MY FAIR LADY (1956)
GIGI (1958)
CAMELOT (1960)
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Alan Jay Lerner was born in New York City in 1918. His father was a wealthy
businessman, allowing Alan to attend prestigious private schools, including
Harvard University (where he met and befriended future president John F.
Kennedy). In addition to his work with Frederick Loewe, Lerner created
musicals with composers such as Kurt Weill, Leonard Bernstein, and Charles
Strouse. In 1951, Lerner received an Academy Award for the screenplay of the
film An American in Paris. Lerner was inducted into the prestigious Songwriters’
Hall of Fame in 1971, and passed away in 1986.
Frederick Loewe was born in Vienna, Austria in 1901. His father was a famous
operetta star. At the age of eight, Frederick taught himself to play the piano by
ear and was able to help his father rehearse for shows. By the age of fifteen,
Loewe had composed a popular hit song, and had begun receiving great public
recognition. He eventually moved to New York, where he met Alan Jay Lerner.
Loewe was inducted into the Songwriters’ Hall of Fame in 1972, and passed
away in 1988.
Egotistical professor of phonetics Henry Higgins and his new friend Colonel
Pickering make an unusual wager: Higgins bets that over the course of six
months, he can turn poor, unmannered flower girl Eliza Doolittle into a proper
refined lady who will be able to pass for a duchess in the highest of society.
Eliza, excited by the possibility of getting off the street, moves into the Higgins’
home, where Henry puts her through a series of exhausting and degrading
speech therapy exercises. Eliza’s spirit is almost broken by Henry’s heartless
approach to her training. Her first public outing - at the Ascot Racecourse - ends
in near disaster as she slips back to her uncouth Cockney roots.
Eliza succeeds in her next and largest challenge: The Embassy Ball. Her manners
are impeccable, her speech is entirely proper, and all of Henry’s high society
acquaintances are entirely convinced by her performance. After the ball, Henry
celebrates winning the bet, but shows no signs of caring about what will happen
to Eliza next – she has served her purpose, and he is finished with her.
Eliza walks out on Henry, and he quickly realizes that he has come to care
deeply about her. As Henry contemplates what he will do without Eliza, she
returns to his home to give him another chance.
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MY FAIR LADY CAST OF CHARACTERS
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Original Broadway poster (the puppeteer in the cloud represents Shaw)
Some of the many modern takes on the My Fair Lady story include episodes of
The Simpsons and Family Guy, as well as the 1999 film She’s All That.
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My Fair Lady
Two Pianos
The 2006 Cleveland Play House production of My Fair Lady (directed by Amanda
Dehnert) recreates the spirit of the beloved classic musical with a twist: instead of
the typical large-scale Broadway orchestra, this production relies on two pianos
to provide all musical accompaniment. Why create such a dramatic revision of
such a landmark musical?
Although this musical arrangement was used sparingly around the time of its
creation, it has become more popular in recent years. The two pianos version of
My Fair Lady fits perfectly within an ongoing theatrical trend of doing smaller
productions of large musicals. It may seem that such a decision is purely
financial—after all, it is less expensive to hire two pianists than a full orchestra—
but there are substantial artistic reasons to think small.
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Chicago Playbill
One of the most well-known names in the smaller-scale musical world is New
York City Center’s Encores! Great American Musicals in Concert. Since 1994, the
Encores! series has produced concert versions of major American musicals, often
shows that have been forgotten by musical theater audiences. The purpose of the
series is to celebrate and show off the scores of these shows—scenery and
costumes are kept to a minimum, and actors perform with scripts in their hands.
The current Broadway production of Chicago (on which the film version was
based) originated as an Encores! production. A similar program—Reprise!—
carries out the same mission in Los Angeles.
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Sweeney Todd
Sweeney Todd
The two piano version of My Fair Lady provides new ways of looking at and
thinking about the venerable musical. Thanks in part to the immensely popular
1964 film, My Fair Lady is often remembered as much for big dance sequences
and flashy Victorian Era fashion as for its classic score and story. Dehnert’s
production turns its focus onto the show’s essential artistic parts by exploring
what makes the piece uniquely theatrical and intimate. The production both
celebrates the original music and investigates in new ways the themes of this
timeless American classic.
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GEORGE BERNARD SHAW AND PYGMALION
George Bernard Shaw was born to a poor family in Dublin, Ireland in 1856. He
moved to London during the 1870s, where he would go on to become an
acclaimed playwright, novelist, cultural and literary critic, and activist. In his
lifetime, Shaw won both the Nobel Prize for Literature (1925) and an Academy
Award (Best Screenplay for Pygmalion, 1938); he is the only person to ever have
received both prestigious honors.
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Shaw also wrote Pygmalion (1912), a stage play based on a myth created by
Roman author Ovid in his epic poem Metamorphoses. In Ovid’s myth, a sculptor
falls in love with a beautiful statue that he has carved. Shaw’s primary concern,
however, was not love. Shaw was more interested in the ills of London society,
particularly the unequal distribution of wealth, the inherent unfairness of the
class system, and the male domination of society.
The story of Pygmalion is very similar to that of My Fair Lady, with one glaring
(and telling) difference: Eliza does not return to Higgins in the end. For Shaw,
this lack of returning symbolized women’s refusal to serve merely as a tool or
puppet to men—Eliza chooses to be her own woman rather than a creation of
Henry’s teachings. Audiences, however, often openly wished for a romantic
ending; as a result, both the 1938 film and My Fair Lady end with Eliza returning
to Henry’s side.
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My Fair Lady
EXPLORING THE PLAY
London 1912
However, studies by wealthy businessman Charles Booth showed that the vast
majority - over three-quarters - of the city’s poor were victims of social structures
and circumstance, including low wages, family illness, or irregular availability of
employment. Booth believed that this portion of the working class was not in
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nearly as bad shape as they were made out to be—and he would prove to be
correct. By the early Edwardian era, the working class was making great
economic, social, and health strides, with the help of, among other factors:
Improved sanitation techniques and practices.
Mass education.
Increased charitable interest from the wealthy.
Developing public welfare services.
More readily and consistently available employment opportunities.
Regardless of economic status, women had few rights in the United Kingdom
(UK). The Women’s Social and Political Union (WSPU) was formed in 1903 in
order to fight this unfair discrimination and work towards lasting social reform.
One of the key components of the WSPU’s mission was the campaign for
women’s suffrage – the right to vote. Over the course of the next fifteen years,
the “Suffragettes”, as they came to be known, went to great lengths to make their
voices heard: from five hundred thousand person rallies in London’s Hyde Park
to coordinated window-smashing raids throughout the city’s high fashion, high
society shopping neighborhoods. In 1918, the efforts of the WSPU (and other
social reformers) were rewarded, as UK women over the age of 30 were given the
right to vote. In 1928, women were given the exact same voting rights as men.
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CLASS
In a social class system, the members of a culture are divided into imaginary
groups (or classes) which are then placed into a hierarchy (a series in which each
element is graded or ranked). Groups that are believed to have the most power
in that culture are placed at the top of the hierarchy, while groups with little or
no power are placed at the bottom.
There have been many different types of class systems throughout history. A
class system can contain any number of groups, and these groups can be divided
in any number of ways. Classes are often formed around socioeconomic lines
(how much money a person has), but class can also be defined by other factors:
education, race, occupation, ownership of land or other property, or political
standing.
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SOME EXAMPLES OF CLASS SYSTEMS
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Middle Class: Office workers (who are financially stable and work in safe
desk jobs),
High Prole: Workers who work with their hands in jobs that require a
certain amount of training and skills (carpenters and plumbers, for
example). The term “prole” is short for proletariat.
Mid Prole: Workers in factories and the service industry; these jobs are
often more dangerous and offer less money and security,
Low Prole: Manual Laborers who, for example, work on farms they do not
own; these jobs can be extremely dangerous and tiring and often do not
even pay minimum wage,
Destitute: The homeless and jobless who have no income,
Bottom out-of-sight: Prisoners and anyone who is incarcerated in any type
of institution.
2. Suffrage:
To answer the following questions refer to the section “Role of Women:
Society and Suffrage” on page 11 as well as the following websites:
- library.thinkquest.org/J002886/sufferage.html
- www.ibiblio.org/unipress/ncbooks/suffrage/sufferage.html
- Google: suffrage
o Examine the specific ways the suffrage movements chose to resist
oppression.
o Create a time line of the suffrage movement in the United States.
o Create a time line of the suffrage movement in the United Kingdom.
o Compare the two time lines. What, if any, conclusions can be drawn?
o How do you think Eliza would react to the suffrage movement at the
beginning of the play?
o How do you think Eliza would react to the suffrage movement once
she has become a new woman and potential member of high society?
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LANGUAGE
“A woman who utters such depressing and disgusting noises has no right to be
anywhere—no right to live.” – Henry Higgins, Act One, Scene One
So who is right?
In other words, an accent is the specific way a person pronounces specific words.
That pronunciation can be shaped by where the person lives or grew up, the
person’s original (or native) language, or any number of social factors.
A dialect, then, applies not only to the way a person pronounces specific words,
but also which words a person uses and how the person uses those words to
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convey his or her meaning. A dialect often will use words in very different ways
than the “proper” or widely accepted usage of the language it comes from.
“Yes, you squashed cabbage leaf, you disgrace to the noble architecture of these
columns, you incarnate insult to the English language; I could pass you off as the
Queen of Sheba.”
What does Henry’s dialect say about his personality? His values? His
background? His economic status?
How do other characters react to Henry’s dialect? What does Eliza think
of the way Henry speaks? What does Pickering think?
Rewrite Henry’s quotation from above in your own dialect.
Eliza, on the other hand, speaks the Cockney dialect of English – one of the
traditional dialects of London’s poor working class. Cockney is known for its
distinctive pronunciations and word choices, some of which can be seen here:
“Aoooow! I ain’t dirty: I washed my face and hands afore I come, I did.”
Eliza uses the word “ain’t” instead of “I am not”, “afore” instead of “before”, and
“I come” instead of “I came”. She adds the phrase “I did” to the end of her
sentence for extra emphasis. She makes the unusual “Aoooow” sound (which
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particularly drives Henry crazy) to express her anger and displeasure. All of
these word choices stem from her upbringing in the Cockney dialect.
What does Eliza’s dialect say about her personality? Her values? Her
background? Her economic status?
How do other characters react to Eliza’s dialect? What does Mrs. Pearce
think of the way Eliza speaks? What do her father and his friends think?
Rewrite Eliza’s quotation from above in your own dialect.
Use the Cast of Characters from My Fair Lady listed on page 5 and put an
“S” next to the name of each who speaks Standard English.
Use the Cast of Characters from My Fair Lady listed on page 5 and put an
“R” next to the name of each who speaks with a regional dialect.
In My Fair Lady, do all of the characters at the top of the social hierarchy
speak Standard English?
Do all of the characters who are lower in the hierarchy speak with
regional dialects?
If not, can you give reasons to explain why not?
Eliza and Henry both live in London, and they both speak English, but their
dialects vary greatly. Both of their dialects are very different than your
Cleveland dialect, which may be very different than that of a friend or family
member from New York, Boston, or Dallas. How can so many people speak the
same language in so many different ways?
All languages are constantly evolving. As people use language in their everyday
lives, they add to or change existing rules of pronunciation, grammar, and
vocabulary. When one group of people who speak a language live far away
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from other people who speak that language, it is likely that these new rules will
not all be shared among all groups. If you and your friends invent a new slang
word, teenagers in San Francisco will not automatically understand that new
word’s meaning. You have adapted the English language according to your own
local dialect.
If all languages are always changing, then why would a linguistic scholar such as
Henry Higgins be so resistant to dialects such as Cockney? Why would he fight
so hard against change?
British linguistic scholar and dialect expert Peter Trudgill suggests that
objections to language change are often “presumably really objections to what
the objectors perceive to be symbolic of a threat to their culture and way of life.”
Restate Trudgill’s theory in your own words. What is he saying about the
attitudes of people who are resistant to linguistic change?
In My Fair Lady does Henry Higgins perceive dialects as a potential threat
to his way of life? If so, in what ways? Find evidence in the script that
supports your answer.
Have you ever stereotyped or judged another person simply on their use
of language? Have you ever been stereotyped or judged by the same
standard?
Could Trudgill’s theory of “objections to language change” be used by the
higher classes to discriminate against or oppress the lower classes?
List some ways that language can be utilized to maintain the class system
and prevent shifts in political, economic, and/or social power.
List some ways that language can be utilized to break the class system and
cause shifts in political, economic, and/or social power.
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Activity Sheet
Character Objective
Characters in movies, plays, books, and stories have a basic similarity.
They all have OBJECTIVES.
Each character in “My Fair Lady” has an OBJECTIVE as well. What is the
primary desire of the following characters?
Eliza Doolittle:
Henry Higgins:
Colonel Pickering:
Freddy Eynsford-Hill:
Alfred P. Doolittle:
Mrs. Pearce:
Mrs. Higgins:
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Activity Sheet
Theme
Every play has a THEME. Every book and movie does, too.
Theme: the main idea or ethical precept of the play.
Theme is the same as topic, subject matter, premise or thesis.
1. ________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________
2. ________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________
3. ________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________
Do these examples connect to the objectives of the characters?
Think about your favorite movie or book. Answer the following questions:
Title: __________________________________________________________
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Activity Sheet
A Good Plot
Plot: what happens in a play; the story/stories being told as revealed by what
the characters say about themselves or each other; the action of the play.
Here are sixteen plot points from the script of My Fair Lady.
Put them in the order they take place in the script
by placing a number (1 to 16) in the space at the left.
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Activity Sheet
Character & Relationship
The central character in My Fair Lady is Eliza, as everything revolves
around the relationship of the other characters to her.
For each character listed below, define that relationship and how each
character “transforms” because of Eliza’s growth and change.
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Activity Sheet
Cockney Rhyming Slang
Perhaps the most infamous of all the British slang, Cockney Rhyming Slang is
a richly complicated, in-the-know type of language. It is said that slang was
originally developed by the thieves of London, so that they could communicate
without the bobbies (police) understanding what they were saying.
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7. Dog and Bone = telephone
Sentence: _________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________
List 3 Hip-Hop terms or phrases and explain their definition and their origin.
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Activity Sheet
British Currency
Today’s British Currency consists of 100p (or “pence”) = £1 (or “pound”)
This was not always the case!
The above equation only came in after decimalization on February 15, 1971.
Prior to decimalization, British currency was a complex series of notes and coins.
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2/-: symbol for florin, two shillings, about the size of a half dollar, still in
circulation, equivalent to 10p, syn. two bob.
2/6d (too n siks): symbol for half a crown, two-and-six (pence), larger than
a half dollar.
5/-: symbol for crown, five shillings, huge, much larger than a silver dollar.
10/-: symbol for (brown) ten shilling note, syn. ten bob note.
10/6d: ten-and-six, also half a guinea
20/-, £1, 240d, 100p: alternate for £1 (green), pound, pound sterling,
sovereign.
21/-: symbol for guinea, twenty-one shillings.
£1: symbol for one pound note (green), first issued in 1928, new note issued
in 1968, and reverting back to coins in 1983.
£5: symbol for five pound note (blue, though, like the tenner’s, they used to
be huge white sheets inscribed with gold filigree, large enough to wrap up
plenty of money in).
£10: symbol for ten pounds (brown) or ten pound note.
£20: symbol for twenty pounds or the twenty pound note (rainbow colors).
Consult the following web site to convert this American and British
currency: http://eh.net/hmit/exchange/
American British
$180 £_____________ (pounds)
$.18 ______________d (pence)
$____________ £1 million (pounds)
$1 million £_____________ (pounds)
$____________ £3,000 (pounds)
$____________ 100d (pence)
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Activity Sheet
Who Makes the Show?
It takes a lot of people to put together a theatrical production. It is very
similar to the many people needed to put on a sporting event, like a
basketball game. Below are two lists of only some of the people who are
integral parts to either a theatrical production or to keeping a basketball team
in working order. Using the internet and what you learned from your visit to
The Cleveland Play House, write a brief description of each person’s
responsibilities. Then, draw a line matching the person in column A
(theatrical production) to column B (basketball team).
3. Actor:_________________ 3. Coach:________________
________________________ ________________________
________________________ ________________________
________________________ ________________________
4. Producer:______________ 4. Players:_______________
________________________ ________________________
________________________ ________________________
________________________ ________________________
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Writing Activity
Be a Theatre Critic
A very strong element in the success or failure of a new production is the Theatre
Critic. Use the following outline to write a review of the Cleveland Play House’s
production of My Fair Lady.
Paragraph 2:
1. What aspects of the production (i.e. sets, costumes, lights, sound,
acting), were similar to how you envisioned them? What aspects were
different? What aspects would you like to have changed and why?
2. What scenes in the play did you find most/least interesting,
entertaining, and enjoyable? What about these scenes made you like or
dislike them so much?
3. Did the production move too slowly, quickly, or at the right speed?
Paragraph 7: CONCLUSION
Would you recommend this production to someone? If so, to whom? If not, why not?
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My Fair Lady
by Alan Jay Lerner and Frederick Loewe
Can Professor Henry Higgins transform a poor flower girl named Eliza
Doolittle into a lovely young woman of high society? With “Just You Wait,”
“Wouldn’t It Be Loverly” and “I Could Have Danced All Night,” this Lerner
and Loewe musical is among the most honored and best loved in the history
of American musical theatre. This special, intimate two-piano version of the
production was approved by the authors years ago, but is rarely performed.
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Standard: Music
Benchmarks: Grades 5-12
Historical, Cultural and Social Contexts Standard - Students demonstrate knowledge
and understanding of a variety of music styles and cultures and the context of musical
expression or events, both past and present. Students identify significant contributions of
composers and performers to music heritage. Students analyze the historical, social and
political forces that have influenced the function and role of music in the lives of people.
Analyze and Responding Standard – Students listen to a varied repertoire of music and
respond by analyzing and describing music using correct terminology. Students evaluate
the creating and performing of music by using appropriate criteria.
Valuing Music/Aesthetic Reflection Standard – Students demonstrate an understanding
of reasons why people value music and a respect for diverse opinions regarding music
preferences. Students articulate the significance of music in their lives.
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Answers to:
Activity Sheet
A Good Plot
Here are sixteen plot points from the script of My Fair Lady.
Put them in the order they take place in the script
by placing a number (1 to 16) in the space at the left.
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