UK comedy
1938
bw 96 min.
Director: Anthony Asquith and Leslie Howard
CLV: $39.95 - available
           1 disc, catalog # CC1133L
VHS: available from Home Vision Cinema
"I
wish to boast," Bernard Shaw wrote, "that Pygmalion has been an extremely
successful play, both on stage and screen, all over Europe and North America as
well as at home. It is so intensely and deliberately didactic, and its subject is
esteemed so dry, that I delight in throwing it at the heads of the wiseacres who
repeat the parrot cry that art should never be didactic. It goes to prove my
contention that great art can never be anything else."The playwright had a
point. His story of a cockney "guttersnipe" rescued from a life of Covent Garden
flower-mongering by a professor of phonetics who teaches her "proper" English --
so perfectly as to have her mistaken for a member of the European nobility -- has
a clear lesson to teach all who care to listen. Class distinctions are completely
artificial in nature, and the only thing separating a dustman from a duchess is
an easily learned, appropriately accented use of the language.
But convincing
as the great playwright's argument may be, it hasn't stopped audiences from
overlooking it nonetheless. Pygmalion is subtitled "a romance" and it's
this aspect of its story that has -- for better or worse -- most enchanted
audiences. It was in fact Pygmalion's romantic underpinnings that made its
world-famous musicalization My Fair Lady possible.
There's a saying that
goes: A definition of an intellectual is someone who can listen to Rossini's
"William Tell Overture" without thinking of "The Lone Ranger." Were that notion
expanded to include anyone who can experience Shaw's Pygmalion without
humming the melodies of "I Could Have Danced All Night" or "I've Grown Accustomed
to Her Face," millions would fail the test. But it's a tribute to this 1938
non-musical adaptation of Shaw's play that we aren't likely to think of its
musical version too much. This film's great cast, headed by Leslie Howard as
Professor Henry Higgins, and Wendy Hiller (in her film debut) as Eliza Doolittle,
make Shaw's great lines ring with crackling wit and sparkling intellectual
clarity.
Howard, who co-directed this production with Anthony Asquith, found
in Pygmalion one of the finest roles of his career. He captures every nuance of
this witty, infuriating man whose indifference to social "niceties" and hatred of
cultural hypocrisies mark him as a rebel to his own class. As he takes charge of
Eliza's education, he shows a clear sense of pride and a lack of sentimentality
towards the "less fortunate." But there's an arrogance to this attitude that
Eliza sees through, even as she benefits from his teaching skill. Higgins's
failure to take her humanity into account is his sole failing. It also provides
the linchpin of romance between teacher and pupil that has sparked audience
affection for Pygmalion against the grain of Shaw's intent.
Shaw, who
saw film as the ideal medium for the piece, claims he never intended a romantic
hookup for Higgins and Eliza. He even wrote a prose addenda to the script in
which Eliza married and set up a flower shop, her antagonism toward Higgins
continuing unabated. But he never wrote this epilogue as dialogue, and
productions of Pygmalion, this film included, have always seen fit to end
things on an upbeat note with a tantalizing hint of a budding love between master
and pupil. But perhaps in the last analysis it's just as well that things turned
out as they did. After all, romance has its didactic side as well.
-- DAVID
EHRENSTEIN
Credits
Directors: Anthony Asquith, Leslie
Howard
Produced by: Gabriel Pascal
Screenplay and Dialogue: George Bernard
Shaw
Scenario: W.P. Lipscomb, Cecil Lewis
Original Music: Arthur
Honegger
Art Director: John Bryan
Set Design: Laurence
Irving
Photography: Harry Stradling
Film Editor: David Lean
Assistant
Director: Teddy Baird
Recordist: Alex Fisher
Camera: Jack
Hildyard
Production Manager: Phil G. Samuel
Musical Conductor: Louis
Levy
Transfer
This edition of Pygmalion was transferred
from a 35mm master print.