Pygmalion
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Pygmalion

3.86 of 5 stars 3.86  ·  rating details  ·  38,419 ratings  ·  773 reviews
This Prestwick House Literary Touchstone Edition� includes a glossary and reader�s notes to help the modern reader appreciate Shaw�s wit and cynicism. In this delightful romance about the man too self-centered to fall in love and the woman too unsure of herself to want more out of life than the little she already has, George Bernard Shaw shakes the dust off the Cinderella...more
Paperback, 112 pages
Published June 1st 2005 by Prestwick House Inc. (first published 1912)
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Nataliya


"Eliza has no use for the foolish romantic tradition that all women love to be mastered, if not actually bullied and beaten,"¹ says G.B.Shaw in the afterword to his famous play.
¹By the way, I think this quote should be memorized and repeated on the daily basis by the contemporary authors, especially in the YA genre, who attempt to create female characters. Really. Maybe I can start a campaign encouraging authors' awareness of this quote. Hmmmm...
This was one of the first plays I've ever read, an...more
Sera
Apr 05, 2008 Sera rated it 4 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition
Recommended to Sera by: RGBC
Shelves: classics, own
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
Jonathan
Dec 31, 2012 Jonathan rated it 4 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition
Recommended to Jonathan by: The musical - My Fair Lady - sort of

This is the last book I will finish in 2012 as there are only 6 hours remaining in my day. It is certainly a fitting book (or rather play inside a book) to end the year on. For Pygmalion is a story about new beginnings and about transformation. What better book to symbolise the changing of the year, I say!

The classic musical My Fair Lady is perhaps my favourite musical film that I have seen. The acting is superb, the plotting excellent and all the music serves to add to the humorous feel of the...more
Mandy
Pygmalion is a story that’s been adapted time and time again in various forms. Of course we have My Fair Lady, both the stage and screen versions. There’s Pretty Woman and She’s All That and a few other obscure film and television installments. I’ve always loved Pretty Woman and My Fair Lady is such a classic that when I saw the original play at a local used book sale, I knew I had to have it. This story has some sentimental meaning to me as well: my best friend played Henry Higgins in our high...more
Ekaterina
That is a beautifully written play. I have watched this play recently in the theater, and I thought it was magnificent. Eliza was simply adorable and Henry Higgins made me laugh so hard. I will not spoil the book by blabbering about its content and the flow of events, but I just wanted to comment and give my opinion about the ending. I love endings like the one in this story. It is like the author is giving you the chance to create your own ending, thus letting you develop your imagination. I us...more
Dave Hill
This is fun to read out loud in crazy English accents while stomping around your apartment. The neighbors might not like it but screw 'em.
Harry Boyd
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
Alan
This is My Fair Lady with a British accent. And accent is everything; this is THE play about accent, and about teaching, the value of English courses, or perhaps "Speech," especially pronunciation. Professor Henry Higgins claims he can raise a Cockney flower girl to the status of lady simply by teaching her different pronunciation.
May I say, as an American visitor to London for at least two decades, that Cockney (born within the sound of the bells of St Mary le Bow) speech is still incomprehen...more
Momina Masood
I couldn't help visualizing Audrey Hepburn, even to the last moment. This play has made me appreciate and admire the actress and her craft even more than before. And, yes, I loved My Fair Lady, and I must confess that in the beginning of the play, I was hoping, even wishing, that Eliza would break into a song like in the musical. *tee hee*

Where the play was concerned, it didn't really seem like the traditional play to me, being so detailed and expansive than any I've read. I might have not given...more
Dawayr
Jan 09, 2013 Dawayr marked it as كتاب_مفتوح  ·  review of another edition

تعتبر من أشهر مسرحيات جورج برنارد شو و تعتبر أيضا السبب الأساسى فى أنه الوحيد الحاصل على جائزة نوبل فى الأدب و أوسكار فى نفس الوقت . تدور أحداث القصة فى بريطانيا حيث يعيش أحد أشهر أساتذة الفونتيكس فى العالم ، الأستاذ هنرى هيجينز . و تبدأ أحداث القصة بوقوفه صامتا وسط مجموعة من الناس فى محاولة أن بدون ملاحظات عن طريقة نطقهم للكلام حينما تأاى اليزا بائعة الورود فى محاولة منها أ تبيع له و للواقفين بعض الورود . و كان ضمن الواقفين الكولونيل بيكرنح أستاذ الفونتيكس الذى أتى من الهند الى بريطانيا فقط ليق...more
The Goon
A professor of phonetics named Henry Higgins is so confident of his abilities to teach proper English, that he offers to turn a "draggle-tailed guttersnipe" into a duchess.

What I mean is, he makes a bet that he can train a flower selling, low class, dirty street urchin by the name of Eliza Doolittle to speak so well that she can be passed off as a duchess.

Because I’m an American, I feel as though this story is not at all outlandish. I was raised to believe that anyone can receive an education...more
Heather
I've always been a huge fan of the musical My Fair Lady, so I decided to finally read the source material, Pygmalion by George Bernard Shaw. It is actually a play but I read it in book form courtesy of the local used book sale. It's a short story - over half of the book was backup and supporting material and it reads fast. I do admit that while I was reading it I did have pictures of Audrey Hepburn and Rex Harrison in my head as they are the ones that star in the musical My Fair Lady, which is p...more
Katsumi
George Bernard Shaw's play Pygmalion is a story based on two completely different people and their primary wants. Eliza Doolittle is a flower girl, who has always wanted to be accepted in society and be loved. Henry Higgins is a linguistics professor, who has no respect for women and his main goal is to prove his knowledge to others and make them aware of his existence. Henry Higgins takes Eliza off the streets in order to give her what it is she wants; teaching her the English language and ways...more
Raquel Curvacheiro
A história, baseada no mito grego de Pigmaleão, relatava a história de um homem que, tendo decidido levar uma vida de celibatário, por não concordar com o papel que as mulheres representavam na sociedade e, mais particularmente, nas relações, acaba por se apaixonar, no mito, por uma estátua por si feita e que representava o ideal da perfeição feminina. No filme a estátua fora substituída pela beleza perfeita de Audrey Hepburn, no papel de uma pobre e pouco culta vendedora de violetas.
Em termos l...more
Frances
I'll summarize the plot by saying that this is the play upon which "My Fair Lady" was based. It's funny, although Henry Higgins comes off as quite a jerk. You can also read this subtext into it: Henry Higgins and Colonel Pickering are a gay couple who have just moved in together and they keep Eliza around so that the public's suspicions will be piqued by the idea that Higgins is taking advantage of a poor young woman and ignore the fact that he has a male live-in lover. If there is any love stor...more
Stewart
A few weeks ago, I showed a friend a DVD of the "My Fair Lady." My friend, who is trying to improve her English as a second language, hadn’t seen the movie before. Watching the acclaimed 1964 film, I wondered how the 1956 Lerner and Lowe musical, upon which the movie was based, differed from the 1912 play "Pygmalion" by George Bernard Shaw upon which the musical was based.
I picked up a $1 Dover edition of the play from the Oakland Public Library and quickly read it. The play and Shaw’s afterwa...more
Leslie
Here is the plot as explained by Henry Higgins, who is such a satisfying and hilarious brute.

"There! Thats all you get out of Eliza. Ah-ah-ow-oo! No use explaining. As a military man you ought to know that. Give her her orders: thats what she wants. Eliza: you are to live here for the next six months, learning how to speak beautifully, like a lady in a florist's shop. If you're good and do whatever you're told, you shall sleep in a proper bedroom, and have lots to eat, and money to buy chocolat...more
Marion Martineer
This was a standard issue at school. I loved it then as I do now. George Bernard Shaw had the notion that epilogues were unnecessary but for the benefit of some unimaginative people put one in. I didn't like his ending but apreciated his willingness to add in an epliogue. I have been a fan of epilogues ever since!
For those who do not know the story, it is about Eliza Doolittle a common flowergirl in London. Henry Higgins a linguist was taking notes on her horrible accent, which ignited a public...more
David Sarkies
Pygmalion, is Shaw's piece de resistance. It is his masterpiece. While I can simply leave it at that, I am compelled to say a lot more about this play, but first, the plot.
Two English gentlemen (and when I read this book I wondered if it was implied that they were homosexual) bet as to whether they can take a street urchin and turn her into a lady by teaching her how to speak proper English. They do and the experiment is successful, and he wins his bet. However, the problem is that the woman,...more
Lisa N
“My Fair Lady” is one of my very favorite musicals. I have avoided reading anything by GBS because I don’t care for his political views and because he was critical of Shakespeare. I actually enjoyed reading this play. It was very close to the “My Fair Lady” script, probably because Shaw also wrote the screenplay. (He was the first person to win both a Nobel Prize and an Academy Award.) The ending of “My Fair Lady” has always been a little unsettling for me. The mythical Pygmalion was a sculptor...more
Dhruva

Audiobooks are a blessing. Seriously. I can stick my headphones into my ears any time I want and start listening. They go at a speed much slower than my reading rate-- but that's a good thing, because I invariably end up glossing over lines if I start reading too fast (which, again, I invariably end up doing) The first audiobook I listened to this year was Pygmalion, from librivox.org

Honestly, I love My Fair Lady. It's a simply delightful film-- funny, romantic, musical, satirical. I wanted to e...more
Alexander Arsov
George Bernard Shaw

Pygmalion
A Romance in Five Acts

Penguin Classics, Paperback, 2003.

8vo. xx, 122pp. Preface by Shaw A Professor of Phonetics [pp. 3-7]. Introduction by Nicholas Grene, 2000 [xiii-xviii].

Written, 1912.
First produced in German [Hofburg Theatre, Vienna], 1913.
First produced in English, 1914.
First published in English, 1916.
The film first produced, 1938.
Revised version with several sequences from the film, 1941.
This version first published by Penguin, 1941.
First published in Penguin...more
Kris
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
Dexter
Pretty good stuff, really reminds me of how influential it is. Basically, a girl "from the gutter" in London, a mere flower seller, is taken in by a professor of phonetics and his friend to see if they can make her a "lady" and pass her off as a Duchess at a garden party. It's comical, funny, and charming--Eliza Doolittle is a bit feisty, but at core, really just wants to do well.

I was hoping there was more romance, but yes, there is enough of it in here. This play also has enough regional accen...more
Alana
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
Fabian
“Pygmalion” G. B. Shaw. 11/16/12

SPOILER!

A fountainhead of inspiration for countless projects, Pygmalion is actually not about love, and, this being a Shaw play, is all about social classes, manners and, what? phonetics. Also about humanity—about the power-play inherent in all types of relationships. Higgins, undeniably a gay man completely up to give the Betty a total overhaul, is not loveable, not even likeable. He is a tyrant—but he is written o-so-well, with British wit to spare. He is the pr...more
Karina
Surprisingly unsentimental and utterly hilarious. I love every single character. Yes, even Freddie.
Jennifer

I loved the movie adaption of Pygmalion (not My Fair Lady) also called Pygmalion. Mr. Shaw worked on that adaption and it shows. The movie is almost word for word the play, but for some interesting additions.

There weren't any big surprises reading the play for me. It was the introduction by Shaw on the man Henry Higgins was loosely based on and the epilogue that I was really interested in.

*spoilers*

The introduction was interesting and I would like to find out what happened to the hopelessl...more
Nina
I watched 'My Fair Lady' with Audrey Hepburn first, and I absolutely loved it. Being a kid when I first watched it, I didn't know it was a play, nor did I know there was a script for it. But of course, with growing up, come the discovering of things. I found this. Pygmalion the play behind 'My Fair Lady' written by George Bernard Shaw is more linguistically motivated than the movie.

I enjoyed the play as much as I enjoyed the movie, keeping in mind that though they are both the same thing essent...more
Neha
When you read a classic, you have a lot of expectations, because you have heard so much about it, movies or musical plays made on it. You also feel it would be long & would use ‘the perfect’ British English with heavy words thrown around, forcing you to use dictionary. I also started reading Pygmalion with high expectations, and it turned out to be far better than my expectations. It was short & quick, funny & sarcastic, light & classy, intellectual & romantic, drama & co...more
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Books2Movies Club: May 2013 - Pygmalion 10 23 Jun 09, 2013 09:17pm  
Should I read Pygmalion or Faust? 27 115 May 03, 2013 10:52pm  
Linguistics Discu...: Pygmalion 3 16 Jan 17, 2013 11:10pm  
Goodreads Librari...: New edition of Pygmalion added 4 26 Nov 04, 2012 11:54pm  
Pygmalion (Paperback)
Pygmalion: A Romance in Five Acts (Paperback)
Pygmalion (Paperback)
Pygmalion (Mass Market Paperback)
Pygmalion (Paperback)

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George Bernard Shaw was an Irish playwright, socialist, and a co-founder of the London School of Economics. Although his first profitable writing was music and literary criticism, in which capacity he wrote many highly articulate pieces of journalism, his main talent was for drama. Over the course of his life he wrote more than 60 plays. Nearly all his plays address prevailing social problems, but...more
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Pygmalion and Three Other Plays Pygmalion & My Fair Lady Arms and the Man Saint Joan Major Barbara

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