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Pygmalion: A Classic Comedy of Language, Class, and Transformation
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| George Bernard Shaw's brilliant social comedy remains one of the most influential and widely performed plays of the modern era. In Pygmalion, the eccentric phonetics professor Henry Higgins undertakes an audacious experiment: transforming Eliza Doolittle, a working-class flower seller, into a woman capable of passing within London high society simply by altering her speech, manners, and presentation.
Originally first performed in 1913, the play combines sparkling dialogue, social satire, intellectual wit, and emotional complexity to explore the rigid class structures of Edwardian England. Shaw examines how language, education, appearance, and social expectations shape identity and determine opportunity, while simultaneously questioning assumptions about refinement, status, gender, and human dignity.
Though widely known through later adaptations such as My Fair Lady, Pygmalion remains fundamentally Shaw's sharp and sophisticated critique of class consciousness and social performance. Beneath the humour and verbal brilliance lies a deeper exploration of independence, self-respect, power, and personal transformation, with Eliza Doolittle emerging as one of the great heroines of modern drama.
Combining comedy, social criticism, and psychological insight, Pygmalion stands among the defining works of twentieth-century theatre and one of Shaw's greatest literary achievements.
Ideal for readers of classic drama, social satire, British literature, modern theatre, Edwardian fiction, and literary comedy. |
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