Complementing the Chichester Festival Theatre of ‘My Fair Lady’.
Winner of eight Oscars. In 1910s London, a snobbish professor agrees to a wager that he can make a crude flower girl presentable in high society.
In this beloved musical, pompous phonetics professor Henry Higgins (Rex Harrison) is so sure of his abilities that he takes it upon himself to transform a Cockney working-class girl into someone who can pass for a cultured member of high society. His subject turns out to be the lovely Eliza Doolittle (Audrey Hepburn), who agrees to speech lessons to improve her job prospects. Higgins and Eliza clash, then form an unlikely bond - one that is threatened by an aristocratic suitor (Jeremy Brett). This is wonderfully stylish (Hepburn is gorgeous), wittily scripted (using much of George Bernard Shaw's ‘Pygmalion’ source material) and immaculately cast. It remains a timeless, captivating classic, deserving of a chance to be seen on a big screen.
USA 1964 George Cukor 170m