11 Things You Didn t Know About My Fair Lady

11 Things You Didn t Know About My Fair Lady

11 Things You Didn't Know About 'My Fair Lady'

50 Years Later ' My Fair Lady' Is Full of Surprises

11 fascinating facts about the famous musical " My Fair Lady"

Happy Birthday My Fair Lady

A critic for the New York Times once described My Fair Lady as “the perfect musical,” and the tale about the gentrification of a young working-class woman may be just that. It was a smash hit from the moment it opened on Broadway in 1956, and its adaptation to film in 1964 was advertised as the most eagerly anticipated motion picture since Gone With the Wind. To celebrate the 50th anniversary of its big-screen debut on Oct. 21, 1964, here are some fascinating facts.

The Birth of a Musical

My Fair Lady was based on Pygmalion, a play by George Bernard Shaw, which opened 100 years ago in New York and London.

The Title That Went by the Wayside

The musical was to have been called Lady Liza until Rex Harrison, who was to play Professor Henry Higgins, objected to a title based on the name of the female lead (Eliza Doolittle).

The Impossible Dream

Composer Richard Rodgers and lyricist Oscar Hammerstein II tried to convert Pygmalion into a musical but later told Alan Jay Lerner, who would write My Fair Lady, that it was impossible.

The Collaborators

Composer Frederick Loewe, left, and lyricist Alan Jay Lerner, right, wrote My Fair Lady together. The new title, My Fair Lady, was taken from the last line of the nursery rhyme "London Bridge Is Falling Down" and appears nowhere in the musical.

The $5 5 Million Wager

In 1962 the president of Warner Bros. Studios, Jack L. Warner, shown here with stars Rex Harrison and Audrey Hepurn, paid a record $5.5 million for the film rights to My Fair Lady.

Love Won Out

At first Warner thought that Rex Harrison, who turned 56 in 1964, looked too old to be the love interest of the 19-year-old Eliza Doolittle character.

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Higgins Might-Have-Beens

Some other actors considered for the role of Henry Higgins were, from top left to bottom right, Noel Coward, Cary Grant, Rock Hudson, Peter O’Toole, Michael Redgrave and George Sanders.

Thanks but No Thanks

Asked to do a screen test if she hoped to reprise her stage role as Eliza Doolittle, Julie Andrews refused; the role went to Audrey Hepburn.

Doolittle Might-Have-Beens

Actresses considered for the role of Eliza Doolittle were, from top left to bottom right, Julie Andrews, Shirley Jones, Shirley MacLaine, Connie Stevens and Elizabeth Taylor.

Hepburn s Vocal Stand-In

Hepburn prepared extensively for her role, only to learn that professional “voicer” Marni Nixon was to dub most of her songs.

Best Picture Plus 7 More

My Fair Lady swept the Oscars ceremony, winning eight in April 1965 — except for the Best Actress award, which went to Julie Andrews for Mary Poppins.

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