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Pygmalion and Major Barbara
Pygmalion and Major Barbara | George Bernard Shaw
4 posts | 2 read
George Bernard Shaw was the greatest British dramatist after Shakespeare, a satirist equal to Jonathan Swift, and a playwright whose most profound gift was his ability to make audiences think by provoking them to laughter. In one of his best-loved plays, Pygmalion, which later became the basis for the musical My Fair Lady, Shaw compels the audience to see the utter absurdity and hypocrisy of class distinction when Professor Henry Higgins wagers that he can transform a common flower girl into a lady—and then pass her off as a duchess—simply by changing her speech and manners. In Major Barbara Shaw spins out the drama of an eccentric millionaire, a romantic poet, and a misguided savior of souls, Major Barbara herself, in a topsy-turvy masterpiece of sophisticated banter and urbane humor. His brilliant dialogue, combined with his use of paradox and socialist theory, never fails to tickle, entertain—and challenge. From the Paperback edition.
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sdbruening
Pygmalion and Major Barbara | George Bernard Shaw
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Happy is the man who can make a living by his hobby. That‘s me (well, woman). Teaching music!

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sdbruening
Pygmalion and Major Barbara | George Bernard Shaw
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Mhmmmm

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sdbruening
Pygmalion and Major Barbara | George Bernard Shaw
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quote
sdbruening
Pygmalion and Major Barbara | George Bernard Shaw
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