Adapted from Bernard Shaw's script Pygmalion, George Bernard Shaw can come up with such a mythical character as the title, which is really appropriate. When I went to Baidu Pygmalion, I felt what a literary giant is... Although I watched Breakfast at Tiffany's three times, I was severely face blind. Last week, when my English teacher showed us My Fair Lady, I just kept sighing, "Hey, it looks like Hepburn." Because Hepburn, who just appeared as a flower girl, has a very rustic appearance and has a gutter accent. The image of grace in my mind can't really overlap (sigh again for Hepburn's acting) but this show is about how Higgins carves a humble stone into a dazzling diamond from the beginning Eliza is only a bet to The uncontrollable feelings were released at the end. After all, musicals are not so delicate in the handling of emotional lines, but Mrs. Higgins was so arrogant for a second, "I can still live without you" "I will never I'll open the door for this bitch" and "I'll miss you" in the next second. Very cute. The lyrics are not many, just repeated a few lines, and the tone is also extremely formal musical, but the emotional color is extremely strong. Part of it has Eliza's "Wait for Higgins", but the audience can fully understand the difference between the two feelings. When did this student who once hated his teacher change his feelings, and when did this arrogant ego extremely The chauvinist professor fell in love with the humble flower girl, no one knows. Maybe Bernard Shaw was trying to satirize the class bureaucracy, but the adapted script only allowed me to see the infinite possibilities of love. I was more free and happy when I was poor. Doesn't getting bread also deprive you of the right to pursue love?
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