Bernard Shaw Вђ“ Pygmalion Page

The play argues that class is a performance. By showing that a "lady" is made through education and clothes rather than birthright, Shaw exposes the absurdity of the aristocracy. The Verdict

George Bernard Shaw’s Pygmalion is a razor-sharp social satire that remains remarkably relevant, even a century after its debut. While many know it through the lens of the musical My Fair Lady , the original play is less of a Cinderella romance and more of a biting critique of the British class system. Bernard Shaw – Pygmalion

The story follows Henry Higgins, a brilliant but socially inept phonetics professor, who bets he can transform Eliza Doolittle, a Cockney flower girl, into a "duchess" simply by changing her speech and manners. It’s a classic "nature vs. nurture" experiment wrapped in a comedy of manners. The play argues that class is a performance

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