
Incontestably one of the greatest Broadway musicals of all time, My Fair Lady, which opened at the Mark Hellinger on March 15, 1956 and enjoyed a long run of 2,717 performances, set the standards for its perfect integration of the songs and the plot in a smooth amalgamation of music and drama. The work of Alan Jay Lerner and Frederick Loewe, who adapted George Bernard Shaw’s whimsical tale of Pygmalion to the musical stage, it starred a non-singing actor, Rex Harrison, another first, and Julie Andrews in her first major role on Broadway. When its producer, Herman Levin, sought to raise the money needed to bring the expensive show to New York, he found in Columbia Records President Goddard Lieberson a tolerant patron of the arts who, single-handedly, provided the $375,000 capitalization, in exchange for the rights in perpetuity to the original cast album. That recording, along with its companion volume in stereo, cut two years later, has always been one of the biggest sellers in the Columbia catalog.
First LP release: April 2, 1956
My Fair Lady, a variation on the legend of Pygmalion and Galatea in which a sculptor falls in love with a statue he has created himself, deals with an eminent professor of phonetics, Henry Higgins, who, on a wager with his friend Col. Pickering, suggests to a simple flower girl, Eliza Doolittle, that he can teach her the proper way of speaking and pass her off as a lady (“Why Can’t the English?”).
At first uncertain about what this offer might mean to her, Eliza warms up to the idea and flirts lightly with it (“Wouldn’t It Be Loverly”), while not far from there, her father, Alfred P. Doolittle, a bon vivant and sometime philosopher, spends another joyous bachelor evening in a local pub, in the company of some of his cronies (“With a Little Bit of Luck”).
The following morning, Eliza shows up at Higgins’s home, but her Cockney mannerisms and moralities become so exasperating to him that he nearly abandons the idea (“I’m an Ordinary Man”). She, in turn, is quickly driven to distraction by his thoughtless treatment and incessant coaxing (“Just You Wait”), despite Pickering’s admonitions to Higgins to treat her more humanly and not just as the object of an experiment. After weeks of grueling drillings, Eliza finally manages to learn the proper way to enunciate (“The Rain in Spain”); overwhelmed, Higgins and Pickering lead her into an exuberant celebration.
Later that night, Eliza is still too exhilarated to go to sleep, despite the urgent calls of Mrs. Pearce, Higgins’ housekeeper, that she should be in bed (“I Could Have Danced All Night”).
Soon after, Higgins decides it is time to introduce his protegee to society; he brings her to the Ascot Races, where she attracts the attentions of Freddy Eynsford-Hill, a young socialite, who becomes infatuated with her (“On the Street Where You Live”).
But it takes several more months of hard work before Higgins feels confident enough for the big moment – that of taking Eliza to the Embassy ball attended by the cream of British society. Eliza succeeds beyond everyone’s expectations and is at once thought to be a foreign princess.
Back from the ball, Higgins and Pickering congratulate each other for their brilliant mystification (“You Did It”), totally oblivious of Eliza and her own feelings. Hurt and angry, she rushes out of the house, only to run into Freddy who seizes the opportunity to profess his love. But Eliza brushes him aside (“Show Me”).
In the meantime, Alfred P. Doolittle has a change of mind about his own situation, and decides that it is time he should marry the woman with whom he has been living for years. But not before he has spent a last night of revelry on the town (“Get Me to the Church on Time”).
The following morning, Higgins discovers to his amazement that Eliza has flown the coop, and philosophically comments to Pickering about the inconsistencies in women (“A Hymn to Him”). Eventually, he finds Eliza at his mother’s home, where she has gone for warmth and sympathy, but she rejects his lame offers of truce (“Without You”), and snappily says she might marry Freddy. On his way back to his own house, Higgins suddenly realizes how much she has affected his own life, and how important she has become to him (“I’ve Grown Accustomed to Her Face”). He is sitting at home, listening to the recordings of her voice, when she quietly enters the room. Smugly, Higgins slumps himself into an armchair, brings his hat down over his eyes, and simply says, with a triumphantly sarcastic tone, “Eliza, where the devil are my slippers?” as the curtain falls.
Buskers: Imelda de Martin, Carl Jeffrey, Joe Rocco
Mrs. Eynsford-Hill: Viola Roache
Eliza Doolittle: Julie Andrews
Freddy Eynsford-Hill: John Michael King
Colonel Pickering: Robert Coote
A Bystander: Christopher Hewett
Henry Higgins: Rex Harrison
Selsey Man: Gordon Dilworth
Hoxton Man: David Thomas
Another Bystander: Rod McLennan
First Cockney: Reid Shelton
Second Cockney: Glenn Kezer
Third Cockney: James Morris
Fourth Cockney: Herb Surface
Bartender: David Thomas
Harry: Gordon Dilworth
Jamie: Rod McLennan
Alfred P. Doolittle: Stanley Holloway
Mrs. Pearce: Philippa Bevan
Mrs. Hopkins: Olive Reeves-Smith
Butler: Reid Shelton
Servants: Rosemary Gaines, Colleen O’Connor, Muriel Shaw, Gloria Van Dorpe, Glenn Kezer
Mrs. Higgins: Cathleen Nesbitt
Chauffeur: Barton Mumaw
Footmen: Gordon Ewing, William Krach
Lord Boxington: Gordon Dilworth
Lady Boxington: Olive Reeves-Smith
Constable: Barton Mumaw
Flower Girl: Cathy Conklin
Zoltan Karpathy: Christopher Hewett
Flunkey: Paul Brown
Queen Of Transylvania: Maribel Hammer
Ambassador: Rod McLennan
Bartender: Paul Brown
Mrs. Higgins’ Maid: Judith Williams
Singing Ensemble: Melisande Congdon, Lola Fisher, Rosemary Gaines, Maribel Hammer, Colleen O’Connor, Muriel Shaw, Patti Spangler, Gloria Van Dorpe; Paul Brown, Gordon Ewing, Glenn Kezer, William Krach, James Morris, Reid Shelton, Herb Surface, David Thomas.
Reviews for this Album
Review
The best of the best Accept no substitutes.A perfect show produced a perfect cast album, and the performances of Rex Harrison. Julie Andrews and everyone else are unsurpassed, and the original 1956 production is one of the most perfectly constructed musicals I have ever seen.