"On the Street Where You Live Reprise " Shirley• "I Could Have Danced All Night" Nixon• Freddy is needed of course as another "objectifying" character to make it clear just how desirable Eliza really is and how foolish and blind Professor Higgins is in not seeing this--in theory, of course, because in practice with Audrey Hepburn or Julie Andrews as Eliza, this would seem entirely unnecessary | "You Did It" Harrison, Hyde-White with the servant's final choir "Congratulations"• "Just You Wait Reprise " Audrey Hepburn• Try or get the SensagentBox With a , visitors to your site can access reliable information on over 5 million pages provided by Sensagent |
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Give contextual explanation and translation from your sites! Arabic Bulgarian Chinese Croatian Czech Danish Dutch English Estonian Finnish French German Greek Hebrew Hindi Hungarian Icelandic Indonesian Italian Japanese Korean Latvian Lithuanian Malagasy Norwegian Persian Polish Portuguese Romanian Russian Serbian Slovak Slovenian Spanish Swedish Thai Turkish Vietnamese Webmaster Solution Alexandria A windows pop-into of information full-content of Sensagent triggered by double-clicking any word on your webpage | "A Hymn to Him Why Can't A Woman Be More Like a Man? "On the Street Where You Live" for• I especially loved her in the opening scene in her soiled clothes and hat and her sour voice |
The entire concept is a work of genius with the drunken father and the objectifying Col | "Just You Wait" — sung by Audrey Hepburn partially dubbed by Marni Nixon and Charles Fredericks |
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His subject turns out to be the lovely Eliza Doolittle Audrey Hepburn , who agrees to speech lessons to improve her job prospects | And so Hepburn does not completely lip-sync some of the opening words of songs as though to remind us that she is not singing |
"Get Me to the Church on Time" Holloway•.
And the delusive dream of a man forming his own perfect woman which is the basis of the Pygmalion legend works so very well with a conceited linguist tutoring a cockney girl | Snobbish phonetics Professor Henry Higgins agrees to a wager that he can make flower girl Eliza Doolittle presentable in high society |
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"" — performed by Audrey Hepburn mostly dubbed by Marni Nixon , Mona Washbourne and chorus | The contrast of the unschooled street urchin Liza Doolittle and the stuffy, self-possessed confirmed bachelor, a kind of nineteenth century British man of science, wonderfully accomplished in his profession, but blind to himself when it comes to relationships with other people, made for a most interesting match |
"Why Can't the English Learn to Speak? "A Hymn to Him Why Can't a Woman Be More Like a Man? It's almost as if Miss Hepburn is saying to the audience: they said it would be better if Miss Nixon sings instead of me because her voice is stronger and so very well trained.
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