![]() Doll in Mint Condition and never been removed from Box Fair Box with noticeable shelf wear crease in front right side dents in top of box Pictures are of Doll you will Receive Comes from a Smoke & Pet Free home! Stored in Smoke Free Home This will make a terrific gift! or treat yourself to this fine collectible. With her long white gloves, rhinestone necklace and rhinestone tiara crowning her beautiful brown hair, it's no wonder she's mistaken for royalty. She's utterly radiant in an ivory colored gown adorned with shimmering rhinestones and long beads. Transformed into a perfect lady, she wins the admiration of everyone around her. Her hairdresser was massaging the back of her neck: everyone sorry for her, and the atmosphere tense.Here is your chance to get this wonderful item Mattel Presents Barbie Eliza Doolittle My Fair Lady EMBASSY BALL Gown Voices become hushed, and all eyes are upon her as Eliza Doolittle™ makes her debut at the Embassy Ball. Now, by mid-afternoon, she was tired out. Finding it difficult to work to different ‘play-backs’ she had been nervously taut most of the day. She confessed, however, that yesterday’s pea-shelling scene had been the greatest strain for she had to eat so many raw peas at best, she does not care for them even when they are at their youngest and smallest, but having had to eat a bushel of huge Californian peas out of their inflated pods, she then went home to dinner and was served duck and green peas! Tuesday, 27 August (1963) On the set Audrey was still doing ‘Loverly’. Audrey is remarkably disciplined: her memory never at fault, she appears on the set word perfect, and she can give exactly the same performance over and over again. Tiring, too: it takes another hour to wash out the dirt before going home after the day’s shooting…. The effect is really dirty, and psychologically must be very depressing. Every dawn Audrey has to have her hair covered with grease, then with a lot of brown Fuller’s Earth. Thursday, 22 August (1963) At lunch-time Audrey, wearing her dirty hair and face, came into my room to say ‘Ullow’. The play of expression on her face was such that one could almost see her brain at work with ideas that followed one another like a succession of pictures…. ![]() I watched her being shot, listening to Higgins telling Pickering that, but for her appalling accent, Liza ( sic: Eliza) could be passed off as a duchess. He recalled it in his diary: Wednesday, 21 August (1963) …I wanted to congratulate Audrey (Hepburn) on her appearance, so went down on to the set for a word with her. Pearce, Higgins’ housekeeperĬecil Beaton, in charge of sets and costumes, recalls the day this scene was taped for “My Fair Lady”. Wilfrid Hyde-White as Colonel Hugh Pickering Wrap her up in brown paper till they come. Pearce: Yes, but – Higgins ( storming on): Take all her clothes off and burn them. Is there a good fire in the kitchen? Mrs. Sandpaper if it won’t come off any other way. Higgins: I’ll take it! I’ll make a duchess of this draggletailed gutter-snipe! Eliza: Aoooooooow! Higgins: ( carried away): I’ll start today! Now! This moment! Take her away and clean her, Mrs. She’s so deliciously low – so horribly dirty! Eliza: Aoooow! I ain’t dirty: I washed my face and hands afore I come, I did. Higgins ( tempted, looking at her) It’s almost irresistible. ( She sits down on sofa.) (Eliza offers to pay for voice lessons but Pickering wants to sponsor her.) Eliza: Oh, you’re real good. Pickering: Won’t you sit down, Miss Doolittle? Eliza ( coyly): Oh, I don’t mind if I do. ![]() Pearce escorts her into the library, where Higgins is discussing the possible experiment with Pickering. Eliza is agreeable she wants to speak better so she can get a job in a flower shop.Įliza appears at Professor Higgins’ house to make arrangements for language lessons. He boasts that, in six months time, he can transform a low-bred, disheveled Cockney flower seller named Eliza Doolittle into a duchess by teaching her to speak properly. In the 1964 Academy Award winning musical, “ My Fair Lady,” linguistics professor Henry Higgins places a bet with his colleague Colonel Pickering. Julie Andrews won the Best Actress Oscar for “Mary Poppins.” That year, Audrey was snubbed at the Academy Awards, not even being nominated for her “My Fair Lady” performance. So Audrey was cast in “My Fair Lady.” Shortly Disney cast Julie Andrews in the musical spectacle, “Mary Poppins”. It caused quite a flap in the movie industry, with many feeling that singer Julie Andrews should have had the role. Audrey was well-known, talented, and her films never lost money. Warner’s film was to cost him $5 million. Audrey Hepburn as Cockney flower seller in 1964 musical film, “My Fair Lady.” Julie Andrews had played the lead in the Broadway play but producer Jack Warner wanted Audrey Hepburn as Eliza Doolittle for his film.
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