Kings Of Crunch Series 12

Listen to me, I don't like the tenor of that question. What is it you want, Doolittle? Don't you understand? What is it, Mrs. Pearce? I can change 'alf a crown. If this girl will put herself in your hands for six months..... an experiment in teaching, she must understand thoroughly what she's doing. Monologues from my fair lady bird. Humanities › Literature Eliza Doolittle's Final Monologues from 'Pygmalion' An Analysis of Miss Doolittle's Two Very Different Sides Share Flipboard Email Print Tim Pigott-Smith (as Henry Higgins) and Michelle Dockery (as Eliza Doolittle) perform in the production of Bernard Shaw's play 'Pygmalion, ' at the Old Vic Theatre, in London. You can't take away the knowledge you gave me. There's another letter from the American millionaire, Ezra D. Wallingford. Is that really a 'better' way of life?

Monologues From My Fair Lady Bird

You are to stay here for the next six months...... learning how to speak beautifully like a lady in a florist shop. Monologues from published plays female. Would you be lookin' for a good butler, Eliza? Who the devil are you? If it's worse, it's a sign it's nearly over. '"Oh, so loverly sittin' '"Absobloominlutely still '"l would never budge till Spring '"Crept over the winder sill '"Someone's 'ead restin' on my knee '"Warm and tender as he can be '"Who takes good care of me '"Oh, wouldn't it be loverly?

Monologues From My Fair Lady K

You know, Pickering, this chap's got a certain natural gift of rhetoric. I don't know if there's time before the next race to place a bet..... come, my dear. And I leave it to you. Henry Higgins's Monologue from My Fair Lady. If you have any trouble with 'er, give 'er a few licks o' the strap. You see, Mrs. Higgins, apart from the things one can pick up..... difference between a lady and a flower girl isn't how she behaves..... how she is treated. She's so deliciously low. So here I am, a confirmed old bachelor and likely to remain so.

Monologues From Published Plays Female

Don't cry, silly girl. '"Beer, beer, glorious beer '"Fill yourself right up'" See this creature with her curbstone English..... will keep her in the gutter till the end of her days? Yes, a lot of tomfoolery. Should we ask this baggage to sit down..... shall we just throw her out of the window? Monologues from my fair lady fitness. By George, Eliza..... streets will be strewn with the bodies of men... ooting themselves for your sake before I'm done with you.

Monologues From Plays Female

Ln heaven's name, why? I've took a sort of a fancy to you and..... you want the girl, I ain't so set on 'avin' her home again..... what I might be open to is an arrangement. I know you don't care. The poor devil who couldn't get a job as an errand boy..... if he had the guts to try?

Monologues From My Fair Lady Fitness

You might marry, you know. I didn't think it meant any difference now. Why should she die of influenza..... she'd come through diphtheria right enough the year before. I'll have to put you in here. You infamous creature! Where's the Colonel? I'm glad to see you have a spark of family feeling left. Give the 'andkerchief to me. And you take the other. Go on back to that Wimpole Street devil. Now, I don't care for your bullyin' an' your big talk. ''With one enormous chair ''Oh, wouldn't it be loverly?

Monologues From My Fair Lady Trailer

Of course she matters. If you don't promise to behave yourself I'll ask you to leave. Freddy Hill writes me twice and three times a day. Suppose she doesn't? How did you know she was here? If I thought they wasn't, I'd ask. It's filling up the deepest gap that separates class from class..... soul from soul.

'"Why don't they grow up Well, like their father instead? Shall I show him into the garden? Give her to him, will you? ''Lots of chocolate for me to eat ''Lots of coal makin' lots of 'eat ''Warm face, warm 'ands, warm feet ''Oh, wouldn't it be loverly? '' Are you all finished here, Eliza? Live where you like but stop that noise! I know 'er, I know 'er.

I don't want to be accused of stealing. It seems to him that her best prospect is to find a man unlike the "confirmed old bachelors like me and the Colonel. " I know it's difficult, Miss Doolittle, but try to understand. You must be reasonable, Mr. Higgins, you must. If it hadn't been for him I would've died of boredom. A monologue from the musical by Alan Jay Lerner and Frederick Loewe (Based on the play (Pygmalion) by George Bernard Shaw. How are you, Bruzzie? Gladly, but first I would love you to present me to this glorious creature. I'm always in the wrong. You can't give Eliza's name to the police..... if she were a thief or a lost umbrella.

'"Can't a woman learn to use her head? Would you have a chocolate? I don't want it now. It's almost irresistible. Then what are we talking about? If I had my hair cut, nobody would notice me. I should have thrown the fire irons. Did you bully her after I went to bed? The great secret is not a question of good manners..... bad manners or any particular sort of manner..... having the same manner for all human souls. Now you repeat that after me. He give it to me, not to you! Do you realize what you've got to teach this girl in six weeks?

You ain't 'eard what I come for yet. I don't want him to work. Colonel Pickering, you're just in time for tea. We're all intimidated. But will you take advantage of a man's nature..... him out of the price of his own daughter, what he's brought up..... and clothed by the sweat of his brow..... she's growed big enough to be interestin' to you two gentlemen? I ain't a duchess yet, you know. This where you wash clothes? How do you know that? It weren't fit for pigs to live. I ask ya, what am l? You presumptuous insect!

And that's what you've set yourself out to conquer, Eliza. Now I'm respectable, she wants to be respectable. I wouldn't worry about that if I were you. What are you doing in Eliza's house? '"Norwegians learn Norwegian, the Greeks are taught their Greek '"ln France every Frenchman knows his language from 'A' to 'Z' '"The French don't care what they do actually '"As long as they pronounce it properly '"Arabians learn Arabian with the speed of summer lightning '"The Hebrews learn it backwards which is absolutely frightening '"Use proper English, you're regarded as a freak '"Oh, why can't the English '"Why can't the English learn to speak? '" '"Any second now '"They'll begin to run '"Hark! You can get a motorbus to Hampton Court. Them she lived with would have killed her for a hatpin, let alone a hat.