Pygmalion (TV play) explained

Pygmalion
Producer:Royston Morley
Starring:Margaret Lockwood
Ralph Michael
Arthur Wontner
Studio:BBC
Runtime:150 mins
Country:United Kingdom
Language:English

Pygmalion is a 1948 British TV production of the 1913 play by George Bernard Shaw. It was the first time the play was done for television and was the longest production done by the BBC to that time.[1]

It starred Margaret Lockwood who was under suspension by the Rank Organisation at the time for refusing a film role.[2] [3]

Cast

Reception

The production was very well received.[4] It was voted best TV production of the year and Lockwood voted Best Actress.[5]

It was Lockwood's first play on TV and she wrote in her memoirs that "I loved every moment of Pygmalion. After the performance I was like a beginner again waiting nervously for the papers, bracing myself to read the criticism. I had not felt this way about notices since I first went on the stage. Thank goodness they were good ones. I was generously praised."[6]

Lockwood later toured with the play on stage.[7]

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: "PYGMALION" ON TELEVISION . . 14,332 . Queensland, Australia . 10 February 1948 . 28 September 2017 . 3 . National Library of Australia.
  2. News: FILM NEWS FROM ENGLAND AND AMERICA . . 11,818 . Sydney . 11 December 1947 . 28 September 2017 . 32. LATE FINAL EXTRA . National Library of Australia.
  3. News: So The British Don't Work Hard Enough! . . 34,391 . 13 March 1948 . 28 September 2017 . 5 . National Library of Australia.
  4. Book: Conolly, L. W.. Bernard Shaw and the BBC. University of Toronto Press. 2009. 9781442690998.
  5. News: FEMININE INTEREST . . 9124 . Queensland. 1 November 1948 . 28 September 2017 . 3 . National Library of Australia.
  6. Book: Lockwood, Margaret. Lucky Star: The Autobiography of Margaret Lockwood. Odhams Press Limited. 1955. 142.
  7. News: Film news horn Hollywood and London . . 13,035 . Sydney . 8 November 1951 . 28 September 2017 . 37 (LAST RACE) . National Library of Australia.