My Fair Lady - crew, film crew

The entire team, the film crew of the film "My Fair Lady"
My Fair Lady (1964)
Timing: 2:50 (170 min)
My Fair Lady - TMDB rating
7.5/10
1403
My Fair Lady - Kinopoisk rating
8.015/10
35492
My Fair Lady - IMDB rating
7.7/10
107000

Film crew

Director

Producer

Editor

William H. Ziegler
Editor

Art Direction

Gene Allen
Art Direction

Costume Design

Photo Cecil Beaton #108103

Cecil Beaton

Cecil Beaton
Costume Design

Production Design

George James Hopkins
Production Design
Photo Cecil Beaton #108103

Cecil Beaton

Cecil Beaton
Production Design

Set Decoration

George James Hopkins
Set Decoration

Original Music Composer

Frederick Loewe
Original Music Composer

Orchestrator

Alexander Courage
Orchestrator
Robert Franklyn
Orchestrator
Albert Woodbury
Orchestrator

Director of Photography

Harry Stradling Sr.

Harry Stradling Sr.
Director of Photography

Screenplay

Book

Music Supervisor

Photo André Previn #108100

André Previn

André Previn
Music Supervisor

Makeup Supervisor

Gordon Bau

Gordon Bau
Makeup Supervisor

Hair Supervisor

Jean Burt Reilly
Hair Supervisor

Songs

Frederick Loewe
Songs

Assistant Director

David S. Hall
Assistant Director

Additional Music

Frederick Loewe
Additional Music

Conductor

Sound

Murray Spivack
Sound
Francis J. Scheid
Sound

Choreographer

Photo Hermes Pan #74394

Hermes Pan

Hermes Pan
Choreographer

Unit Manager

Sergei Petschnikoff
Unit Manager

Theatre Play

Music Arranger

Bobby Tucker
Music Arranger

Musical

Frederick Loewe
Musical

Lyricist

What's left behind the scenes

  • The Broadway premiere of the musical took place on March 15, 1956. The production, starring Julie Andrews in the lead role, immediately became immensely popular, with tickets sold out six months in advance. 'My Fair Lady' was performed on Broadway 2717 times.
  • When it was decided that the musical "My Fair Lady" would be made into a film, its fans were disappointed, as everyone hoped to see Julie Andrews in the role of Eliza (Rex Harrison wanted this too), but Audrey Hepburn ended up playing her. However, Rex Harrison, who played Higgins on Broadway, couldn't be replaced, and the eccentric professor successfully moved from the stage to the big screen, and subsequently received an Oscar.
  • Audrey Hepburn specifically prepared and took vocal lessons for the role, but she was ultimately dubbed by Marni Nixon in all the songs.
  • James Cagney was first offered the role of Alfred Doolittle. When he turned it down at the last minute, the role went to Stanley Holloway, who had played Alfred on Broadway.
  • Before it was decided that Rex Harrison would play Professor Higgins in the film as well, Cary Grant, Peter O'Toole, Noel Coward, Michael Redgrave, and George Sanders were considered for the role.
  • In her 2004 autobiography "Tis Herself", Maureen O'Hara wrote that producer Jack L. Warner asked her to sing for Audrey Hepburn in the film.
  • Jeremy Brett, who turned 30 during filming, was very surprised to learn that a 42-year-old American, Billy Shirley, dubbed his singing voice.
  • Jack L. Warner paid $5.5 million for the rights in February 1962. At the time, this purchase was a record; no one had previously acquired the original idea for a production for such a large sum. Only in 1978 did Columbia pay $9.5 million for the rights to film 'Annie' (1982).
  • Actress Gladys Cooper, who plays Professor Higgins’ mother, previously played the same role in a 1963 television production of 'Pygmalion,' 'Hallmark Hall of Fame: Pygmalion (#12.3)'.
  • The film's title does not appear in any dialogue or song.
  • When Cary Grant was asked why he turned down the role of Henry Higgins, Grant replied that his manner of speaking was much closer to Eliza Doolittle's.
  • The film takes place in 1912.
  • 27A Wimpole Street in London – the address of Professor Higgins – does not actually exist; there is a 27 Wimpole Street.
  • Shirley Jones was one of the actresses Jack L. Warner planned to offer the role if Audrey Hepburn had refused. Julie Andrews' candidacy was rejected because the producers considered her insufficiently famous. Elizabeth Taylor also very much wanted to play Eliza.
  • Audrey Hepburn later confessed that she would never have accepted the role of Eliza Doolittle if she had known that Jack L. Warner wanted to dub all her songs. Furthermore, she once told Julie Andrews personally that she should have played Eliza instead of her. During her performance at the University of California in Los Angeles in 2008, Julie Andrews confirmed this fact.
  • Rex Harrison was very disappointed to learn that the role of Eliza went to Audrey Hepburn, as he wanted it to be played by his partner from the Broadway production, Julie Andrews. But during filming, Harrison and Hepburn became friends, and when the actor received an Oscar for 'My Fair Lady' in 1964, he dedicated it to his 'two beautiful ladies,' Audrey Hepburn and Julie Andrews, who had both played Eliza Doolittle with him.
  • In the musical, Elise is 21 and Freddie is 20. Audrey Hepburn was 34 years old during filming (this fact also upset fans of the Broadway production), and Jeremy Brett was 30 years old.
  • The film was originally going to be called "Lady Lisa".
  • When it was decided that the musical "My Fair Lady" would be made into a film, its fans were disappointed, hoping to see Julie Andrews in the role of Eliza (Rex Harrison wanted her too), but Audrey Hepburn ended up playing her. However, Rex Harrison, who played Higgins on Broadway, was irreplaceable, and the eccentric professor successfully moved from the stage to the big screen and subsequently received an Oscar.
  • In her 2004 autobiography, “Tis Herself,” Maureen O’Hara wrote that producer Jack L. Warner asked her to sing for Audrey Hepburn in the film.
  • Jack L. Warner paid $5.5 million for the rights in February 1962. At the time, this purchase was a record; no one had previously acquired an original stage idea for such a large sum. Only in 1978 did Columbia pay $9.5 million for the rights to film “Annie” (1982).
  • Rex Harrison was very disappointed to learn that the role of Eliza went to Audrey Hepburn, as he wanted his Broadway co-star Julie Andrews to play her. However, Harrison and Hepburn became friends during filming, and when the actor received an Oscar for “My Fair Lady” in 1964, he dedicated it to his “two beautiful ladies,” Audrey Hepburn and Julie Andrews, who had both played Eliza Doolittle with him.
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