By Ernio Hernandez
16 Dec 2007
![]() |
|
| Boyd Gaines and Jefferson Mays in Pygmalion |
|
| Photo by Joan Marcus |
David Grindley (Journey's End) directed the show that began previews Sept. 2 and opened Oct. 18 at the American Airlines Theatre. The limited engagement ends as scheduled, following 31 preview performances and 69 regular performances.
Well-known as the inspiration for the Alan Jay Lerner and Frederick Loewe musical My Fair Lady, the Shaw drama is based on the classical myth of the same name. "When Professor Henry Higgins (Mays) comes across a poor and uneducated Cockney girl named Eliza Doolittle (Danes), Higgins makes a bet that he can take Eliza from the gutters of London and pass her off as a society lady, by simply teaching her the right dialect in which to speak," according to press notes.
Joining Danes and Mays onstage are Tony Award winner Boyd Gaines (as Colonel Pickering) and Jay O. Sanders (Alfred Doolittle). The ensemble also features Helen Carey (Mrs. Higgins), Brenda Wehle (Mrs. Pearce), Kerry Bishé (Clara Eynsford Hill), Kieran Campion (Freddy Eynsford Hill), Sandra Shipley (Mrs. Eynsford Hill), Jonathan Fielding (Bystander), Robin Moseley (Bystander) and Karen Walsh (Parlour Maid).
The design team for Pygmalion includes Jonathan Fensom (sets and costumes), Jason Taylor (lights) and Gregory Clarke (sound). Majella Hurley serves as dialect coach.
Mays earned the Tony Award for his turn in Doug Wright's Pulitzer Prize-winning drama I Am My Own Wife. He recently appeared in the Broadway revival of Journey's End and the New York City Center Encores! staging of Of Thee I Sing. The actor has also been seen in Moe's Lucky Seven, Lydie Breeze and Quills and regionally in Rosencrantz & Guildenstern are Dead, Misalliance, The Importance Of Being Earnest, The Cherry Orchard and more.
Roundabout has previously presented several works by Shaw: last season's Heartbreak House, Major Barbara (2000-2001), Arms and the Man (1999-2000), You Never Can Tell (1997 1998) and Misalliance (1996-1997).
Pygmalion first hit the Broadway stage in 1914 at the Park Theatre and has been revived on Broadway four times since. The most recent (in 1987) starred Peter O'Toole as Higgins and Amanda Plummer as Doolittle.
Tickets to Pygmalion at the American Airlines Theatre, 227 West 42nd Street, are on sale by calling Roundabout Ticket Services at (212) 719-1300. For more information visit roundabouttheatre.org.





