Movies And Books
Many people compare an English literary work to
different movies of their time.
An example of this is Pygmalion by
Bernard Shaw. A story about a woman
transformed into a spectacular beauty
pushed into royalty, but never loses her
identity, is very similar to a movie
directed by Don Bluth called Anastasia.
Bernard Shaw’s play Pygmalion and
Don Bluth’s movie Anastasia, show that one
can change a person’s appearance,
but the person deep within has never left
the surface. The two have a large
array of similarities and differences. What is
also fascinating is that the
background of both the English writer and director
are very similar in how
they began. I will compare both movie work and literary
work of two
exceptional people. Bernard Shaw was born in Dublin on July 26,
1856. He
was essentially shy, yet created the persona of G.B.S. The
showman,
controversialist, satirist, critic, pundit, wit, intellectual
buffoon and
dramatist (http://www.sites.netscape.net/bernardshawinfo) . Shaw
grew up in a
family with a drunken father, whom worked in a corn mill, a
mother whom left
home when he was fourteen. Bernard never went to school past
the age of
fourteen. After his mother left his father had gotten worse
(http://www.spartacus.schoonet.co.uk/jshaw.htm)
. So he embarked on a journey
to London in 1876, where he would become an active
Socialist and a
brilliant platform speaker. His heart was in writing and seven
years later he
wrote five unsuccessful novels. He was successful with his
journalism; he
contributed Pall Mall Gazette
(http://www.sites.netscape.net/bernardshawinfo).
One of the many people
that influenced him in his newspaper career was William
Stead. Shaw
attended a lecture on nationalization that was given by Henry
George,
which had a profound effect on his ideas of socialism. In the year
of
1884 he joined the Fabian Society and in 1885 the Socialist League.
Bernard gave
a lecture on socialism on November 13th which would result in
the Bloody Sunday
Riot. Shaw was considered one of the best writers of
his time. He wrote many
plays such as Arms and the Man (1984), Satirizing
romantic attitudes toward love
and war. In 1897 The Devil’s Disciple, a play
on the American Revolution, was
produced with great success in New York City
(http://www.sites.netscape.net/bernardshawinfo).
He also wrote a play
known as Pygmalion, which satirizes the English class
system through the
story of a cockney girl’s transformation into a lady at the
hands of a speech
professor. The movie My Fair Lady was produced to amplify what
Pygmalion
was all about. Of Shaw’s later plays, Saint Joan (1923) is the
most
memorable; it argues that Joan of Arc, had to be killed because the
world was
not yet ready for her. Among Shaw’s other plays are John Bull’s
Other Island
(1940), The Doctor’s Dilemma, Fanny’s First Play, Back to
Methuselah, The
Apple Cart, Too True to Be Good, and The Intelligent
Woman’s Guide to
Socialism and Capitalism
(http://www.spartacus.schoonet.co.uk/jshaw.htm).
Bernard conducted a
strong attack on the London Theatre and was closely
associated with the
intellectual revival of British theatre. His many plays fall
into several
categories: Plays pleasant, Unpleasant Comedies, chronic-
plays
metabiological Pentateuch. Don Bluth was born into a family of seven
children in
El Paso, Texas. After watching Snow white and the Seven
Dwarfs he found his
calling. From the age of six he could always be found
drawing
(http://www.movies.yahoo.com/shop?d=hc&id=180001539&cf=bios)
. His
family moved to Santa Monica, California, and upon graduation from
high
school he took his drawings to Walt Disney studios in Burbank. He
accepted a
position as an in betweener. He worked with Disney from 1955
through 1956 on the
classic motion picture "Sleeping Beauty". He continued
his education at
Brigham Young University, studying English literature.
In 1977, he returned to
Disney Animation Department as an Animator. He
was promoted within two years to
Directing Animator and to Producer/
Director the following year. From 1971 to
1979 he worked on " Robin
Hood", " Winnie the Pooh and Tigger too",
"The Rescuers" and the "Small
One" (http://www.movies.yahoo.com/shop?d=hc&id=180001539&cf=bios)
.
He has created many prestigious animated films and laser disc video games.
He
was usually known for his animated movies that showed fun,
laughter,
togetherness, and teamwork. He is known to a lot of animators as an
inspiration
to their writing style and their joy for the job. Don was overly
attached and
dedicated to his work, and loved every bit of his day to day
life
(http://www.movies.yahoo.com/shop?d=hc&id=180001539&cf=bios).
Pygmalion,
a play written by Bernard Shaw tells the story of rags to riches. It
begins
with a young flower girl that is poor and she sells flowers to get by. A
man
that thinks she is repulsive approaches her. He bets a general that he
would
be able to change this despiteful young flower girl into a beautiful
duchess.
She goes to him to learn how to speak respectfully and
etiquette. He decides not
only will he help her but he will also change her
into a duchess to fool the
high society. She attends balls and parties to win
over the rich that are
present. Eliza doesn’t feel right about what she has
done, but it is to late.
She has fallen in love with the speech therapist
and is overwhelmed with the
life style that was given and created for her.
She feels that the feeling that
once made her whole is no longer there, she
feels that she is no longer Eliza
Doolittle but someone he has created.
He doesn’t want her to go because he
loves her, but she doesn’t feel that he
really loves her. Unlike most stories
this one did not end happily ever
after. The movie Anastasia begins in a castle
in London, where soldiers are
attacking it. Anastasia is a young girl that is
the duchess of London, she is
shown away out of the castle along with her great
aunt. As they pass through
the passageways they are separated. A little boy
placed her on a train to
Russia. While on the ride she hit her head and got
amnesia. Six years later
while selling flowers she was approached by a young
man, that asked her to
pretend she was the duchess of London. If they could pull
it off they could
receive a large sum of money and she could live the high life.
The queen,
whom was her aunt, was giving a ball in search of her lost niece. So
they
attended, and were sent away because the queen was tired of being insulted
by
all of the people trying to fool her. Later on that night, they crept
into
her bedroom and demanded she see them. After talking to Anastasia for a
while
she realized she was the niece that she had lost so long ago. And they
lived
happily ever after. Bernard Shaw and Don Bluth are very similar to one
another.
These two men have many of things in common, at a young age both
had found their
calling. They had decided they would take jobs under big
companies to advance
their careers. Bluth and Shaw both wanted to
revolutionize their fields of
choice. They wanted to see play writting and
animation in a new light. Like
Bluth, Shaw had written and produced some
of the top plays and movies. Pygmalion
and Anastasia have a lot of
similarities. The stories are both based on two
women that are turned from
rags to riches. At the beginning of both stories, you
are told that they sold
flowers for a living. Both had dreams of making it big
by having their own
flower shops. The men that transformed them into duchess, in
the end would
soon become the love of their lives. They felt guilty for
pretending they
were something that they were not. They felt that they had lost
their
identity and wanted to go back to normal. Bluth and Shaw are not all
together
alike. They grew up in different parts of the world, with different
family
backgrounds. Shaw had a drunken father and a mother whom abandoned
him.
Bluth was born into a family of seven with no major problems. Bluth
was given a
chance at education, while Shaw left school at the age of
fourteen. Their
careers were different in the sense of the time they lived.
Shaw in the 1800’s
to the middle 1900s and Bluth from the middle 1900’s until
now. One life ended
so another could begin. Even though Pygmalion and
Anastasia have similarities,
they also have differences. Some of these
differences are the settings, one in
London and the other in Russia. In
Anastasia, Anastasia starts out as a duchess,
and is hit over the head and
comes up with amnesia. She is then found and
transformed back to her duchess
state, while Eliza was from the beginning poor.
While Anastasia was
pushed into poverty because of her lose of memory. Named
were some of the
differences between Pygmalion and the movie Anastasia. Bernard
Shaw’s
Pygmalion and Don Bluth’s Anastasia exhibit that a person’s
appearance can be
changed but they never lose their identity. Comparing a movie
work to a
literary work was very inspirational and interesting. Hopefully people
will
be able to except a person for whom they are, and not try to change
their
inner beings. Our individuality is what makes us, us.