Why does Professor Higgins pull down his hat to cover his eyes at the end of My Fair Lady?

Why does Professor Higgins pull down his hat to cover his eyes at the end of My Fair Lady? - Stylish woman in hat with tongue out

At the end of My Fair Lady why does Henry or Professor Higgins pull down his hat and slouch in his chair?

Henry Higgins with hat over his eyes



Best Answer

He's covering his face in an attempt to sleep.

This is/was a common method of cutting out the light from your surroundings when trying to take a nap.




Pictures about "Why does Professor Higgins pull down his hat to cover his eyes at the end of My Fair Lady?"

Why does Professor Higgins pull down his hat to cover his eyes at the end of My Fair Lady? - Young female in hat with wide brim and knitted sweater looking at camera while standing in snowy forest in countryside
Why does Professor Higgins pull down his hat to cover his eyes at the end of My Fair Lady? - Stylish lady in hat and warm coat looking at camera
Why does Professor Higgins pull down his hat to cover his eyes at the end of My Fair Lady? - Young smiling female in warm clothes and hat in snowy forest and looking at camera in winter day



What does the ending of My Fair Lady mean?

Eliza Doolittle feels insulted in the My Fair Lady ending because she does not get any credit for her success. She packs up and leaves Higgins house. She also tells Higgins that she no longer needs him. However, she comes back to his house in the final moments of the play.

Do Eliza and Professor Higgins fall in love?

Henry Higgins did remain in Eliza Doolittle's life, but Shaw was insistent on the fact that they were no match romantically, that they remained purely friends who saw each other as sparring partners in wit and cleverness.

Why did My Fair Lady change the ending?

So Sher's version is less romantic, more of a social critique about how arbitrary class distinctions are \u2014 and he changed the ending of the musical. Spoiler alert: In Sher's version, instead of staying with the professor after he asks her \u201cwhere the devil are my slippers?\u201d Eliza turns and leaves.

Is My Fair Lady sexist?

\u201cMy Fair Lady,\u201d one of the most famous and important musicals in the history of that magnificent art form, contains inexcusably sexist and abusive conduct that is central to its plot.



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