| I didn't find the audio lab setting an "unmalleable" choice in Pygmalion in the scenes outside Higgins's house, actually - rather, it underscored the huge issue at the centre of his character, which is that he mostly sees other people as *objects* for him to study, which means he is incapable of considering the consequences of his experiment - which in turn amplifies the play's dissection of class boundaries. It's a very clever take on it. |