Pygmalion

Who is Alfred Doolittle? What is he like? Why do you think the playwright gave him this name? (Act 2)

Who is Alfred Doolittle? What is he like? Why do you think the playwright gave him this name?

(Act 2)

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The appearance of Eliza's father in this act is quite important, because we realize just how rough a background Eliza comes from. She is an illegitimate child whose father is a dustman willing to pimp his daughter. Doolittle, whose name is a pun on the fact that he hardly works, defines himself explicitly as a member of the undeserving poor. Despite the humor that arises when Doolittle explains that he is no less deserving than a widow who collects from a number of different funds for the death of the same husband, the man's joke holds a grain of truth. As a socialist, Shaw was concerned with all of the poor, not just the working or bereaved poor.

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