<P> As Higgins walks home, he realizes he's grown attached to Eliza ("I've Grown Accustomed to Her Face"). He cannot bring himself to confess that he loves her, and insists to himself that if she marries Freddy and then comes back to him, he will not accept her . But he finds it difficult to imagine being alone again . He reviews the recording he made of the morning Eliza first came to him for lessons . He hears his own harsh words: "She's so deliciously low! So horribly dirty!" Then the phonograph turns off, and a real voice speaks in a Cockney accent: "I washed me face an' ' ands before I come, I did". It is Eliza, standing in the doorway, tentatively returning to him . The musical ends on an ambiguous moment of possible reconciliation between teacher and pupil, as Higgins slouches and asks, "Eliza, where the devil are my slippers?" </P> <P> The original cast of the Broadway stage production: </P> <Ul> <Li> Eliza Doolittle, a young Cockney flowerseller--Julie Andrews </Li> <Li> Henry Higgins, a professor of phonetics--Rex Harrison </Li> <Li> Alfred P. Doolittle, Eliza's father, a dustman--Stanley Holloway </Li> <Li> Colonel Hugh Pickering, Henry Higgins's friend and fellow phoneticist--Robert Coote </Li> <Li> Mrs. Higgins, Henry's socialite mother--Cathleen Nesbitt </Li> <Li> Freddy Eynsford - Hill, a young socialite and Eliza's suitor--John Michael King </Li> <Li> Mrs. Pearce, Higgins's housekeeper--Philippa Bevans </Li> <Li> Zoltan Karpathy, Henry Higgins's former student and rival--Christopher Hewett </Li> </Ul> <Li> Eliza Doolittle, a young Cockney flowerseller--Julie Andrews </Li>

Who played eliza doolittle in my fair lady on broadway