"I've Grown Accustomed to Her Face" is a song from the 1956 musical My Fair Lady, with music by Frederick Loewe and lyrics by Alan Jay Lerner. It was originally performed by Rex Harrison as Professor Henry Higgins in a distinctive talk-singing style, serving as the show's poignant near-finale in which Higgins reluctantly acknowledges his attachment to Eliza Doolittle.
The song is set in Eb major and follows an AABA-style form. Loewe's melody moves primarily in gentle stepwise motion, conveying a restrained sentimentality that perfectly captures the character's emotional reluctance. The harmony is largely diatonic, grounded in Broadway tradition, with the bridge introducing subtle modulations that mirror the shifting emotions of the text. Typically performed as a ballad, the song invites intimate jazz interpretations by piano trios and vocalists who can bring out its underlying tenderness.
A landmark jazz treatment appears on Shelly Manne and André Previn's 1956 album My Fair Lady, where the cool jazz trio distills the song's emotional core into an elegant instrumental reading. Tony Bennett also recorded a widely admired vocal version, bringing his characteristic warmth and phrasing to this beloved standard.
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