Pascal took a ship back from India to the United States, penniless but undaunted. He landed in San Francisco where he spent some time deciding what to do next. He decided to approach playwright George Bernard Shaw, whom he had met many years earlier. During that earlier meeting Shaw, who had been impressed with the young Pascal's passion for art and cinema, had told him to pay him a visit when he was entirely penniless. Pascal sought out Shaw, first by going to New York City hidden in the toilet of a railroad train, then convincing a sea captain to give him a lift to England. Somehow he convinced Shaw to give him the rights to his plays, beginning with
Pygmalion (1938), which he released as a film. It was an enormous international hit, both critically and financially. Pascal tried to convince Shaw to let
Pygmalion be turned into a musical, but the outraged Shaw explicitly forbade it, having had a bad experience with the operetta
The Chocolate Soldier (based on Shaw's
Arms and the Man). Pascal was the only person to convince Shaw to adjust his scripts to the new medium of cinema, gaining concessions from Shaw that no one else could. Pascal created the line for
Pygmalion (later used by
Lerner and Loewe in their musical version
My Fair Lady) "
The rain in Spain stays mainly in the plain." Shaw, who publicly was referring to Pascal as a genius, added the line into the script. In 1938, Pascal was named as one of the world's more famous men by
Time magazine, along with
Adolf Hitler and the pope. He followed the film
Pygmalion with
Major Barbara (1941), which he directed as well as produced.
Major Barbara was filmed in London during
aerial bombing by the Nazis. During air raids, the crew and cast had to dodge into bomb shelters. Pascal never stopped the production, and the film was completed on schedule. Pascal became more and more extravagant:
Caesar and Cleopatra (1945), the next Pascal film of a Shaw play, was the most expensive British movie ever made at that time. It was a major financial and critical flop. Pascal insisted on importing sand from Egypt to achieve the right cinematic colors for the film. In this period, Shaw had become more difficult to work with. After the success of
Pygmalion, which was shortened in its transition from stage to screen, the playwright increasingly refused to let his plays be cut. Shaw heightened his praise of Pascal during this period. He wrote in 1946: Pascal produced
Androcles and the Lion (1952), but by this time he was suffering from cancer. ==Death==