Audrey Hepburn (4 May 1929 20 January 1993) was an iconic Academy
Award-winning actress, fashion model and humanitarian. Born Audrey Kathleen
Ruston in Brussels, Belgium, she was the only child of Joseph Anthony
Ruston, an Anglo-Irish banker, and Baroness Ella van Heemstra, a Dutch
aristocrat descended from French and English kings. Her father later appended
the name Hepburn to his surname, and Audrey became Audrey Hepburn-Ruston.
She had two half-brothers, Alexander and Ian Quarles van Ufford, by her
mother's first marriage to a Dutch nobleman.
Hepburn's reputation was as a humble, kind, witty and charming person,
who lived the philosophy of putting others before herself. She showed
this side particularly towards the end of her life in her work for the
United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF). She has often been called the
most beautiful woman of all time, most recently in a 2006 poll for New
Woman magazine.
Life During World War Two
Hepburn attended private schools in England and the Netherlands. Her mother
was very strict and her father was more easy-going which led her to prefer
him. He left the family when Audrey was young. She later called his abandonment
the most traumatic moment of her life (years later she would locate her
father and send him money and write him many letters). After the 1935
divorce of her parents, she was living with her mother at Arnhem, Netherlands
when the German invasion and occupation of World War II occurred. At that
time she adopted the pseudonym Edda Van Heemstra, modifying her mother's
documents to do so, because an "English-sounding" name was considered
dangerous. This was never her legal name.[1]
After the landing of the Allied Forces on D-Day, things grew worse under
the German occupiers. During the Dutch famine over the winter of 1944,
brutality increased and the Nazis confiscated the Dutch people's limited
food and fuel supply for themselves. Without heat in their homes, or food
to eat, people in the Netherlands starved and froze to death in the streets,
particularly so in Arnhem, which was devastated during Operation Market
Garden. Suffering from malnutrition, Hepburn developed several health
problems. She would stay in bed and read to take her mind off the hunger,
and she danced ballet for groups of people to collect money for the underground
movement. She resorted to digging up and eating tulip bulbs to survive
the famine. The impact of these times would shape her life and values.
Rise to Stardom
After the war, Hepburn and her mother moved to London, where she studied
ballet, worked as a model, and in 1951, began acting in films, mostly
in minor or supporting roles as Audrey Hepburn. She got into acting mainly
to make money so that her mother would not have to work menial jobs to
support them. Her first major performance was in the 1951 film The Secret
People, in which she played a ballet dancer. Audrey had trained in ballet
since childhood and won critical acclaim for her talent, which she showcased
in the film. However, her teachers had deemed her "too tall"
to be a professional ballet dancer, since, at 5'7", she was taller
than many of the male dancers. She was chosen to play the lead character
in the Broadway play Gigi that opened on 24 November 1951. She won a Theatre
World Award for her debut performance, and it had a successful six-month
run in New York City.
She was then offered a starring role opposite Gregory Peck in the Hollywood
motion picture, Roman Holiday. Peck saw her star quality and insisted
she share top billing. For her performance, she won the 1953 Academy Award
for Best Actress. Years later, when asked by Barbara Walters what her
favorite film was, Hepburn answered without hesitation, Roman Holiday,
because it was the one that made her a star.
After Roman Holiday she filmed Sabrina with Humphrey Bogart and William
Holden, with whom she had a brief romance. Many believe Holden considered
Audrey to be the love of his life, and she would go on to appear with
him again in the comedy Paris, When It Sizzles.
In 1954, Audrey went back to the stage playing the water sprite in Ondine
in a performance with Mel Ferrer, whom she would wed later that year.
For her performance in Ondine, Hepburn was awarded the Tony Award for
Best Actress (1954) which, coming only six weeks after her academy award
for Roman Holiday, solidified her reputation as both a film and stage
star.
Having become one of Hollywood's most popular box-office attractions,
Audrey Hepburn co-starred with other major actors such as Fred Astaire
in Funny Face, Humphrey Bogart and Gary Cooper in Love in the Afternoon,
George Peppard in Breakfast at Tiffany's, Cary Grant in the critically
acclaimed hit Charade, Rex Harrison in My Fair Lady, Peter O'Toole in
How to Steal a Million, and Sean Connery in Robin and Marian. Many of
these leading men became very close to her. Rex Harrison called Audrey
his favorite leading lady; Cary Grant said, "all I want for Christmas
is to make another movie with Audrey Hepburn;" and Gregory Peck became
a lifelong friend. Some believe Bogart and Hepburn did not get along,
but this is untrue. Bogart got along better with Hepburn than anyone else
on set; he later apologized to Billy Wilder for his behavior.
Hepburn's performance as "Holly Golightly" in 1961's Breakfast
at Tiffany's resulted in one of the most iconic characters in 20th Century
American cinema.
Hepburn was at the center of a controversy in 1964 with the filming of
My Fair Lady, due to her casting as Eliza Doolittle instead of then-unknown
Julie Andrews, who had originated the role on Broadway. The decision not
to cast Andrews was made before Hepburn was cast for the role, and Elizabeth
Taylor reportedly lobbied for the part as well; however, Hepburn was awarded
it by studio heads. Julie Andrews had yet to make Mary Poppins, which
was released within the same year as My Fair Lady. Audrey recorded singing
vocals for the role, but subsequently discovered a professional "singing
double" Marni Nixon had overdubbed all of her songs. She is said
to have walked off the set after being told of the dubbing, returning
the next day apologizing for her behavior. Footage of several songs with
Hepburn's original vocals still exist and have been included in documentaries
and the DVD release of the film, though to date, only Nixon's renditions
have been released on LP and CD. Some of her original vocals remained
in the film, such as "Just You Wait" and snippets from "I
Could Have Danced All Night".
The controversy over Hepburn's casting reached its height at the 1964-65
Academy Awards season, when Hepburn was not nominated for best actress
while Andrews was nominated for Mary Poppins. The media tried to play
up the rivalry between the two actresses as the ceremony approached, even
though both women denied such bad feelings existed and got along well.
Julie Andrews won "Best Actress" at the ceremony. Andrews, however,
later revealed she thought her Oscar win was just Hollywood politics.
From 1967 onward, after fifteen highly successful years in film, Hepburn
acted only occasionally. After her divorce from first husband Mel Ferrer,
she remarried Italian psychiatrist Dr. Andrea Dotti and had a second son,
after a difficult pregnancy that required near-total bed rest. After her
eventual separation from Dotti, she attempted a comeback, co-starring
with Sean Connery in the period piece Robin and Marian in 1976, which
was moderately successful, but not up to the usual standards of a Hepburn
hit film. Surprisingly, she turned down the seemingly made-to-order role
of a former ballet dancer in The Turning Point. (Shirley MacLaine got
the part, and the successful film invigorated her career.) Hepburn made
another comeback try in 1979, starring in Sidney Sheldon's Bloodline:
Pulp author Sheldon's books were so popular his name was included in the
film's title, no doubt leading Hepburn to think she had picked a winner.
She hadn't. Among the reviewers, even Hepburn's admirers-- and there were
still many-- could not recommend the film due to its hackneyed material.
Hepburn's last starring role in a film was with her new flame Ben Gazzara
in the modern comedy They All Laughed, a small, hip and breezy picture--
a real departure for Hepburn-- directed by Peter Bogdanovich. A critical
success, the film was overshadowed by the brutal murder of one of its
stars, Bogdanovich's girlfriend, Dorothy Stratten; the film was released
after Stratten's murder at age 20 and was not a major hit.
Hepburn's last film role, a cameo appearance, was of an angel in Steven
Spielberg's Always, filmed in 1988. A rare Spielberg fizzle, few got to
enjoy Hepburn looking, indeed, angelic, before the film was pulled from
theaters.
Work for UNICEF
Soon after Hepburn's final film role, she was appointed a special ambassador
to the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF). Grateful for her own good
fortune after being a victim of the Nazi occupation as a child, she dedicated
the remainder of her life to helping impoverished children in the world's
poorest nations. Though she had done work for UNICEF in the 50's, this
was a much higher dedication. Those close to her say that the thoughts
of dying, helpless children consumed her for the rest of her life. She
visited countries in Africa and South Asia as part of UNICEF programs.
She dedicated herself to spreading awareness of the conditions of these
nations and doing what she could to help directly. In one interview, she
mentioned buying camels and solar boxes so medicines could be delivered
to a village in the middle of a desert. She worked tirelessly for UNICEF
and various causes in Africa and other South Asian countries, even in
the last months of her life.
In 1992, President George Bush presented her with the Presidential Medal
of Freedom in recognition of her work with UNICEF, and the Academy of
Motion Picture Arts and Sciences awarded her The Jean Hersholt Humanitarian
Award for her contribution to humanity. This was awarded posthumously,
and her son accepted the award on her behalf.
She has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 1652 Vine Street.
Marriages and Death
In the early 1950s she was engaged to the young James Hanson. She called
it "love at first sight;" however, after having her wedding dress
fitted and date set, she decided the marriage would not work, due to the
demands of her career. (She had the wedding dress given to a poor Italian
couple, who still have it today.)
Hepburn did marry, twice: to the American actor Mel Ferrer and to an
Italian doctor, Andrea Dotti, and had a son to each husbandSean
by Ferrer, and Luca by Dotti.
Hepburn met Mel Ferrer at a party hosted by Gregory Peck, and quickly
fell in love with him. After Sabrina, Audrey went back to the stage, this
time with Ferrer in a play called Ondine, in which she played a water
sprite. Ferrer was rumored to be perhaps too controlling of Audrey, but
in William Holden's words, "I think Audrey allows Mel to think he
influences her."
She married him on 25 September 1954. The marriage lasted 14 years; their
son was quoted as saying Hepburn stayed in the marriage too long. In the
later years of the marriage, Ferrer was rumored to have had a girlfriend
on the side, while Audrey had an affair with her handsome "Two For
the Road" co-star Albert Finney. After the marriage fell apart, Audrey
met Italian psychologist Andrea Dotti on a cruise and fell in love with
him on a trip to Greek ruins. She believed she would have many children,
and possibly stop working. Although Dotti loved Audrey and was well-liked
by Sean, who called him "fun", Dotti had affairs with younger
women. The marriage lasted 13 years and ended after Luca and Sean were
old enough to handle life with a single mother.
At the time of her death, she was the companion of Robert Wolders, a
handsome Dutch actor who was the widower of film star Merle Oberon. She
met Wolders through a friend, in the later stage of her marriage to Dotti.
Six months later, they met again for a drink, which turned into dinner.
They fell in love, and after Hepburn's divorce from Dotti was final, she
and Wolders started their lives together, although they never married.
In 1989, after nine years with him, she called them the happiest years
of her life. "Took me long enough," she said in an interview
with Barbara Walters. Walters also asked why she never married Wolders.
Hepburn replied that they were married, just not formally. Hepburn and
Wolders planned the UNICEF trips together. At every one of her moving
speeches, Wolders would watch and sometimes shed tears.
In late 1992, Audrey began to feel pains in her stomach, which turned
out to be a rare form of cancer that originated in the appendix. Audrey
had surgery in a Los Angeles hospital, but the cancer continued to spread,
and she apparently refused chemotherapy. Hepburn died of colorectal cancer
on January 20, 1993, in Tolochenaz, Vaud, Switzerland at the age of 63,
and was interred there.
source : wikipedia |