Friday, January 20, 2012

Remembering Audrey Hepburn



Audrey Hepburn
Actress – fashion icon – humanitarian, Audrey Hepburn was known as being all of these.  She was born May 4, 1929 to Joseph Ruston and Baroness Ella van Heemstra, a Dutch aristocrat, in Ixelles, Belgium, a Brussels suburb.  She moved to London in 1948 and performed as a chorus girl in West End musicals. 





Hepburn & Gregory Peck in
"Roman Holiday"
As Holly Golightly in
"Breakfast at Tiffany's"
Hepburn broke into films in 1951 as an unbilled extra in “One Wild Oat.”  By 1953, she was winning an Oscar for Best Actress in “Roman Holiday” with Gregory Peck.  She’s also well remembered for her characters in “Sabrina,”  “Funny Face,” “My Fair Lady,” and “Breakfast at Tiffany’s.”  She is one of only a few actors who have received Academy, Grammy, Emmy and Tony Awards.

Humphry Bogart & Hepburn
in "Sabrina"
Givenchy & Hepburn
Besides her acting, Hepburn was known for her gamine figure.  Hubert de Givenchy was so smitten with her that he designed her costumes for “Sabrina” without receiving any wardrobe credit in the film.  The two formed a life-long friendship and Givenchy often referred to Hepburn as his muse for many designs.  She made ‘the little black dress’ a fashion staple when she wore Givenchy’s design in the 1961 movie, “Breakfast at Tiffany’s.”  That same year, she was inducted into the International Best Dressed Hall of Fame.

Son Sean & Hepburn
After being in the spotlight for fifteen years, Hepburn decided to retire in 1967 to raise her son.  She attempted a comeback in 1976 in “Robin and Marian” with Sean Connery.  Through the remainder of the seventies and eighties, she tried on various roles, but none that brought her critical acclaim.  Her last role in a motion picture was in 1988 in a cameo appearance as an angel in “Always.”

Hepburn and child
Hepburn with child
In 1988, she became the international Goodwill Ambassador for UNICEF.  Using her celebrity status, she was able to draw attention to the difficulties of displaced children in other countries.  During her five years with UNICEF, Hepburn traveled to over a dozen disadvantaged, third-world countries trying to gain assistance and awareness for starving children, and their need for food, medications, and  protection from violence, exploitation and abuse in their home countries.

Presidential Medal
of Freedom
In 1992, Hepburn was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom for her work with UNICEF.  The American Film Institute named her the third Greatest Female Star of All Time.








Audrey Hepburn
It was September 1992 when Hepburn began suffering from abdominal pains.  The diagnosis was abdominal cancer.  Surgery proved that the cancer had spread too far be removed. Hepburn decided to spend her last Christmas at home in Switzerland. 






Grave of Audrey Hepburn -
photo by Alexandra Spurk
Tolochenaz Cemetery
Upon hearing the news, longtime friend, Hubert de Givenchy sent her home in his private plane, filled with flowers.  Hepburn died on January 20, 1993 of appendiceal cancer at her home in Switzerland.  She was 63.  She is buried in Tolochenaz Cemetery in Vaud, Switzerland.


Joy

2 comments:

  1. WORLD EXCLUSIVE
    One of a kind home movie footage taken from behind the scenes, of the opening scene of "My Fair Lady" The Footage is Approximately 13 minutes long and shows Footage of Audrey Hepburn as they are filming the actual opening scene of the movie, it also includes Images of the set, back stage, and the extras and crew; a few images from the footage as well as the actual reel of footage itself can be seen on page 305 of Juliens Catalog;
    which you can get to by clicking or going here
    http://www.juliensauctions.com/images/auctions/2013/hollywood-legends/flipbook/icatalog.html#/305/zoomed

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