The Best of Audrey Hepburn

Page 1

The

Best

of

Audrey Hepburn by Silvana N.S



The

Best

of

Audrey Hepburn



The Best of

Audrey Hepburn

by Silvana N.S


08 Audey Hepburn

10 Roman Holiday 1953

14 Sabrina 1954

18

22

Funny Face 1957

The Nun’s Story 1959


26 Breakfast at Tiffany’s 1961

30 Charade 1963

34

38

My Fair Lady 1964

Two for the Road 1967

42 Film Collections


Audrey Hepburn “ My career is a complete mystery to me. It's been a total surprise since the first day ” Audrey Hepburn was born Audrey Kathleen Hepburn-Ruston on May 4, 1929 in Brussels, Belgium. She was a blue-blood and a cosmopolitan from birth. Her mother, Ella van Heemstra, was a Dutch baroness; Audrey's father, Joseph Victor Anthony Hepburn-Ruston, was born in Úzice, Bohemia, of English and Austrian descent, and worked in business. Her parents separated and when war broke out Audrey's mother made the fateful decision to return to her home town of Arnhem, believing that Holland would remain neutral. Audrey adopted the less Englishsounding pseudonym of Edda Van Heemstra and risked her life delivering messages for the Dutch Resistance and dancing for them at clandestine fundraisers. "The best audience I ever had made not a

single sound at the end of my performance," she once remarked. After the war she resumed her ballet studies first in Amsterdam and then, from 1948, at the Ballet Rambert in London where she learned that she lacked the strength to be a top ballerina and decided to concentrate on acting. While filming on location in 1950 she was spotted by French novelist Colette who was searching for an actress for the title character in her Broadway play Gigi. On seeing her Colette said: "Voila Gigi."


alternative feminine ideal that appealed more to women than to men. With her short hair style, thick eyebrows, slim body and "gamine" looks, she presented a look which young women found easier to emulate than those of more sexual film stars.

The play ran for 219 performances and the star won a Theatre World Award in 1952. The following year she beat Elizabeth Taylor for the role of the princess in Roman Holiday. Her leading man, Hollywood star Gregory Peck, insisted she should have equal billing with him, telling director William Wyler: "If you don't do it she'll be a big star and I'll look like a big jerk." Peck became a lifelong friend.

“ When I've made about 70 films and the public still wants me, then I shall think of myself as a star �

Over the next decade Audrey's hits included Sabrina, The Nun's Story and My Fair Lady German Occupation. Making more than 50 trips, Hepburn visited UNICEF projects in Asia, Africa, and Central and South America. Hepburn was noted for her fashion choices and distinctive look, to the extent that journalist Mark Tungate has described her as a recognisable brand. When she first rose to stardom in Roman Holiday, she was seen as an

Audrey married actor Mel Ferrer in 1954 and after two miscarriages gave birth to son Sean in 1960. She and Ferrer divorced in 1968 after 14 years though the marriage had been unhappy for much longer. A second union that year to Italian psychiatrist Andrew Dotti followed by the birth of son Luca meant she all but retired from acting. From the late 1980s she committed herself to her role as goodwill ambassador for Unicef. Her first mission was to Ethiopia in 1988 and for 12 years she travelled to Turkey, Latin America, Sudan, Bangladesh, Vietnam and Somalia and addressed the US Congress. Audrey Hepburn died on January 20, 1993 in Tolochnaz, Switzerland, from appendicular cancer. She had made a total of 31 high quality movies. Her elegance and style will always be remembered in film history . Almost 22 years after her death, Audrey Hepburn is still regarded as one of the most beautiful women who ever lived.


Roman Holiday 1953 A bored and sheltered princess escapes her guardians and falls in love with an American newsman in Rome.


Directed by

William Wyler

Produced by

William Wyler

Screenplay by

Dalton Trumbo Ian McLellan Hunter John Dighton

Story by

Dalton Trumbo

Distributed by

Paramount Pictures

Release Date

August 27, 1953

Running Time

118 minutes

Country

United States

Language

English, Italian

Box OfďŹ ce

$ 12 million

Joe Bradley is a reporter for the American News Service in Rome, a job he doesn't much like as he would rather work for what he considers a real news agency back in the States. He is on the verge of getting fired when he, sleeping in and getting caught in a lie by his boss Hennessy, misses an interview with HRH Princess Ann, who is on a goodwill tour of Europe, Rome only her latest stop. However, he thinks he may have stumbled upon a huge scoop. Princess Ann has officially called off all her Rome engagements due to illness. In reality, he recognizes the photograph of her as being the young well but simply dressed drunk woman he rescued off the street last night (as he didn't want to turn her into the police for being a vagrant), and who is still in his small studio apartment sleeping off her hangover. What Joe doesn't know is that she is really sleeping off the effects of a sedative given to her by her doctor to calm her down after an anxiety attack, that anxiety because she hates

her regimented life where she has no freedom and must always do and say the politically correct things, not what is truly on her mind or in her heart. In wanting just a little freedom, she seized upon a chance opportunity to escape from the royal palace where she was staying, albeit with no money in her pockets. Joe believes he can get an exclusive interview with her without she even knowing that he's a reporter or that he's interviewing her. As Joe accompanies "Anya Smith" - her name as she tells him in trying to hide her true identity - around Rome on her incognito day of freedom somewhat unaware that the secret service is searching for her, along for the ride is Joe's photographer friend, Irving Radovich, who Joe has tasked with clandestinely taking photographs of her, those photos to accompany the story. As the day progresses, Joe and Ann slowly start to fall for each other. Their feelings for each other affect what both decide to do, Ann with regard to her royal duties, Joe with regard to the story, and both with regard to if there is a future for them together.


Casts & Awards Academy Award for Best Actress (Audrey Hepburn) Academy Award for Best Costume Design, Black-and-White (Edith Head) Academy Award for Writing (Motion Picture Story) (Dalton Trumbo)* BAFTA Award for Best British Actress (Audrey Hepburn) Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture Actress — Drama (Audrey Hepburn) New York Film Critics Circle Award for Best Actress (Audrey Hepburn) Writers Guild of America Award for Best Written American Comedy (Ian McLellan Hunter and John Dighton)

Gregory Peck “Joe Bradley”


Audrey Hepburn

“Princess AnnAnya ‘Smittie’ Smith”

Eddie Albert

“Irving Radovich”

Hartley Power “Hennessy, Joe's editor”

Harcourt Williams “the Ambassador of Princess Ann's country”

Margaret Rawlings “Countess Vereberg”

Tullio Carminati “General Provno”

Paolo Carlini “Mario Delani”

Claudio Ermelli “Giovanni”


Sabrina 1954 A romantic love story of Sabrina, the daughter of a chauffeur, who falls in love with the playboy son of her father’s employer


Directed by

Billy Wilder

Produced by

Billy Wilder

Screenplay by

Billy Wilder Ernest Lehman Samuel A.Taylor

Based on

Sabrina Fair, 1953 play by Samuel A.Taylor

Distributed by

Paramount Pictures

Release Date

September 9, 1954

Running Time

113 minutes

Country

United States

Language

English

Box OfďŹ ce

$ 4 million

Sabrina Fairchild grew up in an apartment over a garage on the sprawling Long Island estate owned by the Larrabees, for who her widowed father works as the family chauffeur. Sabrina has always been in love from afar with the Larrabees' younger son, several times married but currently single playboy David Larrabee, who has never noticed her except as the gangly kid on the estate. The Larrabees' older son, Linus Larrabee, has always been the responsible hard working one of the two

siblings, he focused so much on making money now running the Larrabee conglomerate of businesses to have a personal life. As such, neither he or Sabrina ever really noticed each other beyond their roles on the estate, not really knowing anything about the other. Linus is not averse to using David's personal life for business benefit, such as publicly announcing David's imminent marriage to Elizabeth Tyson, the daughter of a prospective business partner, an engagement about which David knows nothing. David likes Elizabeth as a casual girlfriend, but he has no intention of getting remarried. This move coincides with Sabrina's return after a two year absence away at culinary school in Paris, something she initially did not want to do in not wanting to be away from David, because and despite her unrequited love for him, which was also one of the reasons Fairchild sent her away. Sabrina's time away has let her grow into her own skin, she now believing that she truly can shoot for the moon, whether that moon be David or anything else. David falls in his brand of love with this new sophisticated version of Sabrina, who he didn't even recognize upon first sighting. Linus, in turn, subversively takes whatever direct action to ensure David marries Elizabeth regardless of his new infatuation with Sabrina. Through these proceedings, Sabrina may truly come to realize what her moon is and if it is achievable, that road which may have some possible heartache along the way.


Audrey Hepburn “Sabrina Fairchild”

Humphrey Bogart “Linus Larrabee”


John Williams “Thomas Fairchild”

Walter Hampden “Oliver Larrabee”

Nella Walke “Maude Larrabee”

Martha Hyer “Elizabeth Tyson”

Marcel Dalin “Baron St. Fontanel”

William Holden “David Larrabee”

Ellen Corby “Miss McCardle”

Casts & Awards Academy Award for Best Costume Design (Edith Head)


Funny Face 1957 An impromptu fashion shoot at a book store brings about a new fashion model discovery


the editor of a leading fashion magazine, to hire Jo as their latest magazine campaign model. Directed by

Stanley Donen

Produced by

Roger Edens

Written by

Leonard Gershe

Distributed by

Paramount Pictures

Release Date

February 13, 1957

Running Time

103 minutes

Country

United States

Language

English, French

Box Office

$ 2.5 million

Fashion photographer Dick Avery, in search for an intellectual backdrop for an air-headed model, expropriates a Greenwich Village bookstore. When the photo session is over the store is left in a shambles, much to salesgirl Jo Stockton's dismay. Avery stays behind to help her clean up. Later, he examines the photos taken there and sees Jo in the background of one shot. He is intrigued by her unique appearance and convinces Maggie Prescott,

The editor tricks Jo into coming to the company and offered her a modeling contract. She adamantly refuses at first, running for her life with the magazine’s employees chasing her. However, Avery manages to woe her by complimenting her unusual looks. Knowing her passion for Paris, where her favorite philosophy professor resides and whom she has been eagerly anticipate to meet, he also convinces her that it was a win-win strategy for both the moagazine and her. Jo finally reluctantly accepts the contract only because it includes a trip to Paris. Eventually, her snobbish attitude toward the job softens, and Jo begins to enjoy the work, through a series of incidents. She is transformed into an elegant model much to the surprise of Prescott and her designer and quickly adapts into her newfound modelling work. It doesn’t take long for Jo to also take notice of her handsome photographer, as Avery is likewise showering her with affection. Problem arises when she finally meet the professor she is so fond to meet, since as it turns out he was interested in Jo in more ways than one. Oblivious to his intention, Jo must now decide which is more important to her, her newfound career or her new encounter in Paris.


Casts Kay Thompson “Maggie Prescott”

Michel Auclair “Professor Emile Flostre”

Robert Flemyng “Paul Duval”

Dovima as “Marion”


Fred Astaire “Dick Avery”

Audrey Hepburn “Jo Stockton”


The Nun’s Story 1959 A story of a young Belgian woman who decides to enter a convent and make the many sacrifices required by her choice.


Distributed by

Paramount Pictures

Release Date

July 18, 1959

Directed by

Fred Zinnemann

Produced by

Henry Blanke

Running Time

149 minutes

Written by

Robert Anderson

Country

United States

Based on

The Nun’s Story, 1956 novel by Kathryn Hulme

Language

English

Box OfďŹ ce

$ 12.8 million

In 1930, in Belgium, Gabrielle van der Mal is the stubborn daughter of the prominent surgeon Dr. Pascin Van Der Mal that decides to leave her the upper-class family to enter to a convent, expecting to work as nun in Congo with tropical diseases. She says good-bye to her sisters Louise and Marie; to her brother Pierre; and to her beloved father, and subjects herself to the stringent rules of the retrograde institution, including interior silent and excessive humbleness and humiliation. After passing high in her class but not without some spiritual conflict, after struggling with a request by Mother Superior to purposely fail her exam as a proof of her humility, she discovers to her disappointment that she has been assigned to go not to the Congo but instead to a mental hospital, where she assists with the most difficult and violent cases though resenting her tropical medicine knowledge going to waste there.

After a long period working in a mental institution, Gaby is finally assigned to go to Congo, where she works with the Atheist and cynical, but brilliant, Dr. Fortunati. Sister Luke proves to be very efficient nurse and assistant, and Dr. Fortunati miraculous heals her tuberculosis. Years later, she is ordered to return to Belgium and when her motherland is invaded by the Germans, she learns that her beloved father was murdered by the enemy while he was helping wounded members of the resistance. Sister Luke's long struggle with obedience starts to take its toll, slowly becoming too much for her to sustain, as she is forced into repeated compromises to deal with the reality of the Nazi occupation, including the fact that they have killed her father.


Peggy Ashcroft

“Mother Mathilde”

Audrey Hepburn “Sister Luke (Gabrielle "Gaby" Van Der Mal)”


Casts Edith Evans “Rev. Mother Emmanuel” Dean Jagger “Dr. Hubert Van Der Mal” Mildred Dunnock “Sister Margharita”

Peter Finch

“Doctor Fortunati”

Beatrice Straight “Mother Christoph” Patricia Collinge “Sister William” Rosalie Crutchley “Sister Eleanor” Ruth White “Mother Marcella” Barbara O'Neil “Mother Didyma”


Breakfast at Tiffany’s 1961 A struggling writer moves into a New York apartment building and becomes intrigued by his pretty, quirky neighbor


Directed by

Blake Edwards

Produced by

Martin Jurow Richard Shepherd

Screenplay by

George Axelrod

Based on

Breakfast at Tiffany’s by Truman Capote

Distributed by

Paramount Pictures

Release Date

October 5, 1961

Running Time

114 minutes

Country

United States

Language

English, Portuguese

Box OfďŹ ce

$ 14 million

Holly Golightly is a flighty Manhattan party girl, who expects "money for the powder room as well as for cab fare" for her companionship. She has even gotten a lucrative once weekly job to visit notorious convict Sally Tomato in Sing Sing, she needing to report back to Sally's lawyer the weather report that Sally tells her as proof of her visits with him in return for payment.

Her aspirations for glamor and wealth are epitomized by the comfort she feels at Tiffany's, the famous high end jewelry retailer where she believes nothing can ever go wrong. Her resolve for this wealth is strengthened, if not changed slightly in focus, upon news from home. Into Holly's walk-up apartment building and thus her life is Paul Varjak, a writer who Holly states reminds her of her brother Fred, who she has not seen in years and who is currently enlisted in the army. The two quickly become friends in their want for something outside of their current lot. Paul's situation is closer to Holly's than he would like to admit. Having not had anything published in over five years, he is a kept man by his wealthy married "decorator", Emily Eustace Failenson - who he refers to as 2E which allows him not to write, which he no longer truly does. Eventually, Paul falls for Holly, and wants to take care of her, instead of being taken care of as is his current situation. Although Holly also seems to be falling for him, the question becomes whether Paul can fulfill Holly's life aspirations, and if not what needs to change for there even to be the possibility of a future for them.


Audrey Hepburn “Holly Golightly”

George Peppard “Paul Vajak (Fred)”


Patricia Neal “Mrs. Emily Eustace "2E" Failenson” Buddy Ebsen “Doc Golightly” Martin Balsam “O.J. Berman”

Casts & Awards Golder Globe Awards for Best Actress (musical or comedy) (Audrey Hepburn)

Mickey Rooney “I.Y. Yunioshi”

Academy Awards for Best Score of a Dramatic or Comedy Picture (Henry Mancini)

Alan Reed “Sally Tomato”

Academy Awards for Best Original Song : “Moon River” (Henry Mancini, Johny Mercer)

José Luis de Vilallonga “José da Silva Pereira” Stanley Adams “Rutherford "Rusty" Trawler” John McGiver “Tiffany's salesman”

Golden Globe Awards for Best Picture (musical or comedy) Grammy Awards for Best Soundtract Album or Recording or Score (Henry Mancini) Writers Guild of America, East for Best Written American Drama (George Axelrod)


Charade 1963 Romance and suspense ensue in Paris as a woman is pursued by several men who want a fortune her murdered husband had stolen. Who can she trust?


(OSS), absconded with $250,000 worth of their gold bars that were destined for the French Resistance. The US government wants that money back.

Directed by

Stanley Donen

Produced by

Stanley Donen

Screenplay by

Peter Stone

Based on

The Unsuspecting Wife, 1961 short story by Peter Stone Marc Behm

Distributed by

Universal Pictures

Release Date

December 5, 1963

Running Time

113 minutes

Country

United States

Language

English

Box Office

$ 13 million

Regina Lampert, a Paris based American, has decided to divorce her Swiss husband, Charles Lampert, because of the secrets and lies that have pervaded their marriage, she coming to the conclusion that she no longer loves him and really knows nothing about him. Before she can make that request to Charles, he is found dead, seemingly pushed off a Paris to Bordeaux train. While Regina was on holiday in Megève, Charles sold all their possessions making $250,000 in the process, and seemed to be on his way to the coast to leave the country for South America probably for good. The money, however, was not among his possessions on the train, those possessions which are returned to Regina. Regina further learns from Hamilton Bartholomew of the CIA that they were after him, Charles Lampert only the primary alias he has been using of late. During WWII, Charles, a member of the Office of Strategic Services

Charles had a few partners in crime among the OSS, namely four men: Tex Panthollow, Leopold Gideon, Herman Scobie and Carson Dyle. Besides Dyle who died in the war, Regina knows the other three men are still alive, as she recognized them from a photograph as the three unknown men who attended Charles' funeral. They are now after her as they also want the money which they believe she has, and will kill to get it. She knows nothing about the money, but realizes that it is her duty to find it to return it to its rightful owner, namely the US government, and that it may save her life from Charles' partners. Clues to the money's whereabouts may be among those possessions Charles had on the train. Coming to Regina's aid is Peter Joshua, a man she met while she was in Megève. As Peter helps her, she quickly falls in love with him, and he seemingly with her. Shortly thereafter, she also comes to the realization that Peter is keeping as many secrets as Charles did, and as such he is a person she perhaps should not be trusting.


Cary Grant

“Brian Cruikshank

(alias Peter Joshua, alias Alexander "Alex" Dyle, alias Adam Canfield)”

Audrey Hepburn “Regina "Reggie" Lampert”


Walter Matthau “Carson Dyle (alias Hamilton Bartholomew)”

Ned Glass “Leopold W. Gideon”

Casts & Awards BAFTA Awards for Best British Actress (Audrey Hepburn)

James Coburn “Tex Panthollow”

David di Donatello, Golden Plate Edgar Award for Best Motion Picture (Peter Stone)

George Kennedy “Herman Scobie”

Laurel Award for Top Comedy, 3rd place Laurel Award for Top Male Comedy Performance, 2nd place

Jacques Marin “Insp. Edouard Grandpierre”

(Cary Grant) Laurel Award for Top female Comedy Performance, 3rd place (Audrey Hepburn)

Thomas Chelimsky “Jean-Louis Gaudel”

Laurel Award for Top Song “Charade”, 5th place (Henry Mancini)


My Fair Lady 1964 A misogynistic and snobbish phonetics professor agrees to a wager that he can take a flower girl and make her presentable in high society.


Directed by

George Cukor

Produced by

Jack L. Warner

Screenplay by

Alan Jay Lerner

Based on

My Fair Lady by Alan Jay Lerner Pygmalion by George Bernard Shaw

Distributed by

Warner Bros.

Release Date

November 9, 1964

Running Time

170 minutes

Country

United States

Language

English

Box OfďŹ ce

$ 72 million

Henry Higgins (Rex Harrison), an arrogant, irascible professor of phonetics, boasts to a new acquaintance, Colonel Pickering (Wilfrid Hyde-White), that he can teach any woman to speak so "properly" that he could pass her off as a duchess. The person whom he is shown thus teaching is one Eliza Doolittle (Audrey Hepburn), a young woman with a horrendous Cockney accent who is selling flowers on the street. After overhearing this, Eliza finds her way to the professor's house and offers to pay for speech lessons, so that she can work in a flower shop. Pickering is intrigued and wagers that Higgins cannot back up his claim; Higgins takes Eliza on free of charge as a challenge to his skills. Eliza goes through many forms of speech training, such as speaking with marbles in her mouth and trying to recite the sentence "In Hertford, Hereford, Hampshire, hurricanes hardly ever happen" without dropping the 'h', and to say "The rain in Spain stays mainly in the plain" rather than "The rine in spine sties minely in the pline". At first, she makes no progress (due to Higgins's harsh approach to teaching), but just as she, Higgins, and Pickering are exhausted and about to give up, Higgins softens his

attitude and gives an eloquent speech about the beauty and history behind the English language. The bet is won when Eliza successfully poses as a mysterious lady of patently noble rank at an embassy ball, despite the unexpected presence of a Hungarian phonetics expert trained by Higgins. Higgins's callous treatment of Eliza afterwards, especially his indifference to her future prospects, leads her to walk out on him, leaving him mystified by her ingratitude. When she is gone however, he comes to the horrified realization that he has "grown accustomed to her face."


Stanley Holloway “Alfred P. Doolittle”

Gladys Cooper “Mrs. Higgins”

Jeremy Brett “Freddy Eynsford-Hill” Bill Shirley as Freddy's singing voice

Casts & Awards

Wilfrid Hyde-White “Colonel Hugh Pickering”

Academy Award for Best Picture – Jack L. Warner Academy Award for Directing – George Cukor Academy Award for Best Actor – Rex Harrison Academy Award for Best Cinematography – Harry Stradling

Theodore Bikel “Zoltan Karpathy”

Academy Award for Sound – George R. Groves, Warner Brothers Studio Academy Award for Best Adaptation or Treatment Score – André Previn Academy Award for Best Art Direction – Gene Allen, Cecil Beaton, and George James Hopkins Academy Award for Costume Design – Cecil Beaton

Mona Washbourne “Mrs. Pearce”

Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy Golden Globe Award for Best Director – Motion Picture – George Cukor Golden Globe Award for Best Actor – Motion Picture Musical or Comedy – Rex Harrison

Isobel Elsom “Mrs. Eynsford-Hill”

BAFTA Award for Best Film from any source


Audrey Hepburn “Eliza Doolittle”

Marni Nixon as Eliza’s singing voice

Rex Harrison “Professor Henry Higgins”


Two for the Road 1967 A couple in the south of France non-sequentially spin down the highways of infidelity in their troubled ten-year marriage


The ten-year marriage of Mark and Joanna Wallace is on the rocks. In flashback they recall their first meeting, memorable moments in their courtship and early wedded life, their travels through Europe, their broken vow never to have children, and their increasing tensions that led to both of them having extra-marital affairs.Tensions between the couple are evident, and as they journey south they both remember and discuss several past journeys along the same road. Directed by

Stanley Donen

Produced by

Stanley Donen

Written by

Frederic Raphael

Distributed by

20th Century Fox

Release Date

September 20, 1967

Running Time

111 minutes

Country

United Kingdom

Language

English

Box OfďŹ ce

$ 12 million

The earliest memory is their first meeting on a ferry crossing in 1954, when Mark was travelling alone and Joanna was part of a girls' choir. They meet again when Joanna's choir bus goes off the road and Mark helps get them back on the road. When the other girls get chickenpox, Joanna and Mark unexpectedly wind up hitchhiking south together. The next story involves the two newlyweds travelling with Mark's ex-girlfriend Cathy Manchester, her husban and daughter Ruth 'Ruthie' from the USA. Ruthie is not given any limits, and her behaviour frustrates Mark and Jo. Eventually Ruthie reveals the unkind descriptions of Joanna her parents have made in private. At this point Mark and Joanna decide to travel alone. At one point, they even sit alone dinning

without speaking to each other, referring such circumstances as what becomes of married people. Nevertheless, at the end of their present struggle, the couple honestly analyse the fears and insecurities which have plagued them throughout their life as a couple.


Eleanor Bron “Cathy Maxwell-Manchester”

William Daniels “Howard 'Howie' Maxwell-Manchester”

Gabrielle Middleton “Ruth 'Ruthie' Maxwell-Manchester”

Claude Dauphin “Maurice Dalbret”

Casts & Awards Cinema Writers Circle Award for Best Foreign Film (Mejor Película Extranjera) San Sebastián International Film Festival Golden Seashell

Nadia Gray “Françoise Dalbret”

(Stanley Donen) Writers' Guild of Great Britain Merit Scroll for Best British Comedy Screenplay (Frederic Raphael)

Georges Descrières “David”

Writers' Guild of Great Britain Merit Scroll for Best British Original Screenplay (Frederic Raphael)


Audrey Hepburn “Joanna 'Jo' Wallace”

Albert Finney

“Mark 'Marcus' Wallace”


Film Collections


Dutch in Seven Lessons

1948

One Wild Oat

1951

Young Wives' Tale

1951

Laughter in Paradise

1951

The Lavender Hill Mob

1951

Secret People

1952

Monte Carlo Baby

1952

Roman Holiday

1953

Sabrina

1954

War and Peace

1956

Love in the Afternoon

1957

Funny Face

1957

Green Mansions

1959

The Nun's Story

1959

The Unforgiven

1960

Breakfast at Tiffany's

1961

The Children's Hour

1961

Charade

1963

Paris When It Sizzles

1964

My Fair Lady

1964

How to Steal a Million

1966

Two for the Road

1967

Wait Until Dark

1967

Robin and Marian

1976

Bloodline

1979

They All Laughed

1981

Always

1989




Almost 22 years after her death, Audrey Hepburn is still regarded as one of the most beautiful women who ever lived. This book compiles some of the most notable movies she acted in during her career as one of the most recognisable actress and style icon in the world


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