Audrey Kathleen Hepburn (née Ruston; 4 May 1929 – 20 January 1993) was a British actress. Recognised as a film and fashion icon, she was ranked by the American Film Institute as the third-greatest female screen legend from the Classical Hollywood cinema and was inducted into the International Best Dressed Hall of Fame List.
Born in Ixelles, Brussels, to an aristocratic family,
Hepburn spent parts of her childhood in Belgium, England, and the Netherlands.
She attended boarding school in Kent, England, from 1936 to 1939. With the
outbreak of World War II, she returned to the Netherlands. During the war, she
studied ballet at the Arnhem Conservatory, and by 1944, she performed ballet to
raise money to support the Dutch resistance. She studied ballet with Sonia
Gaskell in Amsterdam beginning in 1945, and with Marie Rambert in London from
1948. She began performing as a chorus girl in West End musical theatre
productions and then had minor appearances in several films. She rose to
stardom in the romantic comedy Roman Holiday (1953) alongside Gregory Peck, for
which she was the first actress to win an Oscar, a Golden Globe Award, and a
BAFTA Award for a single performance. That year, she also won a Tony Award for
Best Lead Actress in a Play for her performance in Ondine.
Hepburn went on to star in a number of successful films such
as Sabrina (1954), in which Humphrey Bogart and William Holden compete for her
affection; Funny Face (1957), a musical where she sang her own parts; the drama
The Nun's Story (1959); the romantic comedy Breakfast at Tiffany's (1961); the
thriller-romance Charade (1963), opposite Cary Grant; and the musical My Fair
Lady (1964). In 1967, she starred in the thriller Wait Until Dark, receiving
Academy Award, Golden Globe, and BAFTA nominations. After that, she only
occasionally appeared in films, one being Robin and Marian (1976) with Sean
Connery. Her last recorded performances were in the 1990 documentary television
series Gardens of the World with Audrey Hepburn for which she won a Primetime
Emmy Award for Outstanding Individual Achievement – Informational Programming.
Hepburn won three BAFTA Awards for Best British Actress in a
Leading Role. In recognition of her film career, she received BAFTA's Lifetime
Achievement Award, the Golden Globe Cecil B. DeMille Award, the Screen Actors
Guild Life Achievement Award, and the Special Tony Award. She remains one of
only eighteen people who have won Academy, Emmy, Grammy, and Tony Awards. Later
in life, Hepburn devoted much of her time to UNICEF, to which she had
contributed since 1954. Between 1988 and 1992, she worked in some of the
poorest communities of Africa, South America, and Asia. In December 1992, she
received the US Presidential Medal of Freedom in recognition of her work as a
UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador. A month later, she died of appendiceal cancer at her
home in Tolochenaz, Vaud, Switzerland, at the age of 63.
Early life
1929–1938: Family and
early childhood
Audrey Kathleen Ruston (later, Hepburn-Ruston) was born on 4
May 1929 at number 48 Rue Keyenveld in Ixelles, Brussels, Belgium. She was known
to her family as Adriaantje.
Hepburn's grandfather, Aarnoud van Heemstra, was the
governor of the Dutch colony of Dutch Guiana.
Hepburn's mother, Baroness Ella van Heemstra (12 June 1900 –
26 August 1984), was a Dutch noblewoman. Ella was the daughter of Baron Aarnoud
van Heemstra, who served as mayor of Arnhem from 1910 to 1920 and as governor
of Dutch Guiana from 1921 to 1928, and Baroness Elbrig Willemine Henriette van
Asbeck (1873–1939), a granddaughter of Count Dirk van Hogendorp. At age 19, she
married Jonkheer Hendrik Gustaaf Adolf Quarles van Ufford, an oil executive
based in Batavia, Dutch East Indies, where they subsequently lived. They had
two sons, Jonkheer Arnoud Robert Alexander Quarles van Ufford (1920–1979) and
Jonkheer Ian Edgar Bruce Quarles van Ufford (1924–2010), before divorcing in
1925, four years before Hepburn's birth.
Hepburn's father, Joseph Victor Anthony Ruston (21 November
1889 – 16 October 1980), was a British subject born in Auschitz, Bohemia,
Austria-Hungary. He was the son of Victor John George Ruston, of British and
Austrian background, and Anna Juliana Franziska Karolina Wels, who was of
Austrian origin and born in Kovarce. In 1923–1924, Joseph was an Honorary
British Consul in Semarang in the Dutch East Indies, and prior to his marriage
to Hepburn's mother, was married to Cornelia Bisschop, a Dutch heiress.
Although born with the surname Ruston, he later double-barreled his name to the
more "aristocratic"
Hepburn-Ruston, perhaps at Ella's insistence, as he mistakenly believed himself
descended from James Hepburn, third husband of Mary, Queen of Scots.
Hepburn's parents were married in Batavia, Dutch East
Indies, in September 1926. At the time, Ruston worked for a trading company,
but soon after the marriage, the couple moved to Europe, where he began working
for a loan company; reportedly tin merchants MacLaine, Watson and Company in
London. After a year in London, they moved to Brussels, where he had been
assigned to open a branch office. After three years of spending time traveling
between Brussels, Arnhem, The Hague and London, the family settled in the suburban
Brussels municipality of Linkebeek in 1932. Hepburn's early childhood was
sheltered and privileged. Her multinational background was enhanced through her
traveling between three countries with her family due to her father's job.
In the mid-1930s, Hepburn's parents recruited and collected
donations for the British Union of Fascists (B.U.F). Her mother met Adolf
Hitler and wrote favourable articles about him for the B.U.F. Joseph left the
family abruptly in 1935 after a "scene"
in Brussels when Adriaantje (as she was known in the family) was six; later she
often spoke of the effect on a child of being "dumped" as "children
need two parents". Joseph left the family and moved to London, where
he became more deeply involved in Fascist activity and never visited his
daughter abroad. Hepburn later professed that her father's departure was "the most traumatic event of my
life". That same year, her mother moved with Hepburn to her family's
estate in Arnhem; her half-brothers Alex and Ian (then 15 and 11) were sent to
The Hague to live with relatives. Joseph wanted her to be educated in England,
so in 1937, Hepburn was sent to live in Kent, England, where she, known as
Audrey Ruston or "Little
Audrey", was educated at a small private school in Elham. Hepburn's
parents officially divorced in 1938. In the 1960s, Hepburn renewed contact with
her father after locating him in Dublin through the Red Cross; although he
remained emotionally detached, Hepburn supported him financially until his
death.
1939–1945:
Experiences during World War II
After Britain declared war on Germany in September 1939,
Hepburn's mother moved her daughter back to Arnhem in the hope that, as during
the First World War, the Netherlands would remain neutral and be spared a
German attack. While there, Hepburn attended the Arnhem Conservatory from 1939
to 1945. She had begun taking ballet lessons during her last years at boarding
school, and continued training in Arnhem under the tutelage of Winja Marova,
becoming her "star pupil".
After the Germans invaded the Netherlands in 1940, Hepburn used the name Edda
van Heemstra, because an
"English-sounding" name was considered dangerous during the
German occupation. Her family was profoundly affected by the occupation, with
Hepburn later stating that "had we
known that we were going to be occupied for five years, we might have all shot
ourselves. We thought it might be over next week… six months… next year… that's
how we got through".
In 1942, her uncle, Otto van Limburg Stirum (husband of her
mother's older sister, Miesje), was executed in retaliation for an act of
sabotage by the resistance movement; while he had not been involved in the act,
he was targeted due to his family's prominence in Dutch society. These family
events were the turning point in the attitude of Hepburn's mother, who had
flirted with Nazism up to this point. Hepburn's half-brother Ian was deported
to Berlin to work in a German labour camp, and her other half-brother Alex went
into hiding to avoid the same fate.
"We saw young men
put against the wall and shot, and they'd close the street and then open it,
and you could pass by again... Don't discount anything awful you hear or read
about the Nazis. It's worse than you could ever imagine."—Hepburn on the Nazi occupation of the
Netherlands
After her uncle's death, Hepburn, Ella, and Miesje left
Arnhem to live with her grandfather, Baron Aarnoud van Heemstra, in nearby
Velp. Around that time Hepburn performed silent dance performances which
reportedly raised money for the Dutch resistance effort. It was long believed
that she participated in the Dutch resistance itself, but in 2016 the Airborne
Museum 'Hartenstein' reported that
after extensive research it had not found any evidence of such activities. A
2019 book by Robert Matzen provided evidence that she had supported the
resistance by giving "underground
concerts" to raise money, delivering the underground newspaper, and
taking messages and food to downed Allied flyers hiding in the woodlands north
of Velp. She also volunteered at a hospital that was the center of resistance
activities in Velp, and her family temporarily hid a British paratrooper in
their home during the Battle of Arnhem. In addition to other traumatic events,
she witnessed the transportation of Dutch Jews to concentration camps, later
stating that "more than once I was
at the station seeing trainloads of Jews being transported, seeing all these
faces over the top of the wagon. I remember, very sharply, one little boy
standing with his parents on the platform, very pale, very blond, wearing a
coat that was much too big for him, and he stepped on the train. I was a child
observing a child."
After the Allied landing on D-Day, living conditions grew
worse, and Arnhem was subsequently heavily damaged during Operation Market
Garden. During the 1944-45 Dutch famine, the Germans hindered or reduced the
already limited food and fuel supplies to civilians in retaliation for Dutch
railway strikes that were held to hinder the occupation. Like others, Hepburn's
family resorted to making flour out of tulip bulbs to bake cakes and biscuits,
a source of starchy carbohydrates; Dutch doctors provided recipes for using
tulip bulbs throughout the famine. Suffering from the effects of malnutrition,
after the war ended Hepburn become gravely ill with jaundice, anemia, edema,
and a respiratory infection. In October 1945, a letter from Ella asking for
help was received by Micky Burn, a former lover and British Army officer with
whom she had corresponded whilst he was a prisoner of war in Colditz Castle. He
sent back thousands of cigarettes, which she was able to sell on the black
market and so buy the penicillin which saved Hepburn's life. The Van Heemstra
family's financial situation changed significantly through the occupation,
during which time many of their properties (including their principal estate in
Arnhem) were damaged or destroyed.
Entertainment career
1945–1952: Ballet
studies and early acting roles
After the war ended in 1945, Hepburn moved with her mother
and siblings to Amsterdam, where she began ballet training under Sonia Gaskell,
a leading figure in Dutch ballet, and Russian teacher Olga Tarasova. Due to the
loss of the family fortune, Ella had to support them by working as a cook and
housekeeper for a wealthy family. Hepburn made her film debut playing an air
stewardess in Dutch in Seven Lessons (1948), an educational travel film made by
Charles van der Linden and Henry Josephson.
Later that year, Hepburn moved to London after accepting a
ballet scholarship with Ballet Rambert, which was then based in Notting Hill.
She supported herself with part-time work as a model, and dropped
"Ruston" from her surname. After she was told by Rambert that despite
her talent, her height and weak constitution (the after-effect of wartime
malnutrition) would make the status of prima ballerina unattainable, she
decided to concentrate on acting. While Ella worked in menial jobs to support
them, Hepburn appeared as a chorus girl in the West End musical theatre revues
High Button Shoes (1948) at the London Hippodrome, and Cecil Landeau's Sauce
Tartare (1949) and Sauce Piquante (1950) at the Cambridge Theatre. Also, in
1950, she worked as a dancer in an exceptionally "ambitious" revue, Summer Nights, at Ciro's London, a
prominent nightclub.
During her theatrical work, she took elocution lessons with
actor Felix Aylmer to develop her voice. After being spotted by the Ealing
Studios casting director, Margaret Harper-Nelson, while performing in Sauce
Piquante, Hepburn was registered as a freelance actress with the Associated
British Picture Corporation (ABPC). She appeared in the BBC Television play The
Silent Village, and in minor roles in the films One Wild Oat, Laughter in
Paradise, Young Wives' Tale, and The Lavender Hill Mob (all 1951). She was cast
in her first major supporting role in Thorold Dickinson's Secret People (1952),
as a prodigious ballerina, performing all of her own dancing sequences.
Hepburn then took a small role in a bilingual film, Monte
Carlo Baby (French: Nous Irons à Monte Carlo, 1952), which was filmed in Monte
Carlo. Coincidentally, French novelist Colette was at the Hôtel de Paris in
Monte Carlo during the filming, and decided to cast Hepburn in the title role
in the Broadway play Gigi. Hepburn went into rehearsals having never spoken on
stage, and required private coaching. When Gigi opened at the Fulton Theatre on
24 November 1951, she received praise for her performance, despite criticism
that the stage version was inferior to the French film adaptation. Life called
her a "hit", while The New
York Times stated that "her quality
is so winning and so right that she is the success of the evening". Hepburn
also received a Theatre World Award for the role. The play ran for 219
performances, closing on 31 May 1952, before going on tour, which began 13
October 1952 in Pittsburgh and visited Cleveland, Chicago, Detroit, Washington,
D. C., and Los Angeles, before closing on 16 May 1953 in San Francisco.
1953–1960: Roman
Holiday and stardom
Hepburn had her first starring role in Roman Holiday (1953),
playing Princess Ann, a European princess who escapes the reins of royalty and
has a wild night out with an American newsman (Gregory Peck). On 18 September
1951, shortly after Secret People was finished but before its premiere, Thorold
Dickinson made a screen test with the young starlet and sent it to director
William Wyler, who was in Rome preparing Roman Holiday. Wyler wrote a glowing
note of thanks to Dickinson, saying that "as
a result of the test, a number of the producers at Paramount have expressed
interest in casting her." The producers of the film had initially
wanted Elizabeth Taylor for the role, but Wyler was so impressed by Hepburn's
screen test that he cast her instead. Wyler later commented, "She had everything I was looking for:
charm, innocence, and talent. She also was very funny. She was absolutely
enchanting, and we said, 'That's the girl!'" Originally, the film was
to have had only Gregory Peck's name above its title, with "Introducing
Audrey Hepburn" beneath in smaller font. Peck suggested Wyler elevate her
to equal billing so her name appears before the title, and in type as large as
his: "You've got to change that
because she'll be a big star, and I'll look like a big jerk."
The film was a box-office success, and Hepburn gained
critical acclaim for her portrayal, unexpectedly winning an Academy Award for
Best Actress, a BAFTA Award for Best British Actress in a Leading Role, and a
Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Motion Picture Drama in 1953. In his
review in The New York Times, A. H. Weiler wrote: "Although she is not precisely a newcomer to films, Audrey
Hepburn, the British actress who is being starred for the first time as
Princess Anne, is a slender, elfin, and wistful beauty, alternately regal and
childlike in her profound appreciation of newly-found, simple pleasures and
love. Although she bravely smiles her acknowledgement of the end of that
affair, she remains a pitifully lonely figure facing a stuffy future."
Hepburn with co-star
William Holden in the film Sabrina (1954)
Hepburn was signed to a seven-picture contract with
Paramount, with 12 months in between films to allow her time for stage work.
She was featured on 7 September 1953 cover of Time magazine, and also became known
for her personal style. Following her success in Roman Holiday, Hepburn starred
in Billy Wilder's romantic Cinderella-story comedy Sabrina (1954), in which
wealthy brothers (Humphrey Bogart and William Holden) compete for the
affections of their chauffeur's innocent daughter (Hepburn). For her
performance, she was nominated for the 1954 Academy Award for Best Actress,
while winning the BAFTA Award for Best Actress in a Leading Role the same year.
Bosley Crowther of The New York Times stated that she was "a young lady of extraordinary range of sensitive and moving
expressions within such a frail and slender frame. She is even more luminous as
the daughter and pet of the servants' hall than she was as a princess last
year, and no more than that can be said."
Hepburn also returned to the stage in 1954, playing a water
nymph who falls in love with a human in the fantasy play Ondine on Broadway. A
critic for The New York Times commented that "somehow, Miss Hepburn is able to translate [its intangibles] into
the language of the theatre without artfulness or precociousness. She gives a
pulsing performance that is all grace and enchantment, disciplined by an instinct
for the realities of the stage". Her performance won her the 1954 Tony
Award for Best Performance by a Leading Actress in a Play three days after she
won the Academy Award for Roman Holiday, making her one of three actresses to
receive the Academy and Tony Awards for Best Actress in the same year (the
other two are Shirley Booth and Ellen Burstyn). During the production, Hepburn
and her co-star Mel Ferrer began a relationship, and were married on 25 September
1954 in Switzerland.
Although she appeared in no new film releases in 1955,
Hepburn received the Golden Globe for World Film Favorite that year. Having
become one of Hollywood's most popular box-office attractions, she starred in a
series of successful films during the remainder of the decade, including her
BAFTA- and Golden Globe-nominated role as Natasha Rostova in War and Peace
(1956), an adaptation of the Tolstoy novel set during the Napoleonic wars,
starring Henry Fonda and her husband Mel Ferrer. She exhibited her dancing abilities
in her debut musical film, Funny Face (1957), wherein Fred Astaire, a fashion
photographer, discovers a beatnik bookshop clerk (Hepburn) who, lured by a free
trip to Paris, becomes a beautiful model. Hepburn starred in another romantic
comedy, Love in the Afternoon (also 1957), alongside Gary Cooper and Maurice
Chevalier.
Hepburn played Sister Luke in The Nun's Story (1959), which
focuses on the character's struggle to succeed as a nun, alongside co-star
Peter Finch. The role produced a third Academy Award nomination for Hepburn,
and earned her a second BAFTA Award. A review in Variety reads: "Hepburn has her most demanding film
role, and she gives her finest performance", while Henry Hart in Films
in Review stated that her performance "will
forever silence those who have thought her less an actress than a symbol of the
sophisticated child/woman. Her portrayal of Sister Luke is one of the great performances
of the screen." Hepburn spent a year researching and working on the
role, saying, "I gave more time,
energy, and thought to this role than to any of my previous screen
performances".
Following The Nun's Story, Hepburn received a lukewarm
reception for starring with Anthony Perkins in the romantic adventure Green
Mansions (1959), in which she played Rima, a jungle girl who falls in love with
a Venezuelan traveler, and The Unforgiven (1960), her only western film, in
which she appeared opposite Burt Lancaster and Lillian Gish in a story of
racism against a group of Native Americans.
1961–1967: Breakfast
at Tiffany's and continued success
Hepburn as Holly
Golightly
Hepburn next starred as New Yorker Holly Golightly in Blake
Edwards's Breakfast at Tiffany's (1961), a film loosely based on the Truman
Capote novella of the same name. Capote disapproved of many changes that were
made to sanitize the story for the film adaptation, and would have preferred
Marilyn Monroe to have been cast in the role, although he also stated that Hepburn
"did a terrific job". The
character is considered one of the best-known in American cinema, and a
defining role for Hepburn. The dress she wears during the opening credits has
been considered an icon of the twentieth century, and perhaps the most famous "little black dress" of all
time. Hepburn stated that the role was "the
jazziest of my career" yet admitted: "I'm an introvert. Playing the extroverted girl was the hardest
thing I ever did." She was nominated for the Academy Award for Best
Actress for her performance.
The same year, Hepburn also starred in William Wyler's drama
The Children's Hour (1961), in which she and Shirley MacLaine played teachers
whose lives become troubled after two pupils accuse them of being lesbians.
Bosley Crowther of The New York Times was of the opinion that the film "is
not too well acted", with the exception of Hepburn, who "gives the impression of being
sensitive and pure" of its "muted
theme". Variety magazine also complimented Hepburn's "soft sensitivity, marvelous projection
and emotional understatement", adding that Hepburn and MacLaine "beautifully complement each
other".
Hepburn in Charade
(1963)
Hepburn next appeared opposite Cary Grant in the comic
thriller Charade (1963), playing a young widow pursued by several men who chase
after the fortune stolen by her murdered husband. The 59-year-old Grant, who
had previously withdrawn from the starring male lead roles in Roman Holiday and
Sabrina, was sensitive about his age difference with 34-year-old Hepburn, and
was uncomfortable about the romantic interplay. To satisfy his concerns, the
filmmakers agreed to alter the screenplay so that Hepburn's character was
pursuing him. The film turned out to be a positive experience for him; he said,
"All I want for Christmas is another
picture with Audrey Hepburn." The role earned Hepburn her third, and
final, competitive BAFTA Award, and another Golden Globe nomination. Critic
Bosley Crowther was less kind to her performance, stating that, "Hepburn is cheerfully committed to a
mood of how-nuts-can-you-be in an obviously comforting assortment of expensive
Givenchy costumes."
Hepburn reunited with her Sabrina co-star William Holden in
Paris When It Sizzles (1964), a screwball comedy in which she played the young
assistant of a Hollywood screenwriter, who aids his writer's block by acting
out his fantasies of possible plots. Its production was troubled by several
problems. Holden unsuccessfully tried to rekindle a romance with the
now-married Hepburn, and his alcoholism was beginning to affect his work. After
principal photography began, she demanded the dismissal of cinematographer
Claude Renoir after seeing what she felt were unflattering dailies.
Superstitious, she also insisted on dressing room 55 because that was her lucky
number and required that Hubert de Givenchy, her long-time designer, be given a
credit in the film for her perfume. Dubbed "marshmallow-weight
hokum" by Variety upon its release in April, the film was "uniformly panned" but critics
were kinder to Hepburn's performance, describing her as "a refreshingly individual creature in an era of the exaggerated
curve".
Hepburn's second film released in 1964 was George Cukor's
film adaptation of the stage musical My Fair Lady, which premiered in October.
Soundstage wrote that "not since
Gone with the Wind has a motion picture created such universal excitement as My
Fair Lady", although Hepburn's casting in the role of Cockney flower
girl Eliza Doolittle was a source of dispute. Julie Andrews, who had originated
the role on stage, was not offered the part because producer Jack L. Warner
thought Hepburn was a more "bankable"
proposition. Hepburn initially asked Warner to give the role to Andrews but was
eventually cast. Further friction was created when, although non-singer Hepburn
had sung in Funny Face and had lengthy vocal preparation for the role in My
Fair Lady, her vocals were dubbed by Marni Nixon, whose voice was considered more
suitable to the role. Hepburn was initially upset and walked off the set when
informed.
Critics applauded Hepburn's performance. Crowther wrote
that, "The happiest thing about [My
Fair Lady] is that Audrey Hepburn superbly justifies the decision of Jack
Warner to get her to play the title role." Gene Ringgold of Soundstage
also commented that, "Audrey Hepburn
is magnificent. She is Eliza for the ages", while adding, "Everyone agreed that if Julie Andrews
was not to be in the film, Audrey Hepburn was the perfect choice." The
reviewer in Time magazine said her "graceful,
glamorous performance" was "the
best of her career". Andrews won an Academy Award for Mary Poppins at
the 1964 37th Academy Awards and Hepburn earned Best Actress nominations for
Golden Globe and New York Film Critics Circle awards.
As the decade carried on, Hepburn appeared in an assortment
of genres including the heist comedy How to Steal a Million (1966). Hepburn
played the daughter of a famous art collector, whose collection consists
entirely of forgeries which are about to be exposed as fakes. Her character
plays the part of a dutiful daughter trying to help her father with the help of
a man played by Peter O'Toole. The film was followed by two films in 1967. The
first was Two for the Road, a non-linear and innovative British dramedy that
traces the course of a couple's troubled marriage. Director Stanley Donen said
that Hepburn was freer and happier than he had ever seen her, and he credited
that to co-star Albert Finney. The second, Wait Until Dark, is a suspense
thriller in which Hepburn demonstrated her acting range by playing the part of
a terrorized blind woman. Filmed on the brink of her divorce, it was a
difficult film for her, as husband Mel Ferrer was its producer. She lost
fifteen pounds under the stress, but she found solace in co-star Richard Crenna
and director Terence Young. Hepburn earned her fifth and final competitive
Academy Award nomination for Best Actress; Bosley Crowther affirmed, "Hepburn plays the poignant role, the
quickness with which she changes and the skill with which she manifests terror
attract sympathy and anxiety to her and give her genuine solidity in the final
scenes."
Comments
Post a Comment