1968–1993: Semi-retirement and final projects
After 1967, Hepburn chose to devote more time to her family
and acted only occasionally in the following decades. She attempted a comeback
playing Maid Marian in the period piece Robin and Marian (1976) with Sean
Connery co-starring as Robin Hood, which was moderately successful. Roger Ebert
praised Hepburn's chemistry with Connery, writing, "Connery and Hepburn seem to have arrived at a tacit
understanding between themselves about their characters. They glow. They really
do seem in love. And they project as marvelously complex, fond, tender people;
the passage of 20 years has given them grace and wisdom." Hepburn
reunited with director Terence Young in the production of Bloodline (1979),
sharing top-billing with Ben Gazzara, James Mason, and Romy Schneider. The
film, an international intrigue amid the jet-set, was a critical and box-office
failure. Hepburn's last starring role in a feature film was opposite Gazzara in
the comedy They All Laughed (1981), directed by Peter Bogdanovich. The film was
overshadowed by the murder of one of its stars, Dorothy Stratten, and received
only a limited release. Six years later, Hepburn co-starred with Robert Wagner
in a made-for-television caper film, Love Among Thieves (1987).
After finishing her last motion picture role—a cameo
appearance as an angel in Steven Spielberg's Always (1989)—Hepburn completed
only two more entertainment-related projects, both critically acclaimed. Gardens
of the World with Audrey Hepburn were a PBS documentary series, which was
filmed on location in seven countries in the spring and summer of 1990. A
one-hour special preceded it in March 1991, and the series itself began its
national PBS premiere on 24 January 1993, the day of her funeral services in
Tolochenaz. For the "Flower
Gardens" episode, Hepburn was posthumously awarded the 1993 Emmy Award
for Outstanding Individual Achievement – Informational Programming. The other
project was a spoken word album, Audrey Hepburn's Enchanted Tales, which
features readings of classic children's stories and was recorded in 1992. It
earned her a posthumous Grammy Award for Best Spoken Word Album for Children.
Humanitarian work
In the 1950s, Hepburn narrated two radio programmes for
UNICEF, re-telling children's stories of war. In 1989, Hepburn was appointed a
Goodwill Ambassador of UNICEF. On her appointment, she stated that she was
grateful for receiving international aid after enduring the German occupation
as a child, and wanted to show her gratitude to the organisation.
1988–1992
Hepburn's first field mission for UNICEF was to Ethiopia in
1988. She visited an orphanage in Mek'ele that housed 500 starving children and
had UNICEF send food. Of the trip, she said,
I have a broken heart. I feel desperate. I can't stand the
idea that two million people are in imminent danger of starving to death, many
of them children, [and] not because there isn't tons of food sitting in the
northern port of Shoa. It can't be distributed. Last spring, Red Cross and
UNICEF workers were ordered out of the Northern provinces because of two
simultaneous civil wars... I went into rebel country and saw mothers and their
children who had walked for ten days, even three weeks, looking for food,
settling onto the desert floor into makeshift camps where they may die.
Horrible. That image is too much for me. The 'Third World' is a term I don't like very much, because we're all
one world. I want people to know that the largest part of humanity is
suffering.
In August 1988, Hepburn went to Turkey on an immunization
campaign. She called Turkey "the
loveliest example" of UNICEF's capabilities. Of the trip, she said, "The army gave us their trucks, the
fishmongers gave their wagons for the vaccines, and once the date was set, it
took ten days to vaccinate the whole country. Not bad." In October,
Hepburn went to South America. Of her experiences in Venezuela and Ecuador,
Hepburn told the United States Congress, "I
saw tiny mountain communities, slums, and shantytowns receive water systems for
the first time by some miracle – and the miracle is UNICEF. I watched boys
build their own schoolhouse with bricks and cement provided by UNICEF."
Hepburn toured Central America in February 1989, and met
with leaders in Honduras, El Salvador, and Guatemala. In April, she visited
Sudan with Wolders as part of a mission called "Operation Lifeline". Because of civil war, food from aid
agencies had been cut off. The mission was to ferry food to southern Sudan.
Hepburn said, "I saw but one glaring
truth: These are not natural disasters but man-made tragedies for which there
is only one man-made solution – peace." In October 1989, Hepburn and
Wolders went to Bangladesh. John Isaac, a UN photographer, said, "Often the kids would have flies all
over them, but she would just go hug them. I had never seen that. Other people
had a certain amount of hesitation, but she would just grab them. Children
would just come up to hold her hand, touch her – she was like the Pied
Piper."
In October 1990, Hepburn went to Vietnam, in an effort to
collaborate with the government for national UNICEF-supported immunization and
clean water programmes. In September 1992, four months before she died, Hepburn
went to Somalia. Calling it "apocalyptic",
she said, "I walked into a nightmare.
I have seen famine in Ethiopia and Bangladesh, but I have seen nothing like
this – so much worse than I could possibly have imagined. I wasn't prepared for
this." Though scarred by what she had seen, Hepburn still had hope
stating:
As we move into the
twenty-first century, there is much to reflect upon. We look around us and see
that the promises of yesterday have to come to pass. People still live in
abject poverty, people are still hungry, people still struggle to survive. And
among these people we see the children, always the children: their enlarged
bellies, their sad eyes, their wise faces that show the suffering, all the
suffering they have endured in their short years.
Recognition
United States president George H. W. Bush presented Hepburn
with the Presidential Medal of Freedom in recognition of her work with UNICEF,
and the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences posthumously awarded her
the Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award for her contribution to humanity. In 2002,
at the United Nations Special Session on Children, UNICEF honoured Hepburn's
legacy of humanitarian work by unveiling a statue, "The Spirit of Audrey", at UNICEF's New York
headquarters. Her service for children is also recognised through the United
States Fund for UNICEF's Audrey Hepburn Society.
Personal life
Marriages,
relationships, and children
In 1952, Hepburn became engaged to industrialist James
Hanson, whom she had known since her early days in London. She called it "love at first sight", but
after having her wedding dress fitted and the date set, she decided the
marriage would not work because the demands of their careers would keep them
apart most of the time. She issued a public statement about her decision,
saying "When I get married, I want
to be really married". In the early 1950s, she also dated future Hair
producer Michael Butler.
At a cocktail party hosted by mutual friend Gregory Peck,
Hepburn met American actor Mel Ferrer, and suggested that they star together in
a play. The meeting led them to collaborate in Ondine, during which they began
a relationship. Eight months later, on 25 September 1954, they were married in
Bürgenstock, Switzerland, while preparing to star together in the film War and
Peace (1956). She and Ferrer had a son, Sean Hepburn Ferrer.
Despite the insistence from gossip columns that their
marriage would not last, Hepburn claimed that she and Ferrer were inseparable
and happy together, though she admitted that he had a bad temper. Ferrer was
rumoured to be too controlling, and had been referred to by others as being her
"Svengali" – an accusation
that Hepburn laughed off. William Holden was quoted as saying, "I think Audrey allows Mel to think he
influences her." After a 14-year marriage, the couple divorced in
1968.
Hepburn met her second husband, Italian psychiatrist Andrea
Dotti, on a Mediterranean cruise with friends in June 1968. She believed she
would have more children and possibly stop working. They married on 18 January
1969, and their son Luca Andrea Dotti was born on 8 February 1970. While
pregnant with Luca in 1969, Hepburn was more careful, resting for months before
delivering the baby via caesarean section. Hepburn suffered a miscarriage in
1974.
Dotti and Hepburn were unfaithful, he with younger women and
she with actor Ben Gazzara during the filming of Bloodline (1979). The
Dotti-Hepburn marriage lasted more than twelve years and was dissolved in 1982.
From 1980 until her death, Hepburn was in a relationship
with Dutch actor Robert Wolders, the widower of actress Merle Oberon. She had
met Wolders through a friend during the later years of her second marriage. In
1989, she called the nine years she had spent with him the happiest years of
her life, and stated that she considered them married, just not officially.
Illness and death
Upon returning from Somalia to Switzerland in late September
1992, Hepburn developed abdominal pain. While initial medical tests in
Switzerland had inconclusive results, a laparoscopy performed at the
Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles in early November revealed a rare
form of abdominal cancer belonging to a group of cancers known as pseudomyxoma
peritonei. Having grown slowly over several years, the cancer had metastasized
as a thin coating over her small intestine. After surgery, Hepburn began
chemotherapy.
Hepburn and her family returned home to Switzerland to
celebrate her last Christmas. As she was still recovering from surgery, she was
unable to fly on commercial aircraft. Her long-time friend, fashion designer
Hubert de Givenchy, arranged for socialite Rachel Lambert "Bunny" Mellon to send her private Gulfstream jet, filled
with flowers, to take Hepburn from Los Angeles to Geneva. She spent her last
days in hospice care at her home in Tolochenaz, Vaud, and was occasionally well
enough to take walks in her garden, but gradually became more confined to
bedrest.
On the evening of 20 January 1993, Hepburn died in her sleep
at home. After her death, Gregory Peck recorded a tribute to Hepburn in which
he recited the poem "Unending Love"
by Rabindranath Tagore. Funeral services were held at the village church of
Tolochenaz on 24 January 1993. Maurice Eindiguer, the same pastor who wed Hepburn
and Mel Ferrer and baptised her son Sean in 1960, presided over her funeral,
while Prince Sadruddin Aga Khan of UNICEF delivered a eulogy. Many family
members and friends attended the funeral, including her sons, partner Robert
Wolders, half-brother Ian Quarles van Ufford, ex-husbands Andrea Dotti and Mel
Ferrer, Hubert de Givenchy, executives of UNICEF, and fellow actors Alain Delon
and Roger Moore. Flower arrangements were sent to the funeral by Gregory Peck,
Elizabeth Taylor, and the Dutch royal family. Later on the same day, Hepburn
was interred at the Tolochenaz Cemetery.
Legacy
Hepburn's star on the
Hollywood Walk of Fame
Hepburn's legacy has endured long after her death. The
American Film Institute named Hepburn third among the Greatest Female Stars of
All Time. She is one of few entertainers who have won Academy, Emmy, Grammy and
Tony Awards. She won a record three BAFTA Awards for Best British Actress in a
Leading Role. In her last years, she remained a visible presence in the film
world. She received a tribute from the Film Society of Lincoln Center in 1991
and was a frequent presenter at the Academy Awards. She received the BAFTA
Lifetime Achievement Award in 1992. She was the recipient of numerous
posthumous awards including the 1993 Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award and
competitive Grammy and Emmy Awards. In January 2009, Hepburn was named on The
Times' list of the top 10 British actresses of all time. In 2010, Emma Thompson
opined Hepburn "can't sing and she
can't really act"; some people agreed, others disagreed. Hepburn's son
Sean later said "My mother would be
the first person to say that she wasn't the best actress in the world. But she
was a movie star."
Waxwork of Hepburn at
Madame Tussauds, London
She has been the subject of many biographies since her death
including the 2000 dramatization of her life titled The Audrey Hepburn Story
which starred Jennifer Love Hewitt and Emmy Rossum as the older and younger
Hepburn respectively. Her son and granddaughter, Sean and Emma Ferrer, helped
produce a biographical documentary directed by Helena Coan, entitled Audrey
(2020). The film was released to positive reception. Hepburn's image is widely
used in advertising campaigns across the world. In Japan, a series of
commercials used colorized and digitally enhanced clips of Hepburn in Roman
Holiday to advertise Kirin black tea. In the United States, Hepburn was
featured in a 2006 Gap commercial which used clips of her dancing from Funny
Face, set to AC/DC's "Back in
Black", with the tagline
"It's Back – The Skinny Black Pant". To celebrate its "Keep it Simple" campaign, the
Gap made a sizeable donation to the Audrey Hepburn Children's Fund. In 2012,
Hepburn was among the British cultural icons selected by artist Sir Peter Blake
to appear in a new version of his best known artwork – the Beatles' Sgt.
Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band album cover – to celebrate the British
cultural figures of his life that he most admires. In 2013, a computer-manipulated
representation of Hepburn was used in a television advert for the British
chocolate bar Galaxy. On 4 May 2014, Google featured a doodle on its homepage
on what would have been Hepburn's 85th birthday.
Sean Ferrer founded the Audrey Hepburn Children's Fund in
memory of his mother shortly after her death. The US Fund for UNICEF also
founded the Audrey Hepburn Society: the Society hosted annual charity balls for
fund raising until Ferrer became involved in lawsuits in the late 2010s on
behalf of his mother's estate. Dotti also became patron of the Pseudomyxoma
Survivor charity, dedicated to providing support to patients of the rare cancer
which was fatal to Hepburn, pseudomyxoma peritonei, and Sean Ferrer became the
rare disease ambassador since 2014 and for 2015 on behalf of European Organisation
for Rare Diseases. A year after his mother's death in 1993, Ferrer founded the
Audrey Hepburn Children's Fund (originally named Hollywood for Children Inc.),
a charity funded by exhibitions of Audrey Hepburn memorabilia. He directed the
charity in cooperation with his half-brother Luca Dotti, and Robert Wolders,
his mother's partner, which aimed to continue the humanitarian work of Audrey
Hepburn. Ferrer brought the exhibition "Timeless Audrey" on a world
tour to raise money for the foundation. He served as Chairman of the Fund
before resigning in 2012, turning over the position to Dotti. In 2017, Ferrer
was sued by the Fund for alleged self-serving conduct. In October 2017, Ferrer
responded by suing the Fund for trademark infringement, claiming that the Fund
no longer had the right to use Hepburn's name or likeness. Ferrer's suit
against the Fund was dismissed in March 2018 due to the complaint's failure to
include Dotti as a defendant. In 2019, the court sided with Ferrer, with the
judge ruling there was no merit to the charity's claims it had the independent
right to use Audrey Hepburn's name and likeness, or to enter into contracts
with third parties without Ferrer's consent.
Hepburn's son Sean said that he was brought up in the
countryside as a normal child, not in Hollywood and without a Hollywood state
of mind that makes movie stars and their families lose touch with reality.
There was no screening room in the house. He said that his mother didn't take
herself seriously, and used to say, "I
take what I do seriously, but I don't take myself seriously".
Hepburn was known for her fashion choices and distinctive
look, to the extent that journalist Mark Tungate has described her as a recognizable
brand. When she first rose to stardom in Roman Holiday (1953), she was seen as
an alternative feminine ideal that appealed more to women than men, in
comparison to the curvy and more sexual Grace Kelly and Elizabeth Taylor. With
her short hairstyle, 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. In 1954, fashion
photographer Cecil Beaton declared Hepburn the "public embodiment of our new feminine ideal" in Vogue,
and wrote that "Nobody ever looked
like her before World War II ... Yet we recognize the rightness of this
appearance in relation to our historical needs. The proof is that thousands of
imitations have appeared." The magazine and its British version
frequently reported on her style throughout the following decade. Alongside
model Twiggy, Hepburn has been cited as one of the key public figures who made
being very slim fashionable. Vogue has referred to her as "the acme of classic beauty".
Added to the International Best Dressed List in 1961,
Hepburn was associated with a minimalistic style, usually wearing clothes with
simple silhouettes which emphasized her slim body, monochromatic colours, and
occasional statement accessories. In the late 1950s, Audrey Hepburn popularized
plain black leggings. Hepburn was in particular associated with French fashion
designer Hubert de Givenchy, who was first hired to design her on-screen
wardrobe for her second Hollywood film, Sabrina (1954), when she was still
unknown as a film actor and he a young couturier just starting his fashion
house. Although initially disappointed that "Miss
Hepburn" was not Katharine Hepburn as he had mistakenly thought,
Givenchy and Hepburn formed a life-long friendship.
In addition to Sabrina, Givenchy designed her costumes for
Love in the Afternoon (1957), Breakfast at Tiffany's (1961), Funny Face (1957),
Charade (1963), Paris When It Sizzles (1964), and How to Steal a Million
(1966), as well as clothed her off screen. According to Moseley, fashion plays
an unusually central role in many of Hepburn's films, stating that "the costume is not tied to the
character, functioning 'silently' in the mise-en-scène, but as 'fashion'
becomes an attraction in the aesthetic in its own right". She also
became the face of Givenchy's first perfume, L'Interdit, in 1957. In addition
to her partnership with Givenchy, Hepburn was credited with boosting the sales
of Burberry trench coats when she wore one in Breakfast at Tiffany's, and was
associated with Italian footwear brand Tod's.
In her private life, Hepburn preferred to wear casual and
comfortable clothes, contrary to the haute couture she wore on screen and at
public events. Despite being admired for her beauty, she never considered
herself attractive, stating in a 1959 interview that "you can even say that I hated myself at certain periods. I was
too fat, or maybe too tall, or maybe just plain too ugly... you can say my
definiteness stems from underlying feelings of insecurity and inferiority. I
couldn't conquer these feelings by acting indecisive. I found the only way to
get the better of them was by adopting a forceful, concentrated drive." In
1989, she stated that "my look is attainable
... Women can look like Audrey Hepburn by flipping out their hair, buying the
large glasses and the little sleeveless dresses."
Hepburn's influence as a style icon continues several
decades after the height of her acting career in the 1950s and 1960s. Moseley
notes that especially after her death in 1993, she became increasingly admired,
with magazines frequently advising readers on how to get her look and fashion
designers using her as inspiration. Throughout her career and after her death,
Hepburn received numerous accolades for her stylish appearance and
attractiveness. For example, she was named the "most beautiful woman of all time" and "most beautiful woman of the 20th
century" in polls by Evian and QVC respectively, and in 2015, was
voted "the most stylish Brit of all
time" in a poll commissioned by Samsung. Her film costumes fetch large
sums of money in auctions: one of the "little
black dresses" designed by Givenchy for Breakfast at Tiffany's was
sold by Christie's for a record sum of £467,200 in 2006.
Filmography and stage
roles
Hepburn was considered by some to be one of the most beautiful
women of all time; she was ranked as the third greatest screen legend in
American cinema by the American Film Institute. She is remembered as a film and
style icon. Her debut was as a flight stewardess in the 1948 Dutch film Dutch
in Seven Lessons. Hepburn then performed on the British stage as a chorus girl
in the musicals High Button Shoes (1948), and Sauce Tartare (1949). Two years
later she made her Broadway debut as the title character in the play Gigi.
Hepburn's Hollywood debut as a runaway princess in William Wyler's Roman Holiday
(1953) opposite Gregory Peck made her a star. For her performance she received
the Academy Award for Best Actress, the BAFTA Award for Best British Actress,
and the Golden Globe Award for Best Actress in a Motion Picture – Drama. In
1954 she played a chauffeur's daughter caught in a love triangle in Billy
Wilder's romantic comedy Sabrina opposite Humphrey Bogart and William Holden.
In the same year Hepburn garnered the Tony Award for Best Actress in a Play for
portraying the titular water nymph in the play Ondine.
Awards and honors
Hepburn received numerous awards and honors during her
career. Hepburn won, or was nominated for, awards for her work in motion
pictures, television, spoken-word recording, on stage, and humanitarian work.
She was five-times nominated for an Academy Award, and she was awarded the 1953
Academy Award for Best Actress for her performance in Roman Holiday and the
Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award in 1993, posthumously, for her humanitarian
work. From five nominations, she won a record three BAFTA Awards for Best
British Actress in a Leading Role, and received a BAFTA Special Award in 1992.
Notes
When asked about her
background, Hepburn identified as half-Dutch, as her mother was a Dutch
noblewoman. Furthermore, she spent a significant number of her formative years
in the Netherlands and was able to speak Dutch fluently. She solely held
British nationality, since at the time of her birth Dutch women were not
permitted to pass on their nationality to their children; the Dutch law did not
change in this regard until 1985. Her ancestry is covered in the "Early life" section.
Spoto writes that
Hepburn's maternal great-grandmother's maiden name was Kathleen Hepburn.
Walker writes that it
is unclear for what kind of company he worked; he was listed as a "financial adviser" in a Dutch
business directory, and the family often travelled among the three countries.
She had been offered
the scholarship already in 1945, but had had to decline it due to "some uncertainty regarding her
national status".
Overall, about 90% of
her singing was dubbed, despite being promised that most of her vocals would be
used. Hepburn's voice remains in one line in "I Could Have Danced All Night", in the first verse of "Just You Wait", and in the
entirety of its reprise in addition to sing-talking in parts of "The Rain in Spain" in the
finished film. When asked about the dubbing of an actress with such distinctive
vocal tones, Hepburn frowned and said,
"You could tell, couldn't you? And there was Rex, recording all his songs
as he acted ... next time —" She bit her lip to prevent her saying more.
She later admitted that she would have never accepted the role knowing that
Warner intended to have nearly all of her singing dubbed.
This was the highest
price paid for a dress from a film, until it was surpassed by the $4.6 million
paid in June 2011 for Marilyn Monroe's "subway
dress" from The Seven Year Itch. Of the two dresses that Hepburn wore
on screen, one is held in the Givenchy archives while the other is displayed in
the Museum of Costume in Madrid. A subsequent London auction of Hepburn's film
wardrobe in December 2009 raised £270,200, including £60,000 for the black
Chantilly lace cocktail gown from How to Steal a Million.
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