- audrey hepburn fakes



audrey hepburn

This Day in History

Today's Birthday

Quotation of the Day

Audrey Hepburn

Hepburn as Regina "Reggie" Lampert in Charade
Birth name: Audrey Kathleen Ruston
Date of birth: May 4, 1929
Birth location: Brussels, Belgium
Date of death: January 20, 1993
Death location: Tolochenaz, Switzerland
Height: 5' 7" (1.70 m)
Other name(s): Edda Van Heemstra
Notable role(s): Princess Ann in
Roman Holiday
Holly Golightly in
Breakfast at Tiffany's
Eliza Doolittle in
My Fair Lady
Academy Awards: 1953 Academy Award for Best Actress
(Roman Holiday)
Spouse: Mel Ferrer
Andrea Dotti

Audrey Hepburn (May 4, 1929 – January 20, 1993) was an Academy Award-winning actress, fashion model and humanitarian.

Raised under Nazi rule during World War II, she trained extensively to be a ballerina. She instead became a leading Hollywood actress during the 1950's and 1960's. She made only a handful of films afterwards, opting instead to devote herself to her children. From 1988 until her death in 1993, she served as a UNICEF Goodwill ambassador. In 1999, she was ranked as the third greatest female star of all time by the American Film Institute (AFI's 100 Years... 100 Stars).

Contents

  • 1 Early life
  • 2 Early career
  • 3 Hollywood stardom
  • 4 Marriages, family, and later life
  • 5 Work for UNICEF
  • 6 Cancer
  • 7 Enduring popularity
    • 7.1 Beauty and fashion
    • 7.2 Biographical film
    • 7.3 Postage stamp
    • 7.4 Commercials
  • 8 Filmography
  • 9 Television and theatre
  • 10 Awards
  • 11 Quotes
  • 12 Notes
  • 13 References
  • 14 See also
  • 15 External links

Early life

Born Audrey Kathleen Ruston[1] in Brussels, Belgium, she was the only child of Joseph Hepburn-Ruston[2], an Anglo-Irish banker, and Baroness Ella van Heemstra, a Dutch aristocrat descended from French nobility and English kings. Her father later appended the name Hepburn to his surname, and her surname became Hepburn-Ruston. She had two half-brothers, Alexander and Ian Quarles van Ufford, by her mother's first marriage to a Dutch nobleman. She was a descendant of King Edward III of England.[3]

Hepburn's father's job required the family to travel often between Brussels, England, and The Netherlands. From 1935 to 1938, Hepburn attended boarding school in England. In 1935, her parents divorced and her father left the family.[4] She later called this the most traumatic moment of her life. Years later she located him in Dublin through the Red Cross. She stayed in contact with him and supported him financially until his death.[5] In 1939, her mother moved her and her two half-brothers to Arnhem, Netherlands. Hepburn attended the Arnhem Conservatory from 1939 to 1945 where she trained in ballet, in addition to learning a standard school curriculum.

In 1940, the Nazis invaded Arnhem. During the war Hepburn 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. The name Edda was a modified version of Hepburn's mother's name, Ella.[6]

By 1944, Hepburn had become a very proficient ballet dancer. She secretly danced for groups of people to collect money for the underground movement.

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, 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. Arnhem was devastated during allied bombing raids that were part of Operation Market Garden. Hepburn's uncle and a cousin of her mother's were shot for being part of the Resistance. Hepburn's brother spent time in a German labor camp. Suffering from malnutrition, Hepburn developed acute anemia, respiratory problems, and edema--a swelling of the limbs.[7]

In 1991, Hepburn reminisced:

"I have memories. 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 to the train. I was a child observing a child."

Hepburn also noted the similarities between her and Anne Frank:

"I was exactly the same age as Anne Frank. We were both 10 when war broke out and 15 when the war finished. I was given the book in Dutch, in galley form, in 1946 by a friend. I read it . . . and it destroyed me. It does this to many people when they first read it but I was not reading it as a book, as printed pages. This was my life. I didn't know what I was going to read. I've never been the same again, it affected me so deeply."
"We saw reprisals. 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. If you read the diary, I've marked one place where she says, 'Five hostages shot today'. That was the day my uncle was shot. And in this child's words I was reading about what was inside me and is still there. It was a catharsis for me. This child who was locked up in four walls had written a full report of everything I'd experienced and felt."

These times were not all bad and she was able to enjoy some of her childhood. Again drawing parallels to Anne Frank's life, Hepburn said:

"This spirit of survival is so strong in Anne Frank's words. One minute she says, 'I'm so depressed.' The next she is longing to ride a bicycle. She is certainly a symbol of the child in very difficult circumstances, which is what I devote all my time to. She transcends her death."

One way in which Audrey Hepburn passed the time was by drawing, and some of her childhood artwork can be seen today.[8]

When the tanks came in and Holland was liberated, relief-agency trucks followed. Hepburn said in an interview that she ate an entire can of condensed milk and then got sick from one of her first relief meals because she put too much sugar in her oatmeal. [9]. As UNICEF saved her early in life, she would later give back to UNICEF starting in 1954 with radio presentations.

Early career

In 1945, after the war, Hepburn left the Arnhem Conservatory and moved to Amsterdam, where she took ballet lessons with Sonia Gaskell.[10] In 1948, Hepburn went to London and took dancing lessons with the renowned Marie Rambert, teacher of Vaslav Nijinsky, one of the greatest male dancers in history. Hepburn eventually asked Rambert what her future would be. Rampert assured Hepburn that she could continue to work there and have a great career as a ballerina, but that her tall height, 5'7", coupled with her poor nutrition during the war would keep her from becoming a prima ballerina. Hepburn trusted Rampert's advice and decided to pursue acting, a career which she at least had a chance to excel in.[11] After Hepburn became a star, Rampert said in an interview, "She was a wonderful learner. If she had wanted to persevere, she might have become an outstanding ballerina."[12] Unfortunately, Hepburn's mother was working menial jobs to support them. Hepburn had no money and needed to find a paying job. Since she had trained all her life to be a performer, acting was the only sensible career path.

Hepburn as Princess Ann in her breakthrough film, Roman Holiday

Her acting career started with the instructional film, Dutch in Seven Lessons. She then played in musical theatre in productions such as High Button Shoes and Sauce Piquante. Hepburn's first role in a motion picture was in the British film One Wild Oat, in which she played a hotel receptionist. She played several more minor roles in Young Wives' Tales, Laughter in Paradise, The Lavender Hill Mob and Monte Carlo Baby. During the filming of Monte Carlo Baby, Hepburn was chosen to play the lead character in the Broadway play Gigi that opened on 24 November 1951. The writer Sidonie-Gabrielle Colette upon first seeing Hepburn reportedly said, "Voilà! There's our Gigi!"[13] She won a Theatre World Award for her debut performance, and it had a successful six-month run in New York City.

Her first significant film performance was in the 1952 film The Secret People, in which she played a prodigy ballet dancer. Naturally, Hepburn did all of her own dancing scenes.

Hepburn's first starring role and first American film was opposite Gregory Peck in the Hollywood motion picture Roman Holiday. Producers initially wanted Elizabeth Taylor for the role, but director William Wyler was so impressed by Hepburn's screen test, in which the camera was left on and candid footage of Hepburn relaxing and answering questions was taken, that he cast her in the lead. Wyler said, "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!'"[14] The billing was to have Gregory Peck's name above the title in large font with "introducing Audrey Hepburn" beneath. After filming had been completed, Peck called his agent and had Hepburn's name equally billed with his because he had predicted that she would win the Oscar. Hepburn and Peck bonded during filming, and there were rumors that they were romantically involved; both denied such claims. Hepburn, however, added, "actually, you have to be a little bit in love with your leading man and vice versa. If you're going to portray love, you have to feel it. You can't do it any other way. But you don't carry it beyond the set."[15] Hepburn would later call Roman Holiday her dearest movie, because it was the one that made her a star.

Hollywood stardom

Cary Grant and Audrey Hepburn in Charade

After Roman Holiday she filmed Billy Wilder's Sabrina with Humphrey Bogart and William Holden. Hepburn was sent to fashion designer Givenchy to decide on her wardrobe. When told that "Miss Hepburn" was coming to see him, Givenchy famously expected to see Katharine Hepburn (who was only distantly related to Audrey through a common ancestor, James Hepburn, 4th Earl of Bothwell[16]). He was not disappointed with Audrey, however, and they formed a lifelong friendship and partnership. During the filming of Sabrina, Hepburn and Holden became romantically involved and she hoped to marry him and have children. She broke off the relationship when Holden revealed that he had had a vasectomy.[17]

In 1954, Audrey went back to the stage to play the water sprite in Ondine in a performance with Mel Ferrer, whom she would wed later that year. During the run of the play, Hepburn was awarded the Golden Globe for "Best Motion Picture Actress" and the Academy Award for Best Actress, both for Roman Holiday. Six weeks after receiving the Oscar, Hepburn was awarded the Tony Award for Best Actress for Ondine.

By the mid 1950s, Hepburn was not only one of the biggest motion picture stars in Hollywood, but she also came to be regarded as a major style icon. Her gamine and elfin appearance and widely recognised sense of chic were both admired and imitated. In 1955, she was awarded the Golden Globe - World Film Favorite - Female.

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, Maurice Chevalier 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 favourite leading lady; Cary Grant loved to humor her and once said, "all I want for Christmas is another picture with Audrey Hepburn;"[18] and Gregory Peck became a lifelong friend. After her death, Peck went on camera and tearfully recited her favorite poem, "Unending Love" by Rabindranath Tagore.[19] Some believe Bogart and Hepburn did not get along, but this is untrue. Bogart got along better with Hepburn than anyone else on set. Hepburn later said, "Sometimes it's the so-called 'tough guys' that are the most tender hearted, as Bogey was with me."[20]

Funny Face in 1957 was Hepburn's favorite movie to film because she got to dance with Fred Astaire. The Nun's Story in 1959 was one of Hepburn's most daring roles, and one of her favorites since it was so socially relevant.

Hepburn as Holly Golightly with Orangey the Cat in Breakfast at Tiffany's

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 called the role, "the jazziest of my career."[21] Asked about the acting challenge of the role, Hepburn said, "I'm an introvert. Playing the extroverted girl was the hardest thing I ever did."[22] She wore trendy clothing designed by her and Givenchy and added blonde streaks to her brown hair, a look that she would keep off-screen as well.

Hepburn had cemented herself as one of Hollywood's greatest actresses, right alongside Marilyn Monroe. In fact, Monroe was not the only one to sing "Happy Birthday Mr. President" to President John F Kennedy. For JFK's next birthday in 1963, Hepburn did the honors. Despite her stardom, Hepburn retained her humility throughout life. She preferred a more quiet living with family and nature. She lived in houses, not mansions, and she loved to garden.

Hepburn starred in 1964's My Fair Lady which was said to be the most anticipated movie since Gone With The Wind.[23] Hepburn was cast 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. Hepburn initially refused the role and asked Jack Warner to give it to Andrews, but when they informed her that it would either be her or Elizabeth Taylor, who was vying for the role, she decided to take the part. According to an article in Soundstage magazine, "everyone agreed that if Julie Andrews was not to be in the film, Audrey Hepburn was the perfect choice."[24] 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 walked off the set after being told of the dubbing and returned early the next day to apologize 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." 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 then bit her lip to keep from saying any more. [25] Aside from the dubbing, many critics agreed that Hepburn's performance was excellent. Gene Ringgold said, "Audrey Hepburn is magnificent. She is Eliza for the ages."[26]

DVD cover of My Fair Lady

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.

Two For The Road was a non-linear and innovative movie about divorce. Director Stanley Donen said that Hepburn was more free and happy than he had ever seen her, and be accredited that to Albert Finney.[27] Wait Until Dark in 1967 was a difficult film to do. It was an edgy thriller in which Hepburn played the part of a blind woman being terrorized. In addition, it was produced by Mel Ferrer and filmed on the brink of their divorce. Hepburn is said to have lost 15 pounds under the stress. On the bright side, she found co-star Richard Crenna to be very funny, and she had a lot to laugh about with director Terence Young. They both joked that he was shelling his favorite star years before; Terence Young was a tank commander during the Battle of Arnhem. Hepburn's performance was nominated for an Academy Award.

From 1967 onward, after fifteen highly successful years in film, Hepburn acted only occasionally. After her divorce from first husband Mel Ferrer, she married 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. She reportedly turned down the tailor-made role of a former ballet dancer in The Turning Point. (Shirley MacLaine got the part.) Hepburn finally returned to cinema in 1979, taking the leading role in Sidney Sheldon's Bloodline. Author Sidney Sheldon revised his novel when it was reissued to tie into the film, making Hepburn's character older to better match the actress' age. The film was a critical and box office failure.

Hepburn's last starring role in a cinematic film was with Ben Gazzara in the comedy They All Laughed, directed by Peter Bogdanovich. Although a critical success, the film was overshadowed by the murder of one of its stars, Bogdanovich's girlfriend, Dorothy Stratten; the film was released after Stratten's death but played only limited runs. In 1987, she co-starred with Robert Wagner in a tongue-in-cheek made-for-television caper film, Love Among Thieves which borrowed elements from several of Hepburn's films, most notably Charade and How to Steal a Million. The TV-film, which also starred Jerry Orbach as a villain, was only a moderate success, with Hepburn being quoted that she appeared in it just for fun.

Hepburn's last film role, a cameo appearance, was of an angel in Steven Spielberg's Always, filmed in 1988. This film was also only moderately successful. In the final months of her life Hepburn completed two entertainment-related projects: she hosted a television documentary series entitled Gardens of the World with Audrey Hepburn, which debuted on PBS the day of her death, and she also recorded a spoken word album, Audrey Hepburn's Enchanted Tales featuring readings of classic children's stories, which would win her a posthumous Grammy Award.

She has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 1652 Vine Street.

Marriages, family, and later life

In the early 1950s she was engaged to the young James Hanson.[28] 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 his career that would require him to be gone on business most of the time. She had the wedding dress given to a poor Italian couple, who still have it today.

Hepburn did marry, twice: to American actor Mel Ferrer and to an Italian doctor, Andrea Dotti, and had a son with each—Sean in 1960 by Ferrer, and Luca in 1970 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 Hepburn, but in William Holden's words, "I think Audrey allows Mel to think he influences her."

She married him on 25 September 1954. Before having their first child, Hepburn had two miscarriages, the first of which was in March of 1955. In 1959, while filming The Unforgiven, Hepburn broke her back after falling off a horse onto a rock. She spent weeks in the hospital and later had a miscarriage that was probably induced by the physical and mental stress. While she was resting at home, Mel Ferrer brought her the fawn from the movie Green Mansions to keep as a pet. They called him Ip, short for Pippin. In 1965, she had another miscarriage. Hepburn was much more careful when she was pregnant with Luca in 1969; she rested for months and passed the time by painting. Luca was delivered by Caesarean section. Hepburn had her final miscarriage in 1974. [29]

The marriage to Ferrer lasted 14 years until 5 December 1968; 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 Hepburn had an affair with her handsome Two for the Road co-star, Albert Finney. After the marriage fell apart, Hepburn 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. She married him on 18 January 1969. Although Dotti loved Hepburn and was well-liked by Sean, who called him "fun," Dotti had affairs with younger women. The marriage lasted 13 years and ended in 1982 after Luca and Sean were old enough to handle life with a single mother.

Hepburn had several pets, including a Yorkshire Terrier named Mr. Famous, who was hit by a car and killed. To cheer her up, Mel Ferrer got her another Yorkshire named Assam of Assam. She also kept Ip the fawn as a pet; they made a bed for him out of a bathtub. Sean Ferrer had a Cocker Spaniel named Cokey. When Hepburn was older, she had two Jack Russell Terriers.

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.

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. Hepburn's travels were made easier by her wide knowledge of languages; she spoke French, Italian, English, Dutch/Flemish, and Spanish. She learned Italian while living in Rome. She learned Spanish on her own, and there is UNICEF footage of her in Mexico speaking fluent Spanish to locals.

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. Her first Field Mission was to Ethiopia in 1988. She visited an orphanage in Mek'ele with 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."[30]

In August of 1988, Hepburn went to Turkey on an immunization campaign. She called Turkey "The most lovely 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. In Venezuela and Ecuador, Hepburn told 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 chiefs in Honduras, El Salvador, and Guatemala. In April, Hepburn visited Sudan with Robert Wolders as part of a mission called "Operation Lifeline." Due to 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, 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 of 1990, Hepburn went to Vietnam in an effort to collaborate with the government for national UNICEF-supported immunization and clean water programs.

In September of 1992, 4 months before her passing, Hepburn went to Somalia. Hepburn called it "apocoplyptic" and 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."
"The earth is red -- an extraordinary sight -- that deep terra-cotta red. And you see the villages, displacement camps and compounds, and the earth is all rippled around them like an ocean bed. And those were the graves. There are graves everywhere. Along the road, around the paths that you take, along the riverbeds, near every camp -- there are graves everywhere."

Though forever scarred by what she had seen, Hepburn still had hope:

"Taking care of children has nothing to do with politics. I think perhaps with time, instead of there being a politicization of humanitarian aid, there will be a humanization of politics."
"Anyone who doesn't believe in miracles is not a realist. I have seen the miracle of water which UNICEF has helped to make a reality. Where for centuries young girls and women had to walk for miles to get water, now they have clean drinking water near their homes. Water is life, and clean water now means health for the children of this village."
"People in these places don't know Audrey Hepburn, but they recognize the name UNICEF. When they see UNICEF their faces light up, because they know that something is happening. In the Sudan, for example, they call a water pump UNICEF."

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.

In 2006, the Sustainable Style Foundation inaugurated the Style & Substance Award in Honor of Audrey Hepburn to recognize high profile individuals that work to improve the quality of life for children around the world. The first award was given to Ms. Hepburn posthumously and received by the Audrey Hepburn Children's Fund.

Cancer

In late 1992, Hepburn began to feel pains in her abdomen, which turned out to be a rare form of cancer that originated in the appendix. Hepburn had surgery in a Los Angeles hospital, but the cancer continued to spread and doctors decided that another surgery would not help. (Hepburn had been a lifelong smoker. That addiction may have come to her at great cost; studies have found that women who smoke are more than 40% more likely to die from colorectal cancer than women who never have smoked.[31])

Hepburn died of colorectal cancer on 20 January 1993, in Tolochenaz, Vaud, Switzerland, and was interred there. She was 63.

Enduring popularity

Beauty and fashion

Audrey Hepburn to this day is a beauty and fashion icon. She has often been called one of the most beautiful women of all time.[32][33] Her fashion styles also continue to be popular among women.[34] Contrary to her recent image, although Hepburn did enjoy fashion, she did not place much importance on it. She preferred casual, comfortable clothes.[35]

Biographical film

To date only one biographical film based upon Audrey Hepburn's life has been attempted. The 2000 American made-for-television film, The Audrey Hepburn Story, starred Jennifer Love Hewitt as the actress. Hewitt also co-produced the film. The film received poor reviews due to numerous factual errors and for Hewitt's performance.

2003 Commemorative stamp

The film concludes with footage of the real Audrey Hepburn, shot during one of her final missions for UNICEF. Several versions of the film exist; it was aired as a mini-series in some countries, and in a truncated version on America's ABC television network, which is also the version released on DVD in North America.

Postage stamp

In 2003, the United States Postal Service issued a stamp honoring her as a Hollywood legend and humanitarian. It has a drawing of her which is based on a publicity photo from the movie Sabrina. Hepburn is one of the few non-Americans to be so honored.

Commercials

She is featured in a GAP commercial running from September 7, 2006, to October 5, 2006, which uses 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 has made a sizeable donation to the Audrey Hepburn Children's Fund. [36]

Filmography

Year Title Role Other notes
1948 Dutch in Seven Lessons Airline Stewardess Documentary
1951 Monte Carlo Baby Linda Farrel Discovered by French novelist Colette during filming and cast as Gigi for the Broadway play
1951 Laughter in Paradise Cigarette Girl
1951 Young Wives' Tale Eve Lester
1951 The Lavender Hill Mob Chiquita
1951 One Wild Oat Hotel receptionist
1952 The Secret People Nora Brentano
1952 We Will All Go to Monte Carlo Melissa Walter French version of Monte Carlo Baby
1953 Roman Holiday Princess Ann Academy Award Winner; Golden Globe Winner; BAFTA Award Winner; New York Film Critics Circle Award Winner
1954 Sabrina Sabrina Fairchild Academy Award Nomination; BAFTA Award Nomination
1956 War and Peace Natasha Rostov Golden Globe Nomination; BAFTA Award Nomination
1957 Funny Face Jo
1957 Love in the Afternoon Ariane Chavasse/Thin Girl Golden Globe Nomination; Golden Laurel Winner
1957 Mayerling Marie Vetsera Producers' Showcase TV film
1959 Green Mansions Rima Directed by Mel Ferrer
1959 The Nun's Story Sister Luke (Gabrielle van der Mal) Academy Award Nomination; Golden Globe Nomination; BAFTA Award Winner; New York Film Critics Circle Winner; Zulueta Prize Winner
1960 The Unforgiven Rachel Zachary
1961 Breakfast at Tiffany's Holly Golightly Academy Award Nomination
1961 The Children's Hour Karen Wright
1963 Charade Regina Lampert Golden Globe Nomination; BAFTA Award Winner
1964 Paris, When It Sizzles Gabrielle Simpson
1964 My Fair Lady Eliza Doolittle Golden Globe Nomination
1966 How to Steal a Million Nicole Bonnet
1967 Two For The Road Joanna Wallace Golden Globe Nomination
1967 Wait Until Dark Susy Hendrix Academy Award Nomination; Golden Globe Nomination
1976 Robin and Marian Lady Marian
1979 Bloodline Elizabeth Roffe
1981 They All Laughed Angela Niotes
1989 Always Hap

Television and theatre

Year Title Role Other notes
1949 High Button Shoes Chorus Girl Musical Theatre
1949 Sauce Tartare Chorus Girl Musical Theatre
1950 Sauce Piquante Featured Player Musical Theatre
1951 Gigi Gigi Opened on Broadway at the Fulton Theatre, November 24, 1951
1952 CBS Television Workshop Episode entitled "Rainy Day at Paradise Junction"
1954 Ondine Water Nymph Opened on Broadway, February 18 - June 26. Tony Award Winner - Best Actress. Costarring Mel Ferrer
1957 Mayerling Maria Vetsera Producers' Showcase live production. Costarring Mel Ferrer as Prince Rudolf. Released theatrically in Europe.
1987 Love Among Thieves Baroness Caroline DuLac Television movie.
1993 Gardens of the World with Audrey Hepburn Herself PBS miniseries; Emmy Award Winner - Outstanding Individual Achievement - Informational Programming

According to some biographies, Hepburn made several American and British TV appearances before Roman Holiday, and a poster for a 1951 British public appearance listed her as a TV actress. "Rainy Day" is the only example of this early work to have surfaced. A copy of this production exists in the Museum of Radio and Television archives in Beverly Hills, California and New York City, New York.

Some sources (including the Internet Movie Database) erroneously state that Hepburn had a cameo appearance in the 1963 film, A New Kind of Love, but this was debunked by several reviewers when the film was released to DVD in 2005.

Awards

She won the 1953 Academy Award for Best Actress for Roman Holiday. She was nominated for Best Actress four more times; for Sabrina, The Nun's Story, Breakfast at Tiffany's, and Wait Until Dark.

There was Oscar controversy in 1964 when Audrey was not nominated for her performance as Eliza Doolittle in My Fair Lady, one of her most acclaimed performances.

For her 1967 nomination, the Academy chose her performance in Wait Until Dark over her critically acclaimed performance in Two For The Road. She lost to Katharine Hepburn (in Guess Who's Coming to Dinner).

Audrey Hepburn was one of the few people who have won an Emmy, a Grammy, an Oscar and a Tony Award.

  • Academy Award: Best Actress for Roman Holiday (1954) and posthumous The Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award (1993).
  • Tony Award: Best Actress for Ondine (1954) and Special Achievement award (1968).
  • Grammy Award: Best Spoken Word Album for Children (1993) for Audrey Hepburn's Enchanted Tales (posthumous).
  • Emmy Award: Outstanding Individual Achievement - Informational Programming (1993) for the "Flower Gardens" episode of her documentary series, Gardens of the World (posthumous).

In addition, Hepburn won the Henrietta Award in 1955 for the world's favorite actress, the Cecil B. DeMille Award in 1990 and the Screen Actors Guild Life Achievement Award in 1992. Hepburn was posthumously awarded the Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award later in 1993. [37]

Preceded by:
Shirley Booth
for Come Back, Little Sheba
Academy Award for Best Actress
1953
for Roman Holiday
Succeeded by:
Grace Kelly
for The Country Girl

Quotes

   
People associate me with a time when movies were pleasant, when women wore pretty dresses in films and you heard beautiful music. I always love it when people write me and say 'I was having a rotten time, and I walked into a cinema and saw one of your movies, and it made such a difference.
   
   
I love people who make me laugh. I honestly think it's the thing I like most, to laugh. It cures a multitude of ills. It's probably the most important thing in a person.
   
   
I was born with something that appealed to an audience at that particular time...I acted instinctively. I've had one of the greatest schools of all - a whole row of great, great directors.
   
   
Living is like tearing through a museum. Not until later do you really start absorbing what you saw, thinking about it, looking it up in a book, and remembering - because you can't take it all in at once.
   
   
As a child, I was taught that it was bad manners to bring attention to yourself, and to never, ever make a spectacle of yourself... All of which I've earned a living doing.
   
   
I am more than ever awed and overwhelmed by the monumental talents it was my great, great privilege to work for and with. There is therefore no way I can thank you for this beautiful award without thanking all of them, because it is they who helped and honed, triggered and taught, pushed and pulled, dressed and photographed - and with endless patience and kindness and gentleness, guided and nurtured a totally unknown, insecure, inexperienced, skinny broad into a marketable commodity. I am proud to have been in a business that gives pleasure, creates beauty, and awakens our conscience, arouses compassion, and perhaps most importantly, gives millions a respite from our so violent world. Thank you, Screen Actors Guild and friends, for this huge honor - and for giving me this unique opportunity to express my deepest gratitude and love to all of those who have given me a career that has brought me nothing but happiness.
   

For receiving the Screen Actors Guild Life Achievement Award in 1992. Julia Roberts accepted the award on her behalf.

The poem "Time Tested Beauty Tips" was recited by Hepburn to her sons and is popularly attributed to her, but it was in fact written by Sam Levenson. | Read the poem

Notes

  1. ^ http://www.thatface.org/3473
  2. ^ http://www.audreyhepburn.com
  3. ^ http://www.livescience.com/history/ap_royal_roots.html
  4. ^ http://movies.aol.com/celebrity/audrey-hepburn/31869/biography
  5. ^ http://audreyhepburnlibrary.com/80s/parade5-5-89pg2
  6. ^ inactive as of September 1, 2006
  7. ^ http://www.ahepburn.com/article6.html
  8. ^ http://www.audrey1.com/gallery/results.php?cat=Audrey+drawings
  9. ^ http://www.jessicaseigel.com/articles/hepburn.shtml
  10. ^ http://audreyhepburn.com/
  11. ^ http://transcripts.cnn.com/TRANSCRIPTS/0312/24/lkl.00.html
  12. ^ http://audreyhepburnlibrary.com/50s/time9-7-53pg2
  13. ^ http://www.audrey1.com/articles/articles26.html
  14. ^ http://www.audrey1.com/films/roman.html
  15. ^ http://audreyhepburnlibrary.com/50s/motionpicture2-54pg4
  16. ^ http://www.salon.com/people/feature/1999/10/06/hepburns/index.html
  17. ^ http://www.tcm.com/thismonth/article.jsp?cid=97161&mainArticleId=136023
  18. ^ http://audreyhepburnlibrary.com/60s/motionpicture5-64pg3
  19. ^ http://audrey1.com/poems.html
  20. ^ http://audreyhepburnlibrary.com/90s/filmfestpg1
  21. ^ http://audreyhepburnlibrary.com/bat/screenstories10-61pg11
  22. ^ http://audreyhepburnlibrary.com/mfl/mflscrapbkpg25
  23. ^ http://audreyhepburnlibrary.com/mfl/soundstage12-64pg27]
  24. ^ http://audreyhepburnlibrary.com/mfl/soundstage12-64pg27
  25. ^ http://audreyhepburnlibrary.com/mfl/mflscrapbkpg25
  26. ^ http://audreyhepburnlibrary.com/mfl/soundstage12-64pg27
  27. ^ http://audreyhepburnlibrary.com/60s/screenland12-67pg6
  28. ^ Alex Brummer, Hanson: a Biography, (London: Fourth Estate, 1994)pp. 47-50 & p.52
  29. ^ http://www.audrey1.com/grahamspage/biography-page2.html
  30. ^ http://audrey1.com/unicef/index.html
  31. ^ http://www.cancer.org/docroot/NWS/content/NWS_1_1x_Smoking_Linked_to_Increased_Colorectal_Cancer_Risk.asp
  32. ^ http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2004/05/31/1085855500521.html
  33. ^ http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/3763887.stm
  34. ^ http://www.factio-magazine.com/specialfeatures/des__Audrey.cfm
  35. ^ http://www.ew.com/ew/article/reuters/0,24012,1539827_10_0_,00.html
  36. ^ http://www.wboc.com/Global/story.asp?S=5371942
  37. ^ http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0000030/awards

References

  • Sean Hepburn Ferrer, Audrey Hepburn, An Elegant Spirit: A Son Remembers, New York: Atria, 2003.
  • Barry Paris, Audrey Hepburn, New York: Putnam, 1996.
  • Diana Maychick, Audrey Hepburn: An Intimate Portrait, Citadel Press, 1996.
  • http://www.audreyhepburnlibrary.com

See also

  • List of people who have won an Emmy, a Grammy, an Oscar and a Tony Award

External links

Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to:
Audrey Hepburn
Wikimedia Commons has media related to:
Audrey Hepburn
  • Official web site by the Audrey Hepburn Children's Fund
  • Audrey Hepburn at the Internet Movie Database
  • Audrey Hepburn - L'Ange des Enfants
  • ETERNALLY AUDREY
  • U.S. postage stamp
  • Audrey Hepburn A tribute to her Humanitarian Work
  • The Audrey Hepburn Guide - A guide to all things 'Audrey' on the Net
  • Internet Accuracy Project - Audrey Hepburn
  • The Fairest Lady fansite
  • Audrey Hepburn's Gravesite
  • (French) Biographie et filmographie Audrey Hepburn
  • A Tribute to Audrey Hepburn, online since 1997

Search Term: "Audrey_Hepburn"

audrey hepburn news and audrey hepburn articles

Here's our top rated audrey hepburn links for the day:

Time for the trench 

The Argus Leader - Mar 30 12:09 AM
Dick Tracy wore them. So did the men in "The Matrix." Even style icon Audrey Hepburn donned a trench coat or two in her time.
Save

Pampering Two Left Feet 
New York Times - Mar 30 9:51 PM
Hanging out with Paulina Porizkova, the former supermodel and author of ?A Model Summer,? at the pedicure spa.
Save

That Was The Week That Was 
The Standard-Times - Mar 30 8:08 PM
Entertainment highlights during the week of Jan. 14-20:
Save

Grammer cast as Henry Higgins 
The Standard-Times - Mar 30 4:40 PM
The New York Philharmonic will present Kelsey Grammer as Professor Henry Higgins and Kelli O'Hara as Eliza Doolittle in a semi-staged, concert version of "My Fair Lady."
Save

Hair - your most natural accessory 
Vail Daily - Mar 30 12:57 PM
"Gimme a head with hair, long beautiful hair, shining, gleaming, streaming, flaxen, waxen ... Give me down to there hair, shoulder length or longer ...
Save

Jennifer Love Hewitt keeps in touch with her inner dork 
The Standard-Times - Mar 30 5:00 PM
Jennifer Love Hewitt doesn't really talk to the dead. Nor does she give spirits snagged in the physical realm a tender send-off to the great beyond.
Save

Movies on cable are TV's romantic options 
The Standard-Times - Mar 30 4:57 PM
Happy Valentine's Day, and welcome to the Apocalypse. CBS has chosen the day of hearts and flowers to re-introduce its addictive series "Jericho" (8 p.m., CBS, TV-14), where residents of a small Kansas town isolated by a series of nuclear blasts cope...
Save

Fractured beyond repair 
The Standard-Times - Mar 30 4:35 PM
"Happily N'Ever After"
Save

Eagles roar at speech competition 
Forest City Summit - Mar 30 6:33 AM
Story created Mar 27, 2007 - 10:17:50 CDT.
Save

Fashion fans predict the styles that will steal the Oscars show 
The Standard-Times - Mar 30 3:45 AM
Tonight's Oscars telecast is actually two events. It's moviedom's top award show, honoring the best work in every segment of the motion picture industry.
Save

Last Update: 2007-03-31 07:35:54

Thank you for reading the audrey hepburn page - audrey hepburn. 

1. audry hepburn
2. adrey hepburn
3. audre hepburn
4. aubrey hepburn
5. audrey hepurn
6. audreyhepburn
7. audrey hpburn
8. audrey hepbun

As an extra bonus here are the top searched terms over the past month for audrey hepburn. Now you can see what everyone else is searching for in regards to audrey hepburn.

1. audrey hepburn
2. audrey hepburn fakes
3. audrey hepburn biography
4. audrey hepburn quotes
5. audrey hepburn movies
6. audrey hepburn mp3
7. audrey hair hepburn style wedding
8. audrey hepburn clothing
9. audrey hepburn pictures
10. audrey hepburn photos
11. audrey hepburn makeup
12. audrey hepburn myspace layouts
13. audrey hepburn hat
14. pictures of audrey hepburn
15. audrey hepburn bio
16. audrey hepburn pics
17. audrey hepburn fashion
18. designer dresses audrey hepburn
19. moon river audrey hepburn
20. audrey hepburn dresses
21. audrey hepburn funny face
22. audrey hepburn gap commercial
23. audrey hepburn dress
24. audrey hepburn fashions
25. audrey hepburn breakfast at tiffany's
26. audrey hepburn my fair lady
27. audrey hepburn myspace layout
28. audrey hepburn hair
29. audrey hepburn hair styles
30. audrey hepburn story
31. audrey hepburn tiara
32. audrey hepburn pictures hairstyles
33. audrey hepburn style
34. funny face audrey hepburn
35. halloween costume audrey hepburn
36. halloween costumes audrey hepburn
37. audrey hepburn black and white
38. audrey hepburn commercial
39. audrey hepburn current tv schedule
40. audrey hepburn look
41. audrey hepburn style clothing
42. audrey hepburn wig
43. givenchy audrey hepburn
44. my fair lady, audrey hepburn
45. audrey hepburn costume
46. audrey hepburn halloween costumes
47. audrey hepburn moon
48. audrey hepburn with cat
49. costume audrey hepburn
50. audrey hepburn collectables
51. audrey hepburn funny face gap
52. audrey hepburn hairstyles
53. funny face - audrey hepburn
54. how to look like audrey hepburn
55. moon river - audrey hepburn
56. 1961 audrey hepburn dress
57. audrey hepburn moon river
58. audrey hepburn sunglasses
59. how to dress like audrey hepburn
60. sabrina audrey hepburn
61. audrey and katherine hepburn
62. audrey hepburn black white
63. audrey hepburn breakfast tiffany's
64. audrey hepburn diet
65. audrey hepburn halloween costume
66. audrey hepburn monologue
67. audrey hepburn moonriver
68. audrey hepburn posters
69. audrey hepburn sabrina
70. audrey hepburn style dress
71. audrey hepburn wallpapers
72. movie cary grant audrey hepburn
73. replica audrey hepburn dress breakfast at tiffany's
74. audrey hepburn beauty tips
75. audrey hepburn black dress
76. audrey hepburn earplugs
77. audrey hepburn embassy dress
78. audrey hepburn family
79. audrey hepburn hubert de givenchy
80. audrey hepburn in sabrina
81. audrey hepburn make-up
82. audrey hepburn tiaras
83. audrey hepburns children
84. pink gown audrey hepburn
85. quotes by audrey hepburn
86. audrey hepburn & rex harrison
87. audrey hepburn - my fair lady
88. audrey hepburn academy award
89. audrey hepburn and george peppard
90. audrey hepburn and pictures and fashion
91. audrey hepburn cigarette holders
92. audrey hepburn costumes
93. audrey hepburn dance
94. audrey hepburn dance movie
95. audrey hepburn death
96. audrey hepburn faceplate
97. audrey hepburn fulton theatre program
98. audrey hepburn gap ad
99. audrey hepburn in elegant dresses
100. audrey hepburn in jeans
101. audrey hepburn inspired clothing
102. audrey hepburn movies characters
103. audrey hepburn music
104. audrey hepburn paper dolls
105. audrey hepburn replica dress
106. audrey hepburn roman holiday fashion
107. audrey hepburn wallcovering and border
108. charade audrey hepburn
109. fair lady audrey hepburn
110. information about audrey hepburn
111. list movies starring audrey hepburn movies
112. myspace audrey hepburn profile layout
113. styles hat were popularised by audrey hepburn
114. styles that audrey hepburn gave to the industry
115. tiara worn by audrey hepburn
116. ancestry audrey hepburn
117. are audrey and katharine hepburn related
118. audrey catherine hepburn
119. audrey hepburn - photos
120. audrey hepburn and kathrine hepburn related
121. audrey hepburn and pictures
122. audrey hepburn as a ballet dancer
123. audrey hepburn award
124. audrey hepburn backgrounds
125. audrey hepburn bedding
126. audrey hepburn breakfast
127. audrey hepburn breakfast at tiffany's dolls
128. audrey hepburn clothes
129. audrey hepburn cutout
130. audrey hepburn doll
131. audrey hepburn filmography
132. audrey hepburn funeral poem
133. audrey hepburn gap
134. audrey hepburn gap video
135. audrey hepburn gigi
136. audrey hepburn in the 1950's
137. audrey hepburn movie monthly club
138. audrey hepburn on film set
139. audrey hepburn painting
140. audrey hepburn photoshop
141. audrey hepburn purses
142. audrey hepburn sabrina photos
143. audrey hepburn smoking
144. audrey hepburn stared with sean connery.
145. audrey hepburn tattoo
146. audrey hepburns pet fawn
147. awesome audrey hepburn costumes
148. biography of audrey hepburn
149. breakfast at tiffany's audrey hepburn
150. breakfast at tiffany's audrey hepburn clothing
151. color pictures audrey hepburn
152. costume designers for audrey hepburn my fair lady
153. dress replicas audrey hepburn
154. famous quotes by audrey hepburn
155. gap audrey hepburn video
156. hairstyles audrey hepburn
157. how to do audrey hepburn hairstyles
158. hurbert de givenchy and audrey hepburn
159. life magazine interview audrey hepburn
160. life of audrey hepburn
161. list of movies audrey hepburn
162. myspace layout audrey hepburn
163. quotations from audrey hepburn
164. replica audrey hepburn dress for sale
165. the audrey hepburn story
166. the gap ads audrey hepburn
167. the gap audrey hepburn
168. 1953 film with gregory peck and audrey hepburn
169. are audrey and katharine hepburn sisters
170. are audrey and katherine hepburn related
171. are katharine hepburn audrey hepburn related
172. audrey and katharine hepburn
173. audrey hepburn + biography
174. audrey hepburn - i could have danced all night
175. audrey hepburn a girl wants to dance
176. audrey hepburn actress
177. audrey hepburn and fashion
178. audrey hepburn and mel farrer
179. audrey hepburn and poem
180. audrey hepburn articles
181. audrey hepburn as gigi
182. audrey hepburn autograph signature
183. audrey hepburn beauty tip
184. audrey hepburn beehive updo hairstyles
185. audrey hepburn biographt
186. audrey hepburn black dresses
187. audrey hepburn breakfast at tiffany's doll pink dress
188. audrey hepburn breakfast at tiffany's hair
189. audrey hepburn breakfest at tiffany's
190. audrey hepburn bride
191. audrey hepburn clayderman
192. audrey hepburn clothes designer
193. audrey hepburn commercials
194. audrey hepburn costume party
195. audrey hepburn dance in funny face
196. audrey hepburn dancing
197. audrey hepburn dark movie
198. audrey hepburn death'
199. audrey hepburn estate
200. audrey hepburn films
201. audrey hepburn funny face pictures
202. audrey hepburn gigi playbill
203. audrey hepburn gowns
204. audrey hepburn grayscale
205. audrey hepburn green mansions
206. audrey hepburn hair style
207. audrey hepburn hairstyle updo
208. audrey hepburn hairstyles 50s
209. audrey hepburn hairstyles pictures
210. audrey hepburn hats
211. audrey hepburn hi-res
212. audrey hepburn history
213. audrey hepburn in a swimsuit
214. audrey hepburn jennifer love hewitt
215. audrey hepburn katherine hepburn
216. audrey hepburn la vie en rose
217. audrey hepburn layout
218. audrey hepburn makeup tips
219. audrey hepburn married
220. audrey hepburn movie collection
221. audrey hepburn movie lists
222. audrey hepburn movie posters
223. audrey hepburn movie sabrina
224. audrey hepburn myspace icons
225. audrey hepburn photo
226. audrey hepburn pink myspace layouts
227. audrey hepburn pop art
228. audrey hepburn postcards
229. audrey hepburn riding a bicycle
230. audrey hepburn royal holiday
231. audrey hepburn royal holiday pictures
232. audrey hepburn sabrina study in paris
233. audrey hepburn skinny black pants dance
234. audrey hepburn styles
235. audrey hepburn success
236. audrey hepburn sun glasses
237. audrey hepburn timeline
238. audrey hepburn video
239. audrey hepburn wallpapers galleries
240. audrey hepburn wedding flowers
241. audrey hepburn wikipedia
242. audrey hepburn william holden affair
243. audrey hepburns list of classics to own
244. audrey hepburns sons
245. breakfast at tiffany's - audrey hepburn
246. cardboard cutout audrey hepburn
247. charade poster audrey hepburn
248. classic audrey hepburn haircuts
249. dresses audrey hepburn
250. funny face starring audrey hepburn and fred astaire
251. gap audrey hepburn
252. gary cooper audrey hepburn
253. givenchy audrey hepburn designs
254. how did audrey hepburn die
255. how did audrey hepburn keep her figure
256. how tall was audrey hepburn
257. hubert de givenchy and audrey hepburn
258. jennifer love hewitt as audrey hepburn
259. katharine hepburn and audrey hepburn
260. makeup tips for audrey hepburn eyes
261. moon river audrey hepburn mp3
262. moon river- audrey hepburn
263. moonriver audrey hepburn
264. movie the unforgiven audrey hepburn
265. movies with audrey hepburn and shirley mclaine
266. natalie portman audrey hepburn
267. ondine audrey hepburn
268. photos audrey hepburn
269. photos of audrey hepburns children
270. photos of audrey hepburns daughter
271. pica of audrey hepburn
272. poster audrey hepburn
273. pregnant audrey hepburn
274. quote and audrey hepburn and black dress
275. sabrina - audrey hepburn
276. the gap commercial audrey hepburn
277. unesco audrey hepburn
278. video clips of audrey hepburn
279. wallpapers audrey hepburn
280. watch audrey hepburn videos free
281. william holden and audrey hepburn