Posts tagged: Audrey Hepburn
CGI technology has brought the late Audrey Hepburn back to the screen, as she stars in a TV advertisement for the chocolate company, Galaxy. Hepburn’s sons, Sean Ferrer and Luca Dotti, said regarding the project: “Our mother often spoke about her love of chocolate and how it lifted her spirit, so we’re sure she would have been proud of her role as the face of Galaxy.” (watch the commercial here)
Breakfast at Tiffany’s, (1961)
Holly and Cat
Breakfast at Tiffany’s, (1961)
Audrey Hepburn with Cat.
Breakfast at Tiffany’s, (1961)
Holly, Paul, and Cat.
Anthony Perkins and Audrey Hepburn (holding her pet fawn Ip) on the set of Green Mansions (1959)
Charade, 1963.
Hee.
You’re not only a model, you’re an actress.
Funny Face, 1957.
I apologize for the delay. Right after the festival, I had several shows to perform and finals. Here is my review of the last day at the festival.
After we finished up with A Trip to the Moon and Other Trips, my sister and cousin caught up with us to see Charade with me and my parents.
Charade was a truly wonderful treat. It was certainly a jump in time from our previous film experience, but a wonderful one. Charade featured an older, wiser, but still just as beautiful Audrey Hepburn as a widow being pursued by her late husband’s murderers who are in search of the money he’d stolen from them, all while developing an untrustworthy romance with a much older Cary Grant.
Audrey has such a naive yet sophisticated presence in every movie that she really does her best work when she’s paired alongside some of those well-established, best-of-the-best actors, like Gregory Peck and Fred Astaire and Humphrey Bogart, many of whom were 13-30 years her senior. Here, she is 34 and Cary Grant is 58, but the chemistry between the two of them is just phenomenal and comes just at the perfect time in their careers. Cary had originally turned down the opportunity to appear with her in Roman Holiday and in Sabrina, and almost had to turn down this one as well, but he realized how terrible the script for his previous engagement was and practically crawled back to Stanley Donen to do Charade instead. And the dialogue in the script allows for the relationship to be more believable, making light of their age difference and develops a great game of cat and mouse between the two, Audrey doing the chasing this time.
Also supporting Audrey is the great Walter Matthau, who’d later go on to do such films as Hello, Dolly!, the original Taking of Pelham 123, and Grumpy Old Men. Previously, he’d done many of the Hitchcock Presents… which brought the element to the film that made it, what many called, “the best Hitchcock film that Hitchcock never made.”
The film is probably my favorite of Cary Grant’s comedies. There is something abouthim in Charade that is just absolutely carefree and unafraid to let loose. Cary has these hilarious faces! The only other time I can remember laughing as hard at a Cary Grant film would be in Arsenic and Old Lace, almost twenty years prior. I suppose that goes along with one of his lines from Charade, “You’ve just said a horrible word: Serious. When a man gets to be my age, that’s the last word he ever wants to hear. I don’t want to be serious.”
NOTE: You can actually watch Charade online, on Hulu or Netflix.
Afterwards, we caught up with my sister to catch the Women, with Norma Shearer, Rosalind Russell, and Joan Crawford, as well as more big names. This film was made in 1939, but many of you may be familiar with the 2008 remake, also featuring a mess of big name actress such as Bette Midler, Annette Bening, Cloris Leachman, and Carrie Fisher, to name a few. You may also recognize it as the film adaptation of the Broadway hit of the same name by Clare Booth Luce, originally performed (and appropriately so) at the Ethel Barrymore Theater.

The Women is a brilliant film for women. When you’re told that this film is called The Women, they aren’t joking around with the title. This film features absolutely nothing BUT women. Not once do you see anything resembling the opposite sex, besides a coat belonging to the main character’s husband. The animals, the portraits in the background, prop books’ authors, everything that has a sexual orientation is female, which I believe is appropriate as this film is all about women’s issues and their relationships. Of course, it is centered around Mary Haines and her subsequent divorce after her husband cheats on her, but even then, it isn’t his infidelity that’s the issue, its Crystal Allen’s presence in their relationship that is the point. The love that is talked of between Mr. and Mrs. Haines seems absolutely mutual, but his struggle with doing what’s right and wrong is Crystal’s manipulation, and as we women know, man is slave beneath woman’s whip of influence.
Of course, the film’s star is Joan Crawford, who plays the film’s terrible other woman. She is mean, manipulative, and does well opposite a sweet Norma Shearer. By this time, she is still stuck in roles that are more vampy, before she hits it in a serious roles like Mildred Pierce. Through the whole film, there is nothing I’d like to see more than for Mary to rip the fancy clothes her husband has bought her right off her back and push her into the street naked, but maybe thats just my feminine side talking. Joan doesn’t make you hate her but her actions. She is that woman that all women know of. She is the manipulator.
The film is definitely long and definitely filled with a lot of hormone-induced bad decisions, but I loved it. I don’t think I’d watch it again any time soon, but I respect it for its genius. I would strongly suggest that all females find time to watch it at least once.
The last film on our trip was another Cary Grant film, Mr. Blandings Builds His Dream Home, featuring Myrna Loy and Melvyn Douglas, as a part of their architecture series at the festival. This film struck so well in the hearts of many Americans who just wanted a place to call their own. In fact, I remember watching and thinking, “This is just like George Washington Slept Here,” a film with Jack Benny of the same concept produced four years before Mr. Blandings. I quite enjoyed Washington Slept Here, but Mr. Blandings was just as wonderful to watch. I suppose it had more appeal the public simply because of its more famous cast. While Jack Benny carries the screen well, Mr. Blandings is more equally balance between Cary, Myrna, and Melvyn. Also placing Mr. Blandings on a higher pedestal would be RKO’s advertising department. According to our presenter, a some 40 replicas of Mr. Blandings’ home were built all across the United States.

An interesting realization I had while watching this film, it being the third Cary Grant film I’d seen throughout the festival, was realizing a necklace that Cary wore under his shirt. We didn’t see it in I’m No Angel, as he doesn’t take his shirt off, but I noticed it both in Charade and in Mr. Blandings. There’s fifteen years between the two films, but there is no mistaking that its the same necklace, a small, gold, coin-shaped pendant on a long thin chain.

All in all, the festival was a fantastic chance to see great films on the big screen, experience a slice of history, and hear what went into making these movies. Despite a bit of personal drama that when on while we were attendance, there weren’t any other people I’d wish to have attend the festival with. I could only gush to my cousin over Charade and Stanley Donen, and then only gush with her when we realized that Stanley Donen was sitting right in front of us during the film.
If you are interested in classic film or a history of films, this is definitely a place to be. If only I could go again, I would LIVE there, nestled between a hundred other people in uncomfortable seating (though I think if I even smell popcorn one more time, I might throw up). My theatre professors noticed that they’d never seen me so excited as when I came back from the festival and I think thats because, as an actress and artist, there is nothing more I’d rather be doing than making films like the ones I saw this weekend.
If you do have a chance to go, here is my advice: Bring snacks and energy drinks because you will not have time to eat nor the energy to stay awake. Bring a good camera if you wanna snapshot of any of the celebs because an iPhone will NOT do anyone justice. If you’re attempting to do a blog, blog in between films and not at the end of the day like I did or you’ll never get any sleep. And speaking of which, if you want to get the full experience, here’s my last piece of advice: SLEEP LESS, WATCH MORE.
(reposted with pictures)
So we decided not to see High Society as it was too terribly cold outside to watch, but we did have dinner at the Public inside the Roosevelt, two tables away from THE Ben Mankiewicz, who had a harem of women around him at all times. We attempted to get a picture and an autograph, but the wall of women was too thick.

Afterward, we saw Sabrina at Grauman’s Chinese Theater. It was wonderful. My big cousin fell asleep in my lap before the movie began (we’d all had a long day) and my big sister went to catch up with friends so my parents and I are essentially the only ones of our party who have actually seen a movie since we got here.
Sabrina was fabulous. The costume designer for Mad Men and the Mad Men collection at Banana Republic spoke before the movie, commenting on how well Edith Head did on supervising the costume design, especially with a certain young, new designer Givenchy. The pictured above is the dress Audrey Hepburn wore during the party and in the tennis court, which is on display here at the festival. You really don’t get a sense of how tiny she was until you’re standing next to it. I knew she could fit a dog collar around her waist, but wow! It looks like only a very, VERY tall six year old could fit into it. And Audrey was a tall girl too, despite being so tiny. You can tell in the scenes with Humphrey Bogart that they are almost equal in height, even while she’s in flats.
Audrey was always self-conscious about her body. She spent some of her youth eating dandelions and mud pies because her father had invested all their family’s money into the Third Reich and many times, they went without food. Her metabolism suffered for it and it often took two big helpings of spaghetti (which she’d often make for the cast and crew of whatever movie she was working on when filming ran late) just to keep her weight up. In her adulthood, she also suffered from anorexia on occasion, I suppose because she had gotten used to going without.

In Sabrina, you can really see her transform from this awkward little girl into this gorgeous, sophisticated, young woman. Really, she is beautiful in the fact that she isn’t very attractive. She has bushy eyebrows (which, despite the studio’s insistence, she kept bushy), crooked teeth, and large nostrils. One of her ears is kind of pointed while the other is round. Yet she is still this picture of perfection. She truly is an inspiration for woman who aren’t satisfied with their physical appearance.

Humphrey Bogart apparently didn’t want Audrey for the role. He was filling in last minute for Cary Grant though, so his suggestion to use wife Lauren Bacall came too late. He really does a good job though at being the tough, stalwart, cold business guy. Much like William Powell in My Man Godfrey, you almost can’t tell he is in love with Sabrina except for subtle character ticks, the biggest one for me and my favorite being the slight twitch in his right cheek right before he socks his brother in the face. It’s a small break, but it is one that really shows us how vulnerable even the toughest guy can get when he’s in love.

Billy Wilder is also a truly genius writer as well. The humor, the puns, the subtle sexual jokes, are so wonderfully played out by the actors. It’s almost a shame that he was such a hard person to work with. We all know geniuses tend to be arrogant, but apparently, he scared off his first co-writer for the movie within one day.
Truly a wonder to see on the big screen.

** Fun note: When Sabrina pulls down the brim of his hat the first time, there is this moment where you can see a glimpse of Bogie’s old role as the gangster. And the look he gives Audrey definitely shows that he knows it.
Audrey Hepburn’s dress from Sabrina. On display at the 2012 TCM Film Festival.
Also, I’d like to emphasize that unless you can fit a dog collar around your waist, like Audrey, you will NEVER fit into this dress.
The eyes of Liz Taylor, Yul Brynner, Sophia Loren, Leslie Caron, Paul Newman, Audrey Hepburn, Peter O’Toole, Bette Davis, Joan Crawford, James Dean, Vincent Price, Gregory Peck, Katharine Hepburn, William Powell, Humphrey Bogart, Natalie Wood, and James Stewart.
I decided to make a collage of great actors’ eyes for my Characterization class in which we do the Style, developed by Tim Robbins for the Actors Gang, that involves sharing the eyes. A little lame, but I take pride in knowing each actor simply by their eyes. Lol.