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OUR FAIR LADY
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Release
Date:
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February 1, 1993
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Press Release:
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People Magazine
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by Susan
Schindehette
Additional contributors: Kristina Johnson and Lynn Morgan in Los
Angeles and Ann Guerin in New York City
OUR MOST RECENT IMAGES OF HER CAME OUT OF AFRICA where, as a
shirtsleeved ambassador for UNICEF, she walked in a ravaged
Somalia, giving solace with that radiant smile—and focusing the
world's attention on a starving land. Last September she asked
to be taken to the famine's epicenter, a feeding camp in the
town of Baidoa. As she arrived, she saw hundreds of small
lifeless bodies being loaded onto trucks. The worst of it, she
would later say, eyes welling with tears, was "the terrible
silence."
Life was a brave journey for Audrey Hepburn. She was, after all,
a woman who spent much of her girlhood in Nazi-occupied Holland,
subsisting for a time on flour made from tulip bulbs. Along with
her starving grandparents, she received food from a relief
agency—UNICEF's precursor. "Your soul is nourished by all your
experiences," she once said. "It gives you baggage for the
future—and ammunition, if you like."
Hepburn's journey ended last Wednesday in Tolochenaz,
Switzerland, where, at 63, she succumbed to the colon cancer
that had been diagnosed just two months before. Death found her
in a merciful setting: on a mild springlike night at her beloved
18th-century stone farmhouse on Lake Geneva. "She was able to
make only-one trip in the last days," says journalist Henry
Gris, one of her oldest friends. "She went out into the garden.
It's very gray this time of year, but she wanted to see her
flowers." At the end she was surrounded by those she cherished
most, including her companion of 12 years, Robert Wolders, 55.
"He was very dedicated to her," says Gris. Also at Hepburn's
bedside were her sons, Sean Ferrer, 33, and Luca Dotti, 22, and
her beloved Jack Russell terriers.
For a time last week, as people recalled the luminous images of
Hepburn in her 25 films, it seemed as if the whole world were in
mourning. "You looked at her, and all you could think was that
nothing bad should ever happen to her," said actress Arlene
Dahl. "If there was a cross between the salt of the earth and a
regal queen." said Shirley MacLaine, her costar in The
Children's Hour (1961), "then she was it."
Hepburn saw herself a bit differently. "I was born with an
enormous need for affection," she once said, "and a terrible
need to give it." Born Edda Van Heemstra Hepbum-Ruston to an
English-Irish banker father and a Dutch baroness, she had a near
idyllic early childhood in Brussels. But her parents divorced
when she was 9. Then came the war, and the Baroness, seeking
safe haven, moved with her daughter to her parents' home in
Arnhem. During Holland's Nazi occupation, Edda carried messages
for the Resistance in her ballet shoes. In time, as she would
later recall, "the rationing started, and then, little by
little, the reprisals began." An uncle and cousin were shot; her
elder half brother, Alexander, was conscripted to work in a
Berlin factory. The once chubby girl became gaunt and hail.
Certainly the memory of those years never left her: More than a
decade later she would turn down director George Stevens' offer
to make The Diary of Anne Frank because, she explained, "I could
not deal with it."
In 1948 the resilient teenager left for England to study ballet
and landed a chorus girl's part in a London production of High
Batton Shoes. Three years later, in Monte Carlo for a movie bit,
she was spotted by the novelist Colette, who instantly realized
that she had found the girl to play her Gigi on Broadway. That
role won Hepburn a Theatre World Award in 1952, and then-after
she kept a photo of Colette on her dressing table, inscribed,
"To Audrey Hepburn. the treasure I found on the beach."
After seeing her screen test, director William Wyler cast
Hepburn in his 1953 film, Roman Holiday. "She's not beautiful,"
said the crusty Wyler after Audrey picked up an Oscar for the
part, "but she gets to you."
Over the years, of course, she didn't get to everyone. Humphrey
Bogart, perhaps nettled by her romance with their costar William
Holden in 1954's Sabrina, said she was "OK if you like doing 36
takes." And a film magazine she long outlasted called her "this
weird hybrid with butchered hair." But the movie going public
worshiped her. and eventually even Bogie recanted. "You take the
Monroes and the Terry Moores," he said, "and you know just what
you're going to get every time. With Audrey it's kind of
unpredictable. She's like a good tennis player—she varies her
shots."
That she did—through a career that spanned divergent roles in
which she somehow always maintained her ineffable aura of class.
Though she had doubts about herself ("Oh, I'd like to be not so
flat-chested," she once said; "I'd like not to have such angular
shoulders, such big feet, such a big nose"), few other women saw
these as flaws. A rail-thin gamine during the zaftig Zeitgeist
of the 50s, she created a new ideal of beauty and with the help
of her friend designer Hubert de Givenchy, established an
impeccable—and frenetically imitated—look predicated on
simplicity.
Hepburn was chronically, hopelessly civilized. On locations the
world over, she made it a priority to establish a sense of home,
especially after her 1954 marriage to actor Mel Ferrer, whom she
had met when they costarred in Broadway's Ondine, a play that
won her a Tony. Hepburn would clear hotel suites of
standard-issue items and replace them with silver candlesticks,
matching salt-and-pepper shakers, her own sheets.
The couple's eventual split in 1968 was one of her life's great
disappointments, but she found it easier to bear than the five
miscarriages she suffered. It was while on location in the Congo
for The Nun's Story in 1958 that her depression over her
childlessness suddenly seemed to lift. "After looking inside an
insane asylum, visiting a leper colony, talking to missionary
workers and watching operations, I developed a new kind of inner
peacefulness," she said. In January 1960, her first child, Sean,
was born. Ten years later, during a 13-year marriage to Italian
psychiatrist Andrea Dotti, she gave birth, at 40, to another
son, Luca.
Always she made it clear that family took precedence over her
career. "The fact that I've made movies doesn't mean breakfast
gets made or that my child does better in his homework," she
said in 1980, explaining an eight-year screen hiatus that ended
in 1976 with Robin and Marian. "I still have to function as a
woman in a household."
Yet in later years, with her children grown, she found a new
purpose. In 1988 she became special ambassador for UNICEF and
immediately set off for Ethiopia to minister to famine victims.
Grueling trips to the Sudan, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras,
Mexico, Venezuela, Ecuador, Bangladesh and Vietnam followed. "I
do my best," she said simply. "I wish I could do more."
It was after her return from Somalia last fall that Hepburn
began suffering stomach pain. Doctors at first suspected she had
contracted an amoebic infection, but surgery in November found a
graver cause. "Rob [Wolders] told me she never complained once,"
says a friend. "It's not that bad," she would say.
But it was. Toward the end, says Gris, "she was in such terrible
pain. She could only speak in a whisper. She could not talk to
all of the people who called."
Hepburn seemed to sense that she was destined to play a special
role not just in movies but also in people's lives. "People
associate me with a time when movies were pleasant," she said,
"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.' "
Audrey Hepburn did, in the end, make a difference. "In a cruel
and imperfect world," says critic Rex Reed, "she was living
proof that God could still create perfection."
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Image & Story: ©
1993 Time Inc. - a Time Warner company.
All Rights Reserved. |

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