home
***
CD-ROM
|
disk
|
FTP
|
other
***
search
/
TIME: Almanac 1995
/
TIME Almanac 1995.iso
/
time
/
caps
/
50s
/
50hepbur.000
< prev
next >
Wrap
Text File
|
1994-03-25
|
18KB
|
329 lines
<text id=93HT0309>
<title>
1950s: Princess Apparent:Audrey Hepburn
</title>
<history>Time-The Weekly Magazine-1950s Highlights</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
TIME Magazine
September 7, 1953
Princess Apparent
</hdr>
<body>
<p> Princess Anne's pretty, high-arched feet were tired. The
endless rounds of official visits required of royalty on tour
had left her toes cramped and sore. Her face showed no sign of
her trouble as she stood--aloof, beautiful and dignified in
flowing white brocade--to receive the distinguished noblemen
and diplomats who thronged the glittering reception hall in the
great palazzo. Gravely smiling, she greeted, in half-a-dozen
languages, each baron and ambassador, each banker's lady and
minister of state with the correct slight nod and carefully
chosen words. There seemed to be not a flaw in the well-ordered
proceedings. Then the camera peeped impertinently beneath the
princess' royal skirts. It revealed the awful fact that she had
slipped off one of her high-heeled shoes and, standing in
perfect balance on one foot, was happily, restfully, wriggling
the toes of the other.
</p>
<p> Exquisitely blending queenly dignity and bubbling mischief,
a stick-slim actress with huge, limpid eyes and a heart-shaped
face was teaching U.S. moviegoers last week a lesson they
already knew and loved--i.e., that the life of a princess is
not a happy one. Balcony bobby-soxers for years have shed
pleasant tears at the plight of trapped royalty, and breathed
a happy sigh when at last the royal one escapes into a
commoner's arms (Olivia de Havilland and a handsome pilot in
1943's Princess O'Rourke; Vera-Ellen and a tap-dancing reporter
in 1953's Call Me Madam). As the princess in Paramount's new
picture, Roman Holiday, the newcomer named Audrey Hepburn gives
that popular old romantic nonsense a reality it has seldom had
before. Amid the rhinestone glitter of Roman Holiday's make-
believe, Paramount's new star sparkles and glows with the fire
of a finely cut diamond. Impertinence, hauteur sudden
repentance, happiness, rebellion and fatigue supplant each
other with lightning speed on her mobile, adolescent face.
</p>
<p> Pathos and Dignity. When the movie princess escapes, on
impulse, from dull routine and is found, drunk on a sedative,
by Reporter Gregory Peck on a bench in a Roman park, Audrey
makes her helplessness absolutely winning by her quiet
assumption that Peck will tend to her needs just as her personal
maid might. "I've never been alone with a man before," she says
severely a bit later in Peck's apartment, "even with my dress
on," and her trusting innocence becomes a sure guarantee of
safety. Audrey Hepburn's princess seems never to forget her
exalted station, even when she is gulping an ice-cream cone,
getting her hair cut or whamming a cop over the head with a
guitar in a nightclub dustup. Yet to scenes where she is playing
the princess proper, she brings a wistfulness that seems
completely unposed. She can be infinitely appealing with her
hair snarled and her dress dripping wet. In the film's final
moments, she becomes a lonely little figure of great pathos and
dignity.
</p>
<p> Bridging the Gap. The skies over Hollywood have exploded
with new stars time and time again: heavily accented femmes
fatales like Pola Negri, sturdy peasants like Anna Sten,
indestructible waifs like Luise Rainer or Elisabeth Bergner,
calendar girls like Marilyn Monroe, dignified stars from
London's West End like Deborah Kerr. Audrey Hepburn fits none
of the cliches, and none of the cliches fit her. Even hard-
boiled Hollywood personages who have seen new dames come and
go are hard put to find words to describe Audrey. Tough Guy
Humphrey Bogart calls her "elfin" and "birdlike." Director John
Huston frankly moons: "Those thin gams, those thin arms and that
wonderful face..." Director Billy Wilder, who is slated to
direct Audrey's second picture (Sabrina Fair), contents himself
with a prophecy: "This girl, singlehanded, may make bosoms a
thing of the past."
</p>
<p> The truth is that the quality Audrey brings to the screen
is not dependent on her figure, her face, her accent (which is
neither quite British nor quite foreign) or even her talent.
Belgian-born (of a Dutch mother and an Anglo-Irish father), she
has, like all great actresses from Maude Adams to Greta Garbo,
the magic ability to bridge the gap between herself and her
audience, and to make her innermost feelings instantly known and
shared.
</p>
<p> Hollywood's first inkling of this magic quality came when
a screen test ordered by Director William Wyler was viewed by
Paramount's brass. It showed Audrey playing the princess part
a little nervously, a little self-consciously. But Wyler had
played a sly trick on the newcomer by ordering the British
director who made her test to keep his cameras turning after the
scene was over. When the word "cut" rang out, Audrey sat up in
their royal bed, suddenly as natural as a puppy, hugging her
knees and grinning the delighted grin of a well-behaved child
who has earned a cookie.
</p>
<p> "She was absolutely delicious," says Wyler. "We were
fascinated," says Paramount's Production Boss Don Hartman. "It's
no credit to anyone that we signed her immediately."
</p>
<p> Monte Carlo Baby. Audrey's screen test clinched Wyler's
decision to make the picture on which it was based. He had
considered and rejected most of the obvious Hollywood beauties
for the part. He prized Audrey not so much on the basis of her
talent as on the fact that she was unknown, and could not
therefore be spotted through the royal disguise. The only
trouble was that Audrey refused to stay unknown.
</p>
<p> As a London chorus girl, she had wangled some bit parts in
British movies, e.g., the cigarette girl in the opening scene
of Alec Guinness' Lavender Hill Mob. Then a Paramount scout in
London spotted her. One picture, called Monte Carlo Baby, called
for location shots in Monaco's Hotel de Paris. Just as Audrey
stepped into the rays of the klieg lights in the lobby to run
through her brief scene as a honeymooning bride, the door swung
open and in rolled an old lady in a wheelchair. It was famed
French Novelist Colette, one of whose many bestselling novels,
Gigi, had just been dramatized in English by Anita (Gentlemen
Prefer Blondes) Loos. Colette held up an imperious finger to
halt the wheelchair as Audrey did her bit before the camera.
Then she turned to her husband. "Voila," she whispered,
indicating Audrey, "there's your Gigi."
</p>
<p> That afternoon a startled young actress listened in saucer-
eyed wonder as M. Maurice Goudeket explained that his wife, the
great Colette, had personally picked her to play the lead in a
Broadway play. A few weeks later, after an expensive exchange
of cablegrams and consultations with Broadway Producers Gilbert
Miller, Author Loos herself flew to London to confirm Colette's
judgment. "I tried to explain to all of them that I wasn't
ready to do a lead," said Audrey in New York last week, "but
they didn't agree, and I certainly wasn't going to argue with
them."
</p>
<p> A bit-playing actress who was virtually unknown thus signed
up, almost simultaneously, to star in a Broadway play and a
Hollywood movie.
</p>
<p> Dolls Aren't Real. Audrey's mother belonged to an ancient
family in the Dutch nobility; their home was once the Castle of
Doorn, in which the defeated German Kaiser spent his declining
years. Audrey's grandfather, Baron Aernoud van Heemstra, onetime
governor of the Dutch colony of Surinam, was a familiar figure
at the court of Queen Wilhelmina.
</p>
<p> Born in Brussels in 1929, Audrey herself was the product
of a divorced mother's second marriage, an unhappy alliance that
ended in another divorce when Audrey was ten. Her father, J.A.
Hepburn-Ruston, was a high-pressure business promoter and rabid
anti-Communist who, after leaving Audrey's mother, joined Sir
Oswald Mosley's Blackshirts (British Union of Fascists).
Audrey's earliest companions were her two older half-brothers,
with whom she spent many hours in tomboy comradeship, climbing
trees and racing across the green fields of their Belgian
estate. Unlike most little girls, she did not care for dolls.
"They never seemed real to me," she says. She preferred instead
the company of dogs, cats, rabbits, and other animals with as
much vitality as herself. In her quiet moments, she would dress
up in the make-believe that others kept for their dolls, and
wherever a bush or a tree or a spare piece of furniture formed
a secret corner, she would build herself an imaginary castle and
sit happily for hours drawing pictures or dreaming dreams.
</p>
<p> Ballet in the Underground. When she was four, Audrey began
spending her winters at school in England. In 1939, after her
mother's divorce and Britain's declaration of war on Germany,
she went to stay at Arnhem, where the Van Heemstra family had
their home. There, one day on 1940, she was taken to see a
performance of Britain's Sadler's Wells ballet company. She
went home entranced and determined to be a ballet dancer
herself.
</p>
<p> Next day the Nazis invaded The Netherlands. It was a weird,
unreal world in which Audrey, the gay-grave dreamer of fairy
tales, found herself; a world where terror lurked in every
shadow and neighbors could disappear overnight. Audrey's own
uncle, a prominent lawyer in Arnhem, was one of the first
victims of Nazi "discipline." He was shot as one of six hostages
in retaliation for a plot to blow up a German train. Audrey's
cousin, an adjutant at the royal court, was also executed.
</p>
<p> A British subject who spoke both French and English much
too fluently for comfort on the streets of Arnhem, Audrey was
sent to school to learn the language of her mother's people.
In the afternoon she took drawing lessons, and once a week she
went to the local conservatory of music to learn ballet.
Sometimes, on her way to school, she would carry messages for
the underground in her shoes. Later, when her dancing became
more proficient, she and a friend who played the piano gave
dance recitals in private houses to collect money for the
resistance. It was against Nazi regulations for more than a
handful of people to gather in any one place, but the 100 or
more who dropped in to watch Audrey were circumspect, and the
Nazis never found out.
</p>
<p> As time and the war went on, money and food became scarcer.
At one time, Audrey's family had nothing to eat for days but
endive. "I swore I'd never eat it again as long as I lived,"
she says. The hungry days in Holland gave her a taste for rich
pastries and chocolate that is still unsatisfied.
</p>
<p> When British troops finally reached Arnhem, Audrey recalls,
"I stood there night and day just watching. The joy of hearing
English, the incredible relief of being free. It's something
you can't just fathom."
</p>
<p> Poise and Motion. After the war, Audrey went back to ballet
school. She spent three years studying in Amsterdam and then
moved on to London to continue her studies under Ballet Director
Marie Rambert. "She was a wonderful learner," said Madame
Rambert last week. "If she had wanted to persevere, she might
have become an outstanding ballerina." But impatience and a
feeling that she had lost too much time was already clawing at
Audrey. Money was short for the Van Heemstras, and what little
there was could not be sent out of Holland. Audrey had to make
her own way in London. Starting the rounds of West End
auditions, she got a job as a chorus girl in the London
production of High Button Shoes.
</p>
<p> She got other small jobs--in movies, revues and
nightclubs. A commercial photographer spotted her on one show
and put her picture in every drugstore in Britain advertising
the benefits of Lacto-Calamine. Meanwhile, she went on with her
ballet lessons and filled in her spare time studying dramatics
under British Character Actor Felix Aylmer. "A pretty girl is
not necessarily qualified for the stage," says Aylmer (who used
to coach Charles Laughton). "What's most important is poise and
motion. She had that naturally."
</p>
<p> In November, 1951, Audrey opened at Manhattan's Fulton
Theater in the title role of Gilbert Miller's production of
Gigi, a sophisticated Gallic story of a 16-year-old French
tomboy who dreams of bourgeois marriage while her female
relatives train her to become a rich man's mistress. Next day
the New York Times's Critic Brooks Atkinson wrote: "Miss Hepburn
is the one fresh element in the performance. She is an actress;
and, as Gigi, she develops a full-length character from artless
gaucheries in the first act to a stirring emotional climax in
the last scene. [She] is spontaneous, lucid and captivating."
The rest of New York critics heartily agreed. Paramount Pictures
and William Wyler, who had decided to keep their $2,200,000
production waiting for Audrey on the hunch her play would not
run a month, were obliged to twiddle their thumbs for half a
year while audiences packed the Fulton to sigh and smile at the
enchantingly gawky Gigi.
</p>
<p> Audience Authority. Despite all the glowing praise from
critics and public, Audrey was still far from sure that it was
deserved. Night after night, she worried and fretted over her
Broadway part. "She was terribly frightened," says Veteran
Actress Cathleen Nesbitt, who was assigned by Producer Miller
to take the newcomer under her protective wing. "She didn't have
much idea of phrasing. She had no idea how to project, and she
would come bounding onto the stage like a gazelle. But she had
that rare thing--audience authority, the thing that makes
everybody look at you when you are on stage." When things went
wrong, Audrey would make her final exit crestfallen and out of
breath from trying too hard. "I didn't get my laugh." she would
say in distress to a fellow actor. "What did I do wrong?" At the
end of the first week, when her name went up in lights on the
Fulton marquee, Audrey darted across the street like a
schoolgirl to have a look. Then, in sudden solemnity, she
sighed: "Oh dear, and I've still got to learn how to act."
</p>
<p> As a Broadway celebrity, she cared little for a cafe
society. Five out of six nights, after the show was over, she
would go home with Cathleen Nesbitt and gossip happily over
yoghurt and milk. Seeming both more naive and more sophisticated
than most girls of her age, Audrey Hepburn, at 23, was a piquante
mixture of adolescent bounce and womanly dignity. She could
convulse friends with a hilarious imitation of Jerry Lewis, or
pay a duty call, with all the necessary grace and assurance, on
visiting Queen Juliana of The Netherlands.
</p>
<p> Roman Holiday. Audrey's born-to-the-manner poise, her years
of hard work and the months of genuine privation that forced her
to grow up before her time were all apparent last week in her
first starring movie. Director Wyler has given the picture charm
and authenticity by filming it against the beautiful backgrounds
of ancient and modern Rome, and by using real Romans in the bit
parts. Gregory Peck and Eddie Albert add relaxed portraits of
a newspaperman and a photographer to help the fun along. But it
is Audrey Hepburn alone who makes the story come true. "Hell,"
said one Hollywoodian after seeing the picture, "The princess
going back to her platinum throne. That's not so bad when you
come to think of it, but it broke my heart. Just the look of
that girl. It's one of those magic things."
</p>
<p> "That girl," William Wyler told a friend when the picture
was done, "is going to be the biggest star in Hollywood."
</p>
<p> Last week, after the first vacation she had in five years,
Audrey was in New York being groomed to take her place in the
Western constellation. The treatment involved endless
interviews, cocktail parties and personal appearances on radio
and TV. To protect Paramount's $3,000,000 investment, she was
required to answer an endless series of silly questions. "How
does it feel to be a star, Miss Hepburn?" "Do you think marriage
and a career are compatible, Miss Hepburn?" Audrey sailed
through the tiring ordeal with the grace of a princess born and
the tact of a diplomat. She could speak gently of her own
engagement (to James Hanson, a wealthy young British
businessman), which had been broken off after Roman Holiday was
finished. She could still charmingly squelch the brash reporter
who tried to pry deeper. She could speak with disarming gaiety
of her pleasingly irregular teeth and still not deny her obvious
beauty. To the agonized gentlemen of the West Coast, whose
business is often to turn hat check girls into great ladies
overnight with publicity gimmicks, Audrey's artless publicity
technique was a revelation--just as her camera technique had
been to the cameraman, and as her flair for dress was to the
studio dressmakers. "Working with Audrey is fun," said one
Hollywood expert last week, "When you're working with her,
you're working with a fellow technician."
</p>
<p> As for being a great star: "It takes years," Audrey Hepburn
says simply, "to make a great star."
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>