#203016 - Mon Nov 24 2003 07:39 AM
Re: Audrey Hepburn
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Multiloquent
Registered: Sat Dec 25 1999
Posts: 2824
Loc: Fairhaven Massachusetts USA
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She was fantastic in the Stanley Donen films "Funny Face" and "Two For The Road" as well as in Donen's "Charade" (vastly superior to the recent Demme remake) and "Wait Until Dark" (see this if you want some scares! Hepburn gave one of the best portrayals of a blind person ever.)
tjoeb};>
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#203017 - Mon Nov 24 2003 02:06 PM
Re: Audrey Hepburn
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Multiloquent
Registered: Mon Jun 25 2001
Posts: 2542
Loc: Los Angeles California USA
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I actually started a thread on this great lady about two years ago.
huh? wonder where it went
I own many of her movies I think that she was very pretty but as an actress, she had limited range however, she was truly awesome in the movies that she chose to be in.
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#203018 - Mon Nov 24 2003 03:51 PM
Re: Audrey Hepburn
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Administrator
Registered: Sun Dec 19 1999
Posts: 38005
Loc: Jersey Channel Islands
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I was given a boxed set of videos last Christmas, great viewing.
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#203019 - Wed Nov 26 2003 10:18 PM
Re: Audrey Hepburn
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Mainstay
Registered: Sat Jul 20 2002
Posts: 850
Loc: Waterford New Jersey USA
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I love Audrey. I think she had great depth as an actress...Roman Holiday has got to be my favorite.
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#203020 - Mon Dec 01 2003 12:13 PM
Re: Audrey Hepburn
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Participant
Registered: Sat Nov 22 2003
Posts: 9
Loc: Right behind you...
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Roman Holiday... one of the few movies that can actually make me cry. Actually, it can make me cry for two reasons- Number one, the first one was so awesome and the ending was quite sad. Number two- the remake was terrible and it's one of those movies you NEVER should do a remake of. Plus, it was a made for TV movie... *sigh*
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#203021 - Mon Dec 01 2003 03:19 PM
Re: Audrey Hepburn
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Multiloquent
Registered: Mon Jun 25 2001
Posts: 2542
Loc: Los Angeles California USA
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Actors don't have depth...they have range this is a term that is used to describe what types of characters and movies they could do well.
Katherine Hepburn could do it all. she was funny and epic and dramatic and adventure this is what I mean by range.
Audrey was absolutely fantastic as a comedic and romance actress. Go watch 'War and Peace' sometime...the one with her then husband Mel Ferrer. she looks great and she is a good actor, but not as good as in her romantic comedies.
Audrey shines in "Roman Holiday", "Sabrina", "Funny Face", etc. not to mention "Breakfast at Tiffany's" and "Charade"
one note though...she was pretty darn good in "Wait Until Dark"
so actors talk about having range...the ability to do all types of movies and characters. it's not depth. just wanted to correct a misperception about acting.
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#203023 - Mon Dec 01 2003 03:26 PM
Re: Audrey Hepburn
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Administrator
Registered: Sun Dec 19 1999
Posts: 38005
Loc: Jersey Channel Islands
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The Nun's Story, does no one else love this film?
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#203024 - Tue Dec 02 2003 09:44 AM
Re: Audrey Hepburn
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Enthusiast
Registered: Mon Sep 29 2003
Posts: 234
Loc: Philadelphia, PA
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Quote:
Lord Andry:Actors don't have depth...they have range this is a term that is used to describe what types of characters and movies they could do well.
Actually, it is interesting that you mention this. One of my closest friends is an Equity actor, and has a Master's in theater. I have a small interest in acting myself, although more on a hobby level, not nearly as rigorous as my friend's commitment to the craft. Nevertheless, he is always encouraging me and giving me things to read and view to stimulate my interest.
Just a few months ago, he gave me a paper that he had written for a theater class he took some years ago. The subject was "Range and Depth, the two-dimensional actor." His point was that an actor had to focus on both of these qualities to be artistically successful. He also argued that all of the great actors were people who possessed both.
Depth is just another way of saying "ability at character development." Sometimes, by the career decisions that actor's make, the opportunity to develop a character "deeply" is forced upon the actor, and other times a character can be developed very deeply in just one piece of work. Good examples of the former would be Leonard Nimoy as Spock in Star Trek, or Carrol O'Conner as Archie in All in the Family. Over the years, both characters were developed to extreme depths. Good examples of the latter were Anthony Hopkins in Silence of the Lambs, Tom Hanks in Forrest Gump, and Dustin Hoffman as Raymond Babbit in Rainman. Although all of the actors above could be said to possess depth in these portrayals, few people would point out Leonard Nimoy's range.
Another way to look at range would be the ability to capture depth in a wide variety of character portrayals. Most actors that can be said to have range also possess depth in this way. The reverse is not always true, however. An actor capable of a deep portrayal in one role may simply be unbelievable in another. An actor that truly has both would be someone like Russell Crowe, who covers the gamut from Dr. John Nash in A Beautiful Mind, to Maximus in Gladiator.
With all of this in mind, I would have to say that Audrey is among the greats, truly having mastered both range and depth.
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#203025 - Tue Dec 02 2003 01:49 PM
Re: Audrey Hepburn
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Multiloquent
Registered: Mon Jun 25 2001
Posts: 2542
Loc: Los Angeles California USA
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good points
I guess how we view actors is a matter of perception. you're right...she definitely had depth, I didn't know that the industry used this term. every romantic comedy she was in, she was fantastic.
I don't think Audrey would have been good in 'On Golden Pond' that's is what I'm trying to say. I love Audrey...I just don't think she had the dramatic range other actors of her time did. can you imagine Audrey in the role that Ingrid made famous in 'Casablanca'?
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#203027 - Wed Dec 03 2003 08:43 AM
Re: Audrey Hepburn
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Star Poster
Registered: Thu Sep 30 1999
Posts: 11250
Loc: Munchkinland
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This article was in today's newspaper. I thought of this discussion when I read it. Quote:
'An Elegant Spirit'
Audrey Hepburn's son writes of her sadness, self-doubt By BOB THOMAS Associated Press
SANTA MONICA, Calif. -- From Princess Anne in Roman Holiday to Eliza Doolittle in My Fair Lady, Audrey Hepburn seemed the epitome of inner calm and self-reliance.
But to her son, she was a woman beset with sadness and self-doubt.
"She remembered vividly the fear she felt as a child when the German troops invaded the city of Arnhem, in the Netherlands, where she spent most of the war," writes Sean Hepburn Ferrer in his new book, Audrey Hepburn, An Elegant Spirit.
"She also told us about how her brothers ate dog biscuits when there was nothing else to eat; how the bread was green because the only flour available was made from peas. She spent the whole day in bed reading so as not to feel the hunger."
Hepburn also suffered the loss of her father -- not from the war, but by desertion. He left the family when war was declared, and she didn't see him until 20 years later, when she was an international movie star.
Ferrer, the only son of Audrey Hepburn and Mel Ferrer, was interviewed at the offices of the Audrey Hepburn Children's Fund in a venerable building a mile from the Pacific Ocean in Santa Monica. The fund is virtually a one-man operation that stages exhibits and events to benefit UNICEF, to which Hepburn devoted her final years. Her son's proceeds from the book go to the fund.
About his mother's sadness, Ferrer commented: "I believe that you can't know courage without conquering fear, and you can't really know joy without knowing sadness."
He explained the "screenplay" that was his mother's life was divided into three acts: (1) pursuing a highly successful film career; (2) raising her two sons (she has a son from her marriage to Italian psychiatrist Andrea Dotti); (3) devoting herself to UNICEF after the sons became adults.
"I think that emotional marks are made early on," Ferrer said. "Even if you can rationalize them as you grow up, they still leave that dank sadness you can never truly shake.
"That's why she believed that one of the priorities in our society should be to address the children who are in need. Not just for a cup of soup or another vitamin, but to see what war does to children and protect them as much emotionally as we should physically."
Ferrer is a tall, husky 43-year-old whose dark hair bears the beginnings of gray. His own professional life is divided among conducting the work of the Audrey Hepburn Children's Fund, managing his mother's legacy by policing piracy of her image and checking residual payments from her movies, and pursuing his own career in films.
Having grown up in the movie world, Ferrer entered the field not as an actor but in production. His efforts to produce his own movies have been unsuccessful, mainly, he said, because he refuses to appeal to commercial mediocrity.
"I have a passion to make something that's good, not merely OK," he said. But he hasn't given up.
Ferrer had just returned from a book-signing tour that took him to New York, Boston and Chicago. Like his parents, he had to answer the same questions over and over again -- such as, Why write the book now, a decade after his mother's death?
"I didn't write the book now," he explained. "I started thinking about it shortly after my mother passed away. I didn't know if it was going to be a book, but I wanted to sit down and write about this time in my life for my children."
Audrey Hepburn, An Elegant Spirit is a large-format book loaded with illustrations and an intimate look at her personal life, from her unhappy childhood to her graceful death. After an initial operation in California for stomach cancer in 1992, the disease spread, and a second operation revealed no hope for survival. She returned to her Swiss home, where she died Jan. 20, 1993, at age 63.
"She wasn't angry," her son recalled. "She was disappointed that she couldn't be operated on again. She felt at peace with it. She felt that death is a natural part of life."
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#203028 - Tue Aug 17 2004 11:40 AM
Re: Audrey Hepburn
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Forum Champion
Registered: Wed Aug 11 2004
Posts: 5659
Loc: Alabama USA
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Audrey Hepburn was not only an actress; she epitomized a new image of grace and glamour in the entertainment industry. That's one of the reasons why I enjoy her movies so much. And her acting style was so different from many of her contemporaries.
I've seen many of her movies, but the ones I enjoy the most are Roman Holiday, Charade, Wait Until Dark, My Fair Lady, Two for the Road, and Breakfast at Tiffany's. The Children's Hour and The Nun's Story were both good too, but just not my favorites. I didn't like The Unforgiven and Green Mansions. Audrey was all wrong in The Unforgiven, playing an American Indian in a Western, and Green Mansions was simply an overall weak film. Sabrina was okay, but I must confess I enjoyed the 1995 remake more. And I usually abhor remakes of any kind!
Overall, Audrey Hepburn is my favorite actress. I intend to see all of her films eventually. I recently read Barry Paris's biography of her life, and it was quite good too.
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#203029 - Tue Aug 17 2004 01:51 PM
Re: Audrey Hepburn
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Pure Diamond
Registered: Fri May 18 2001
Posts: 123698
Loc: Canton Ohio USA
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It's that face I think. And that overall charm that came from it. She was a dancer by choice and not really an actress but, yikes, how she pulled it off! And such classic beauty! And she was quite a humanitarian. Total package of class.
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