HEPBURNY

@hepburny / hepburny.tumblr.com

YOUR #1 GIF RESOURCE FOR ALL THINGS AUDREY HEPBURN
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Anonymous asked:

Hello there, I was on the hunt for an Audrey tumblr site which is active. Your last post is three month old, is there any chance that you could post more often than that. I look at my fav sites every day and it's so sad if I get no new updates. I really like your gifs! Bye bye ; )

That’s so lovely to hear!! I’m probably replying around 2 months after this ask was sent but I appreciate you sending this and making me rethink it! I still have so much to share and I do enjoy being around here but my work makes it pretty difficult (I work for a tax/audit firm)... I would say I have a pretty massive post archive of Audrey gifs but it would probably interest you to follow some other audrey blogs. @rareaudreyhepburn and @timelessaudrey are the best and have been around longer than I have been here <3

I hope Adobe sorts it out its apps for Mac so I can work on some surprise gifsets in the future! Thank you for the love, you all <3

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Anonymous asked:

Hello, hello! I think a little ago I’d seen a post you made with a quote from someone when they first met Audrey, I think she was with Mel Ferrer at the time and they mention something about her looking young (and maybe something about someone knocking their head on a pool? Can’t quite recall!). If you could point me to it I’d quite appreciate it! Hope you’re having a lovely day xxx

So nice of you to remember that I was the source of that post <3 (can’t believe this post is 5 years old!)

Captioned:

In spring of 1955, the Ferrers went to Italy and reoccupied the charming house in Albano, twenty miles outside Rome, where they had spent their honeymoon. One of their visitors was JEREMY BRETT, WHO WAS PLAYING AUDREY’S YOUNGER BROTHER IN WAR AND PEACE.

“When I arrived at their house,” recalled Brett, shortly before his death in 1995, “Mel met me and under his right arm popped a little girl with no makeup who looked about sixteen years old — an exquisitely delicate, porcelain doll. I was spellbound. I remember swimming with them and banging my head on the side of the pool because I was so busy looking at her.” — EXCERPTED FROM THE BOOK: AUDREY HEPBURN BY BARRY PARIS

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hepburny
She was absolutely stunning and perfect in her role in “Roman Holiday,” 1953. She had a kind of aura around her, as if she were born to play the part (of a princess). I called my agent, George Chasin, and told him I wanted her to have co-star billing, because it was obvious to me that she was going to be a big star and maybe win the Academy Award. Chasin gave me an argument… and I said, ‘Look, George, just do it! It’s really the princess’ story.’ And I thought, ‘She’s so terrific in this and I’m going to look like a jackass if it says “Gregory Peck in ‘Roman Holiday.’” It was absolutely clear to me that equal billing was the way it ought to be. — Gregory Peck ( October 8, 1989 )
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hepburny
The picnic scene, forced Miss Hepburn on to a diet of one daily plate of cereal-only for a week. That was to repair the damage done during the filming of the picnic, during which she ate 20 portions of chicken, a sack of potato chips, and more than a gallon of ginger ale. —excerpted from The Sydney Morning Herald archive ( dated January 9, 1958 )
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hepburny
THE KISS: Two dressing rooms were assembled for Audrey, especially for the final sequence—one for taking off her wet clothes, the other for putting on dry ones. They were labeled “Wet Hepburn” and “Dry Hepburn.” When it came time for the kiss, Blake held out for eight takes, each one straining Peppard’s neck more than the last. To give the camera the best view of the leading lady, the actor had to tilt his face just so, and the awkward angle, he claimed, threatened his look of rapture. But they did it again (and again) with Audrey ducking into “Wet” and emerging from “Dry,” and at long last, with the warmish studio rain pouring down around him, Blake Edwards had the last shot he wanted. High-angled and wide, his camera tilted down on Paul and Holly ensorcelled in a kiss. Breakfast at Tiffany’s was now a love story.  —Fifth Avenue, 5 A.M. by Sam Wasson
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hepburny
Audrey Hepburn on the terrace of the Restaurant Hammetschwand at the summit of Bürgenstock, Switzerland, circa 1955.
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hepburny
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 to 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 (May 4, 1929 - January 20, 1993)
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hepburny
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 to 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 (May 4, 1929 - January 20, 1993)
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hepburny
Happy Birthday, Audrey Kathleen Hepburn! ( May 4, 1929 - January 20, 1993 )
Gregory Peck: She was scintillating in that first film, and was never anything less in Sabrina, Charade, Funny Face, Love in the Afternoon, My Fair Lady – in all those films she made with those other fellows. I think of Audrey as a “spunky lady”, as funny as she is beautiful, one of a rare breed in the tradition of Irene Dunne, Katharine Hepburn, Myrna Loy, Carole Lombard and Jean Arthur. However, “regal” is the best one word description of Audrey on the screen. She is is, was and will always be the most regal of screen actresses. There will never be a sequel to Roman Holiday, but without a doubt, the Princess went on to become a Queen.
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Anonymous asked:

wow i never would have believed audrey and george peppard didnt get along even in the promo pics they look so happy. makes me sad to hear it

yeah they were quite a pair

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