Overview I. Introduction: Article - Audrey Hepburn spent a difficult childhood and easily converted it into a gold-plated fairy tale. II. Family Life / Growth: A - Shyness B - Turbulent Family III. A suffering in the Netherlands: A - Reason for returning to childhood in the Netherlands B - "Awareness of pain and fear" IV. Dance: A love of dance B - Chorus girl V. Join the show: A - Getting Started
Audrey Hepburn (born Audrey Catherine Ruston, May 4, 1929 - January 20, 1993) is a British actress, model, dancer, humanitarian activist. Hepburn is widely recognized as a icon of movies and fashion, and it is also active in Hollywood's Golden Age. She was chosen as the legend of the third largest female movie in the Hollywood Golden Age by the American Film Institute and was named as the International Best Dress List Hall of Fame. Hepburn was born in Ixell of Brussels and spent his childhood in Belgium, the UK, and the Netherlands. In Amsterdam, she studied ballet at Sonia Gaskell, then moved to London in 1948, continued training the ballet with Marie Rambert, then worked as a chorus girl on western music production. After several movies appeared in several movies, Hepburn starred the 1951 Broadway drama "Gigi".
Audrey Hepburn (1929-1993) British actress and humanitarian. Hepburn was the main Hollywood star in the 1950s and 1960s, starring classical films such as Roman Holiday (1956), Nuns Story (1956), Tiffany's Breakfast (1961) and so on. Audrey Hepburn later withdrew from the act and served as ambassador for UNICEF. On May 4, 1929, Belgian father and mother of the Netherlands. Her father's work as an insurance agent meant that families frequently travel between the UK, the Netherlands and Belgium. In 1935, her parents divorced; one of the reason was that her father was a companion of Nazi. Divorced six-year-old Audrey was very painful; she later said this was the most traumatic event in her life. Despite being suffering from Nazi occupation after the war, Audrey later took her father to Dublin and supported him economically.