Years ago, upon the inception of
Poseidon's Underworld, I revealed my great love for The Sound of Music
(1965), the very first movie that I can recall seeing in a theater
during one of its re-releases and how it impacted my life then and afterwards. Since that, I've had tributes to
Eleanor Parker (twice, even!) and Christopher Plummer, but not till now one for Dame
Julie Andrews, a performer who has brought untold amounts of light to
millions of viewers (not to mention listeners) of the stage and screen. She's
had a remarkable life and career, with not only the Austrian Alps serving as her peaks
and valleys, that we'll shine a light on today.
Little Julia Elizabeth Wells was born
on October 1st, 1935 in Surrey, United Kingdom. Her father
was a teacher specializing in wood and metalwork while her mother
adored singing and performing. During the early days of WWII, the
couple separated as her father worked towards the removal of children
from areas targeted by the Blitz and her mother joined another man
with whom she began entertaining British troops. Ironically, both men
were called “Ted.” She and her first husband divorced and she
married the second, Ted Andrews, in 1939.
Initially, Julia lived with her father
and brother, but by the age of five, her burgeoning talent as a child
singer caused him to send her to live with her mother and stepfather
where their own connections to the entertainment world might help to
further it. This worked, in fact, as The Andrews became more and more
successful as an act and allowed them to send the little girl to an
arts school for vocal training. The unhappy trade-off was having to
fend off the occasional drunken advances of her stepfather when she
was only a little girl.
By age ten, Julia, now Julie Andrews,
was joining in her parents' act singing alone or with her stepfather
as her mother accompanied on the piano. Before long, the little girl
with the freakish four-octave range and pristinely clear diction was
attracting major attention, calling for appearances at London's
Hippodrome and even a Royal Command Performance at the London
Palladium.
In 1950, her mother relayed the
staggering news that Ted Wells, the man she had always believed to be
her (by now estranged) father was, in fact, not so and that another
man, a family friend (apparently a pretty close one!), was her
biological father. Andrews never learned his identity.
After working in London's West End,
Andrews traveled to America in 1954 just as she was turning nineteen
to appear on Broadway in a production of The Boy Friend where she
garnered terrific reviews. She then auditioned for two major
productions, My Fair Lady and Rodgers & Hammerstein's Pipe Dream,
with her pick of them both in the end.
She went with My Fair Lady, opposite Rex Harrison and, though the acting requirements of the role nearly did her in, with his extensive coaching during their “off” time, it became a triumph. She was nominated for a Tony Award, but lost to Judy Holliday in Bells Are Ringing.
She went with My Fair Lady, opposite Rex Harrison and, though the acting requirements of the role nearly did her in, with his extensive coaching during their “off” time, it became a triumph. She was nominated for a Tony Award, but lost to Judy Holliday in Bells Are Ringing.
Already having worked with Bing Crosby
in a musical version of High Tor (1955) for TV after his enjoying her
in The Boyfriend, she took part in another landmark television
production in 1957. Rodgers & Hammerstein, having nearly used her
in Pipe Dreams, utilized her services for their made-for-TV musical
Cinderella.
The expensive, custom-made musical was
overseen by the famed song-writing duo in nearly every detail and was
broadcast in color (though only a back & white kinescope, made
for west coast viewers, was preserved.) Andrews was Emmy-nominated
for the live, wildly popular special, but lost to Polly Bergen in The
Helen Morgan Story.
After appearing on a few U.S. variety
shows and specials, Andrews returned home to England where she was
eager to marry longtime friend and set designer Tony Walton, who'd
worked with her prior to her sojourn to Broadway. Their 1959 fairy
tale wedding caused quite a stir among the citizens of Surrey.
Soon, though, it was back to Broadway
for another show by Lerner & Loewe, the creators of My Fair Lady.
This time she played Queen Guinevere in Camelot, opposite Richard
Burton as King Arthur and Robert Goulet as Sir Lancelot. She appeared
on The Ed Sullivan Show in character with her costars to promote the
piece. The smash success of the musical led to another Tony
nomination, but this time lost to Elizabeth Seal in Irma la Douce.
Andrews had won one particular fan in
funny lady Carol Burnett, who conceived a program for them called
Julie and Carol at Carnegie Hall. Andrews had guest-starred twice on
The Garry Moore Show, on which Burnett was then a regular, and a close friendship developed.
The 1962 special was a ratings winner and the two would pair up again later for others. (This exceedingly chummy pairing would lead to whispers of a possible Lesbian connection between the two, though they never let it stop them from pursuing further specials.)
The 1962 special was a ratings winner and the two would pair up again later for others. (This exceedingly chummy pairing would lead to whispers of a possible Lesbian connection between the two, though they never let it stop them from pursuing further specials.)
Andrews went back home in order to have
the baby she was carrying, a daughter to be called Emma. As luck
would have it, she was offered what would ultimately be a
life-changing role in a motion picture, but felt that she must turn
it down due to her pregnancy! Fortunately, Walt Disney, who had
attended Camelot and fallen for her charms, told her he would wait
until she was ready before beginning production on Mary Poppins
(1964)...
This was more than a balm to her as she
had just been passed over as the lead in the film adaptation of My
Fair Lady (1964) because Warner Brothers studio head Jack Warner
doubted her marquee value. Instead, he cast box office name Audrey
Hepburn in the role, leaving the songs to be dubbed in by Marni Nixon
as Hepburn's voice was far too underdeveloped to handle the
challenging score. While the film was a huge hit and Hepburn looked
stunning in the Cecil Beaton costumes, there was a tinge of
hollowness to it in knowing that the leading lady wasn't really
singing.
The fanciful, effects-laden Mary
Poppins was an elaborate production blending song, dance and even
animation. Andrews was cast opposite Dick Van Dyke as a cockney
chimney sweep (succeeding greatly in the dancing, but floundering
with his accent.) Interestingly, Nixon provided singing voices in this one, too, specifically a trio of geese.
The “practically perfect” nanny
with a gift for the magical that Andrews was portraying seemed to fall
perfectly into her talent wheelhouse. She of course had the melodious
voice for the battery of catchy Sherman Brothers songs, but she also
had that “iron fist in a velvet glove” quality that the sometimes
strict persona called for.
Armies of moviegoers, young and old,
flocked to the cinema to see this colorful, well-appointed fantasy,
causing it to earn back five times its cost on initial release and
making it the most financially successful film of its year (and Walt
Disney's greatest hit to that date.)
When the Oscar nominations came out,
Andrews was nominated as Best Actress in her big screen debut while
Audrey Hepburn was not granted one for her admirable work in My Fair
Lady (though she did share Andrews' category of Best Motion Picture
Actress – Musical/Comedy at the Golden Globes.) Andrews won both
the Golden Globe and the Oscar and in her acceptance speech at the
former, she memorably quipped, “And, finally, my thanks to a man
who made a wonderful movie and who made all this possible in the
first place, Mr. Jack Warner,” driving home the point that she was
not 100% the syrupy, easily-pushed-over type of lady she often
played.
(The crew on Poppins already knew that she wasn't exactly a mealy-mouthed churchmouse when a cable she was being suspended on snapped and dropped her to the floor, resulting in a few choice remarks including at least one F-bomb! Ha ha!) Her old stage costar Rex Harrison won for Lady, making for an ironic, but happy pairing backstage.
(The crew on Poppins already knew that she wasn't exactly a mealy-mouthed churchmouse when a cable she was being suspended on snapped and dropped her to the floor, resulting in a few choice remarks including at least one F-bomb! Ha ha!) Her old stage costar Rex Harrison won for Lady, making for an ironic, but happy pairing backstage.
Mary Poppins also won Julie a BAFTA
back home in England as Most Promising Newcomer to Leading Film
Roles. She wisely followed up her Disney musical debut with a movie
altogether different, The Americanization of Emily (1964.) Starring
opposite James Garner, in this wartime story she played a woman who
more or less exchanges romantic favors in exchange for various
creature comforts that are of limited availability due to rationing.
In the process, she and the generally ne'er do well Garner wind up
falling in love. The movie has been cited by both stars as their
personal favorite which, especially in Andrews' case, is really
saying something! Sadly, in terms of her approaches to variety, her
next movie was destined to solidify her image as a very good girl who
sings her problems away.
As 20th Century Fox was
planning to make a big screen musical, The Sound of Music, based on
Mary Martin's stage hit by Rodgers & Hammerstein, Andrews was in
the running for the lead role. Doris Day had deemed herself “too
American” for the part of an Austrian novice nun who wins the heart
of seven children for whom she serves as governess, ultimately
landing their father, too, after a crisis of duty to the church.
Grace Kelly's (retired by then, but occasionally toying with a
return) and Shirley Jones' names were also bandied about, but both
screenwriter and new director (following William Wyler's exit from
the project) Robert Wise wanted Andrews.
Trouble was, at the time of
pre-production Andrews was untried on the big-screen as Poppins was
only in the midst of filming. However, after glimpsing some of the
rushes of the unfinished musical, they were swiftly convinced of her
ability and snatched her up. As neither she nor male lead Christopher
Plummer were household names at that time, stalwart 1950s leading
lady Eleanor Parker was cast as Andrews' elegant nemesis Baroness
Schraeder.
The spare stage script was masterfully
elaborated upon by Lehman while former editor Wise (whose direction
of West Side Story, 1961, had garnered him an Oscar) ensured that the
piece would look incredible and be free of many of the garish colors
and cloying attributes that appeared on stage. A location filming
stint in Salzburg, Austria lent the movie a dazzling verisimilitude,
not to mention a healthy dose of gorgeous scenery. Andrews' opening
spin as she burst into the title number became an instant piece of
cinema inconography.
The studio was finding it increasingly
difficult to proceed in the wake of the financial burden of 1963's
extravagant and hopelessly over-budget Cleopatra and was guardedly
hopeful that Music would successfully generate some much-needed
income to their coffers. They needn't have worried. The film was an
immediate smash success, running in movie theaters for years in its
initial release and coming back again and again to rake in more
dough. As Leonard Maltin remarked, the movie “...pleased more
people than practically any other film in history.”
There are people out there, even fans
of Andrews, who believe that Andrews won an Oscar as Maria in The
Sound of Music (perhaps because of photos like this one in which she posed with the Oscar she was presenting that year?) – and she was nominated – but the winner that year
was another Julie, Julie Christie in Darling (1965.) Imagine the
suspense for these gals, though, as they had to not only wait for
their category, but then hear, “...and the winner is, Julie...”!!
For her follow-up to The Sound of
Music, Andrews once again attempted to switch gears and avoid
typecasting, though this was a problem that would hound her
throughout her movie career. As one of Hollywood's top box office
attractions, she was paired with gorgeous superstar Paul Newman to
work in what was to be Alfred Hitchcock's 50th movie, Torn
Curtain (1966), a thriller about a man who pretends to defect to the
Soviet Union in order to obtain a secret formula.
Andrews played his concerned girlfriend
(shown in bed - gasp! - with him) who is unaware of his scheme and
gets caught up in it all. Despite one memorable killing and some
notable supporting actors (like Lila Kedrova, shown here), the movie
was uninspired and a bit plodding. Because this was not top-notch
Hitchcock, Torn Curtain is often considered something of a dud, but
it was actually a hit, costing $3 million, but raking in $13 million,
which was quite a sum in its day.
Andrews' next couple of films would
coincide a bit more closely to her perceived public image of goodness
and light. Hawaii (1966) was a gargantuan epic (though based upon
only one segment of the five-part novel) about missionaries becoming
insinuated on the island. Max Von Sydow was the stern, unwavering
Bible-beater with Andrews as his long-suffering wife. Oddly, despite
her top-billing and proven box office success, her role sort of
receded into the background during a fair share of the film's run
time. Still, the movie was a hit, earning back more than double its
substantial cost.
More in line with her strengths was the
colorful musical Thoroughly Modern Millie (1967), all about a young
lady in the early-1920s who heads off to the big city and becomes a
flapper, bobbing her hair and taking part in the “Jazz Age.”
Costarring were James Fox, Mary Tyler Moore and handsome John Gavin.
Also on board was the irrepressible
Carol Channing as a flashy widow and sometimes aviatrix . In what was
something of a pattern of ladies in support of Andrews, Channing was
nominated for an Oscar (losing to Estelle Parsons of Bonnie and
Clyde.) Channing did win the Golden Globe, however. (Andrews was
nominated as well in the musical/comedy category, but lost to Anne
Bancroft of The Graduate.) Previous Andrews costars who scored Oscar
noms included Peggy Wood in The Sound of Music (the award went to
Shelley Winters for A Patch of Blue) and Jocelyne LaGarde in Hawaii
(Sandy Dennis won for Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?) Lila Kedrova
of Torn Curtain had, in fact, just won one for Zorba the Greek as
well before their work together.
At this point, Miss Andrews was the #1
box office star in the world and had spun a web of musical magic
blended with diligent drama. This, though, was about to change and
that change came in an unexpected way since her next film was yet
another musical, this time reuniting her with both her producer and
director from The Sound of Music, Saul Chaplin and Robert Wise,
respectively. The movie was called Star! and it told the story of
musical theatre legend Gertrude Lawrence (a persona she'd been
approached to portray before but had declined.)
The film was a staggering undertaking,
with Andrews decked out in a record-setting 125 costumes (!) in all
and with multiple production numbers, some of them involving
elaborate décor. Though part of the story recalled Andrews' own
start in English music halls, other parts were a considerable stretch
of her abilities under the eye of choreographer Michael Kidd. In the
number “Jenny,” for example, Andrews took part in a type of
stylized movement and dance that had heretofore been untried by her.
(Considering my personal aversion to clowns, it's really saying
something that this is my favorite sequence in the movie and quitepossibly my favorite Andrews number in any of her films!)
Some of these numbers, however, along
with a great deal of the script, bore little resemblance to the life
and career of Lawrence. Also, various factors from the sudden lack of
interest in musicals from the movie-going public to Andrews' fan base
balking at the sight of their leading lady drinking, smoking, cursing
and so on led to the expensive movie landing with a huge thud at the
box office. The lengthy film was taken back and shorn of 20 minutes
(and even retitled “Those Were Happy Times”) to no avail. The
project was a bust.
Andrews and husband Walton had divorced
in 1967 after eight years and in 1969 she surprised the world by
marrying successful TV and film director Blake Edwards. Himself
divorced in 1967 and the father of two, he'd made a crack about her sweetness that went
“...she probably has violets between her legs!” The remark got
back to her and she found it so amusing that she sent him a bouquet
of violets. The two began dating and were married not long after.
Their first collaboration, though, was
to be still another major flop, one that she couldn't afford so soon
after Star! The movie Darling Lili, a musical about a female German
spy during WWI who winds up falling for her assigned target (Rock
Hudson) began filming in 1968, but wasn't released until 1970. It
went over it's already considerable budget by close to 50% and wound
up making back only a fraction of that.
The highly-troubled production emerged
as a bloated, rather uninvolving 190-minutes, which was soon trimmed
to 136 minutes. (A far later director's cut by Edwards clocked in at
a brisk 107!) While some viewers insist the opposite, most audiences
felt that Andrews and Hudson had no chemistry at all together and
tales began to spin from the set (some stemming from annoyed members
of the press who were feeling the effects of a beleaguered Andrews'
reticence to submit to the same interview questions.) These involved
everything from friction between the costars to Edwards humiliating
Hudson by demonstrating how to kiss Andrews to accounts of Edwards
and Hudson hitting San Francisco leather bars and even a sexual
threesome among them! All denied by the participants.
It should be said that even though
Star! and Darling Lili had the one-two effect of slamming the lid on
Andrews' movie career for a time, both were dismal financial
failures, she was still regarded as a considerable talent. She won
Golden Globes as World Film Favorite in 1967 and '68 and was
nominated for her acting in both Star! and Darling Lili (losing to
Barbra Streisand in Funny Girl and Carrie Snodgrass in Diary of a Mad
Housewife.) it would, however, be four years until she appeared in
another feature film and there would be no singing in that one.
She was hardly idle, though. In 1971
there was Julie and Carol at Lincoln Center, followed by The Julie
Andrews Hour, her own TV variety show which ran from 1973 to 1974.
The series won seven Emmys and paired her with a wide variety of
talents of the day (even bringing the real Maria Von Trapp on to
share a yodel or two!) Unfortunately, the show never received a
decent time slot, nor substantial ratings, despite high quality and a
generous budget. Only one season was produced, though Andrews would
continue to appear in sporadic specials.
When she did return to movies, it was
in The Tamarind Seed (1974), directed by her husband and costarring
Omar Sharif. The romantic espionage drama was a success, doubling its
budget in box office returns, and since between them she and Edwards
were receiving 15% of the gross, it proved personally profitable.
John Barry provided some terrific music for the film.
Once more, she was trying to expand her
image and range, lolling in bed with Sharif and playing a “straight”
part with a few thrills along the way. Still, a very staid quality
remained, not helped by some mannish and unflattering Emma Porteous
costumes on her. (Nancy "Miss Jane Hathaway" Kulp would have KILLED for them, though, I imagine!) Indicative of how the advertising promised more than
what was delivered is seen below. The poster art shows the lovers
walking in skimpy swimwear, but the reality of the scene was a far
cry from that! (She did, however, wear a bikini in a scene with her lying and sitting down while Sharif did everything possible to obscure the clingy swimsuit he'd been assigned, allowing only a nanosecond glimpse of it,)
Even with the relative success of
Tamarind, Andrews would not be seen in a movie again until 1979 when
she costarred in 10, a downright sensation. The comedy, directed by
Edwards, involved a composer (Dudley Moore) involved with a musical
star (Andrews) who begins fantasizing about a stunning newlywed he
has encountered (Bo Derek.) Comic misadventures ensue as Moore
obsesses over the cornrow-wearing beauty who is a 10 out of 10.
Even though this was a tremendous hit
and a cultural phenomenon, it wasn't free of controversy. Moore only
played the lead because George Segal left the movie in a rage after
location shooting in Mexico. He came back to Hollywood to find that
Edwards was inserting a musical sequence in the film featuring
Andrews and felt that he was being used to reignite her faltering
career as a movie musical star. In any case, the success of the film
seemed to center more on Moore and Derek than Andrews (who did let
some curse words fly in yet another attempt to shake her rather gooey
image.)
She next costarred in Little Miss
Marker (1980), a third remake of a 1934 Shirley Temple movie opposite
Walter Matthau and Tony Curtis, which certainly did nothing to
counteract her reputation as a sweetheart who is fond of little
children. The pleasant, gently amusing movie slid into obscurity
rather swiftly.
In 1981, Andrews made her biggest play
yet to shed herself of the screen image she'd battled ever since
portraying Mary Poppins and Maria Von Trapp. Under Edwards'
direction, she costarred in the ensemble comedy S.O.B., a sometimes
scathing take on Hollywood backstabbing and phoniness, based on some
of Edwards' own experiences and slights over the course of his
career.
Andrews' role (quite a stretch!) was
that of a movie musical star who is desperate to rid herself of her
squeaky clean image. In the course of the plot line, the musical she
is currently starring in is reworked into softcore pornography, its
script and style dramatically altered, culminating in a moment that
has Andrews tearing open her top to flash her bare breasts to the
world! (Johnny Carson, at the time of S.O.B.'s release, thanked
Andrews and quipped that she showed us “...that the hills were
still alive.”)
Having startled the world with her
brief (and reasonably tasteful) nude scene, Andrews next proceeded to
one of her last great hits. 1982's Victor/Victoria (with Edwards
again at the helm) was a musical depicting the unusual,
Depression-era scenario of a woman who pretends to be a man who
dresses as a woman for entertainment purposes. In other words, a
female impersonator who in actual fact is female to begin with!
Andrews would continue to work in
movies and, increasingly, on TV, either in Edwards' movies or others,
though with far less frequency than she had previously. In 1983, she
played Burt Reynolds' therapist in The Man Who Loved Women.
In 1986, she reappeared in two movies,
the comedy That's Life!, opposite Jack Lemmon and the multiple
sclerosis drama Duet for One, which re-teamed her with her Hawaii
leading man Max Von Sydow (in a part initially slated for Faye
Dunaway!) The Golden Globes, which had long appreciated her talents
and bestowed her with nominations, had her up for awards in both
categories, musical/comedy and drama, though she lost to Sissy Spacek
in Crimes of the Heart and Marlee Matlin in Children of a Lesser God.
Then she was off the radar again for a
time until the 1991 TV-movie Our Sons, with Ann-Margret, playing a
businesswoman with a gay son (Hugh Grant) whose partner is dying of
AIDS, but whose own mother won't even come to see him. This was
followed by an attempt at a sitcom, developed by her husband. Julie
only lasted for seven episodes in 1992. A low-budget, poorly
distributed movie with Marcello Mastroianni called A Fine Romance was
done that same year.
Her efforts were next poured into a
stage version of Victor/Victoria. The costly, elaborate production
featured songs by Henry Mancini, a longtime Edwards collaborator,
though he passed away before the orchestrations were entirely
finished. Robert Preston, who'd costarred in the movie, was initially
intended to take part as well during early attempts to create it, but ultimately declined (and, in fact, died well before its 1995 premiere.) The musical
was doing so-so business when the Tonys were announced, with Andrews
the sole nominee in any category. In a now-famous moment, she came
out at curtain and publicly declined the nomination, citing the
hard work of her fellow unrecognized collaborators. This caused a
wave of interest in the show and ticket sales picked up! (By the time this show toured the hinterlands and I saw it, Toni Tennille and Dennis Cole were starring!)
Anyone who felt any sort of resentment
towards her for her stand, however, was about to be dealt sweet
revenge. The daily stress and strain of the demanding musical was
giving Andrews some throat discomfort and difficulty. She underwent
surgery for “benign nodules” (with Raquel Welch stepping into the
lead role) and when the procedure was over, she was left with
virtually no singing voice whatsoever and a raspy speaking one!
It was later discovered that there were
no nodules in the first place and that it was muscular striation,
along with vocal chord tissue, that was removed, permanently
destroying one of the stage and screen's most notable and beloved
voices. A (reported) $30 million settlement did little to allay
Andrews' personal devastation at this news and she had to undergo
extensive psychological therapy to come to grips with the loss. She
also underwent four additional operations, which helped her speaking
voice, but her once four-octave singing voice has remained a highly
limited alto.
Andrews turned to the writing of
children's books with her daughter Emma Walton, which turned out to
be a very successful enterprise. She also continued to act with
success, including a 2001 television version of On Golden Pond with
her Music costar Christopher Plummer and franchises like The Princess
Diaries, Eloise at the Plaza and sequels to Shrek (one of several
bits of voice-only work she has done recently), all happily
reinforcing the regal, ladylike qualities that she once felt the need
to try to shake.
Accolades kept mounting such as a
Kennedy Center Honor in 2001 and a Screen Actors Guild Lifetime
Achieve-ment Award in 2007. Edwards died in 2010 of pneumonia at age
eighty-eight. (They had adopted two Vietnamese girls in the
mid-1970s, making her a mother and stepmother to five children in
all.)
At this most recent Oscar ceremony,
Lady Gaga paid tribute to the 50th anniversary of The
Sound of Music with an alternately brilliant, bizarre, impressive,
weird, unforgettable medley and received a rousing standing ovation.
However, in a surprise twist, Andrews then took the stage which sent
the already on their feet crowd into a tizzy of thunderous applause.
Andrews' career has been a combination of the highest highs and the lowest lows, but even if she didn't fully realize her wish of becoming a highly versatile screen persona, she can hardly complain about the incredible wave of love that has been showered upon her for her portrayal of two of the cinema's most memorable and adored characterizations, Mary Poppins and Maria Von Trapp. Legions of fans hold those movies, and her, dear to their hearts. Now seventy-nine, she is able to appear only when she wishes and revel in the adoration that she has earned over her almost lifetime-long career of entertaining.
16 comments:
I have always been ambivalent about Julie. I adore her as Millie Dillmount, and the first half of Victor/Victoria but thats about it. A favourite review of Sound of Music begins: "The picture runs for 172 minutes, and the first minute is rather good ...". It always feels totally saccharine to me, as Pauline Kael said in her famous review, "wasn't there one Von Trapp kid who did not want to sing their hearts out for father's guests, or who threw up before going on stage" - and what family of children from teen to tiny tot all dress alike and play together all the time" ....
I feel for Julie though, all anyone wants to know now is about SOM or Mary Poppins. Great to have two such enormous hits in one's resume, but its like nothing else she did is of any interest, which is why her later films flopped so much, as audiences only wanted her as Maria or Mary. Even Millie was not that much of a hit initially.
She comes across as a game, lovely lady and we like her a lot, but she is one star whose image has not changed over the decades.
Having said all that I am looking forward to seeing her one with Mastroianni, and catch All Our Sons again where Ann-Margret is terrific as ever.
I proudly call the "The Sound of Music" a guilty pleasure of mine...although, how can anything so wholesome be considered guilt-inducing?
I believe it was the second movie I saw as a young child that left an impact on me ("The Wizard of Oz" was the first. Geez! Are we that predictable?)
Since then, Julie can really do no wrong in my book. As for Christopher Plummer, he can blow his whistle at me any day!
Thanks for the in-depth look into Julie's career.
She always makes me so happy! I read her (really honest) book but still learned a lot here. Love this posting. I am going to the TCM film festival this month in LA and SOM is the opening movie. Julie is doing red carpet and I hope an onstage interview, so your timing with this is thrilling. I recently bought SOB and she is pretty funny in it. I think Gaga and Julie together may have been the gayest moment of my life (next to Liza showing Lana Turner movie clips at a concert). Sad about the voice, at least we have her recorded concert version of "The King and I" and a million other things that are sweet and great.
I second that about her and Lady Gaga, best Oscars moment ever ?
I watch Thoroughly Modern Millie at least once a year and a friend and I know all the lines and repeat them to each other ...... add in Bea and Carol and Mary and John Gavin and James Fox in drag - gayest movie ever?
I listened to the audiobook of her autobiography which ends with her flying out to Hollywood for the screen test (or maybe filming) of Mary Poppins. I eagerly await Volume 2!
While I listened to her early life story, I downloaded all of the songs from every one of her albums that I could stand. I really don't need to hear SOM again since I watch it so often, and who needs Burlinton Bertie From Bow and all that?
I've got about 20 songs that are not her major hits and her voice is very lovely. I just wish she had recorded more music during that time, but I know she was very busy.
My family used to listen to My Fair Lady, Camelot, and SOM while we cleaned house on Saturday morning. I can sing every one of those songs. :-)
And, true confession time, when The Sound of Music was rereleased in 1972 (I think) I went to see it about four times in a row one Saturday, and then promptly went back the next Saturday to see it a couple more times. I consider it to be a great musical transfer despite what Pauline Kael and other people think.
I loved "The Americanization of Emily". She was great and James Garner was at his best looking ever.
Follow Up:
So, I pulled out my SOM soundtrack out and now I can't get "Lonely Goatherd" out of my head.
...Men in the midst of a table-d'hôte-herd...
...One little girl in a pale pink coat-herd
...Soon her mama with a gleaming gloat-herd...
The Sound of Music has two scenes that I love: the D-Re-Mi is a rousing number, perfectly photographed and edited, and when she leaves the Von Trapp mansion just before the Intermission.
I love Mary Poppins. My favorite scene is almost at the end, when she looks out the window as the family goes to the park to Fly a Kite; Julie Andrews' range of emotions at that moment is unforgettable.
S.O.B. and Victor/Victoria are among the best movies she made. I, too, want my Jazz Hot.
Thanks for this post on Julie Andrews. As always, I learned a lot.
Best wishes.
Lovely tribute to a true legend. It's a tragedy about her voice but, as with Linda Ronstadt whose voice has been robbed through illness, she's left behind such a great legacy we can be happy that she shared it so abundantly when she possessed it.
Like most I love Mary Poppins, Sound of Music, Emily and Millie and even her lesser vehicles from her major period, Star! and Darling Lili have their pleasures.
I recently read a fascinating book called "Roadshow!" about the phenomenon of that practice and how it was kicked into overdrive by the success of Music and killed by the resounding flop of Lili and the many films in between and talks a great deal about Julie therein.
It seems that after the failure of Lili that either she or directors lost touch with what made her stand out on screen, excepting Victor/Victoria where Robert Preston and Lesley Ann Warren still eclipse her somewhat, she never seems to pop off the screen in her later films. Still she's a regal presence whenever she turns up and she's always a welcome sight.
One small note: The TV film she did with Ann-Margret is called Our Sons not All My Sons.
I'm happy to see some appreciation (in varying degrees!) for Miss Julie and this post. It was a LONG, involved one and nearly wore me out, so I'm glad some of you liked it!
Michael, for those of us who drank the "Sound of Music" Kool-Aid as kids and allowed it to permeate us, I doubt we'll ever understand those snotty criticisms that some reviewers put forth. As spunky as Andrews is as Maria, refusing to be put down by the initially almost-sinister Captain, I can't get why people insist that she's so saccharine. On the contrary, she shows considerable determination. As for the kids... I do believe in real life, none of the kids bowed out and they all took part in the singing, so why would one in the movie do such a thing? Whatever... (I do wonder, on another note, if we Americans tend to be a little more taken, even awed, by her with her crisp, regal bearing than some Britons are since they see and hear many others like her at home all the time?)
Knuckles, if you haven't taken a gander at my Christopher Plummer tribute, please do so because there are some shirtless photos sprinkled in. He was so handsome...
Gingerguy, again I am astounded by your ability to be EVERYWHERE! That is amazing that you will be at the TCM festival. That has to be unforgettable...
Dave, I love that you went to see SOM in a marathon like that! As I said in my earlier post, the time I went (at like age 5) I made my mother stay through until Sixteen Going on Seventeen. I was gobsmacked my that sequence as a child with all the chiffon twirling (God help me...) I never heard her Camelot stuff until many, many years later and, of course, I love it. I meant to put something in the post, but didn't, about a parody someone did of her in Forbidden Broadway which focuses on her style of "sliding" notes in her songs. It's to the tune of "I Could've Danced All Night" but is called, "I Couldn't Hit the Note..."!!
A, I still need to see Emily! It has always escaped me or me it. I'll have to make it a point next time it comes around.
Armando, Do Re Mi is infectious, especially as it builds to the end, isn't it? What a great idea to have all the Salzburg locations dotted in throughout. I am feeling to need to revisit some of Julie's movies now, like "Mary Poppins" and "SOB," both of which I haven't seen in eons.
Joel... GAWD. I cannot believe the typo on that TV-Movie. You know what it is? We have a moving company here called All My Sons (!) and I got that in my head for a moment! It's fixed now, thank you. It never dawned on me until I wrote this that both TV Cinderella's were in "VV" together. I love stuff like that. And it's nice that each got an Oscar nom out of it. I'm sure that Roadshow book is fascinating. That whole era of massive musical flops is very fascinating!
Poseidon, great and epic blog-biography of one of our true living legends...beautifully and exhaustively written and as usual, you've illustrated with wonderful, many never-before-seen-by-me photos!
I am a HUGE Julie Andrews fan...she is so versatile and talented. I was privileged to see her during her very short run on Broadway in Victor/Victoria...and she was fantastic!
In my DVD collection, I cout Sound of Music, Thoroughly Modern Millie, Mary Poppins and Victor/Victoria among my very favorite films.
Yes, her nude scene in SOB is tasteful, although I am always startled by the bousnciness and perkiness of her breasts as she tears off her bodice. They really BOINK and then fall into place...ever notice that?
Andrews is the subject of a LOT of "Lavender Myth" - the close friendship with Burnett; her openly gay first husband Tony Walton; rumors about Blake Edwards...a lot of gay references in all their later films together...makes you wonder, hm?
I love your blog and eagerly await your next topic!!
-Chris
Just to add that its not Julie I thought saccaharine in Sound of Music, she is indeed very spunky (the real Maria was it seems a bit of a battleaxe) but the show itself. Its fascinating looking at that era of the big roadshow movies now. There is a lot to enjoy in Star! too though they present Gertrude Lawrence as an absolute bitch, and of course who knew who Gertie was back then - that young crowd like myself didn't. But Julie certainly gave it her all. I like Victor/Victoria up to about "Le Jazz Hot", particularly that restaurant scene with the coackroach! and Julie is wonderful with Robert Preston.
I just have to chime in that for me, there are two things that undercut the saccharine of SOM. Well, three I guess. The first is Eleanor Parker. She plays the role so beautifully that I'm stunned she wasn't nominated for an Oscar. A bit of vinegar, and she certainly takes the Pauline Kael opinion - Boarding school!
The second is Christopher Plummer. That cruel mouth of his only sort of turns into a smile after he falls in love with Maria. There is still a lot of fierce in him, even after they all start singing.
And third, and most importantly, Nazis! The movie actually has a very strong third act which most musicals, and certainly most movie musicals, never pull off. Suddenly the drama and stakes are intensified.
I really didn't know much about Andrews so this was a fun and informative read!
I've always thought Emma Thompson looked a bit like Julie Andrews and that was reinforced when I saw the picture you posted of Julie's headshot for her variety show!
I'm going to have to throw a few of Andrews' better vehicles on my Netflix queue...I've only seen "SOM," "10" and "Victor/Victoria."
Thanks for the great post, Rick
Angelman, thanks for your endorsement and approval! ;-) I'm glad this one made you happy. I felt like I had to include at least SOME of the rumor-mongoring where she, Blake and others are concerned and, yes, they do have a lot of gay content and gender concerns in their movies, especially for the time they were made. Not sure how much or how little I truly believe, but when there's smoke...! I seem to recall Carol Burnett once saying that the key to a good marriage with her husband was (not separate bedrooms, but ) separate HOMES! Nearby or adjacent, but not "one." That raised a big rainbow flag for me (and she wasn't kidding around.) But anyway...
Yes, Michael, I barely knew now who Gertrude Lawrence was (to me, before looking her up, she was always the originator of Anna in The King and I who sort of got close to the notes of her songs!) And I don't think they really "got" her in Star!, nor revealed who she truly was. Surprising, since Lehman was typically a very strong writer.
Dave, I agree with every scintilla of what you pointed out. I WORSHIP Eleanor as The Baroness and think there is so much going on in her performance. She wastes not one frame and gives the role dimension that was nonexistent beforehand. Yes, it gets a little corny with the nuns messing up the Nazis vehicles (though that always got a huge laugh), but the soldiers are nonetheless intimidating. Ben Wright still creeps me out, even when I see him in kindly roles! And Franz the butler, too.
Rico, I can see some of Julie in Emma now that you mention it. Interesting that she played the author of Mary Poppins in that movie not long ago. They both have somewhat narrow faces with a very slight catch in one eye.
Thanks again, all, for your interest and time!
I saw "Star" in a theater one afternoon with a friend. I'm so glad I saw it on the big screen but I will say it's VERY long. My friend and I took several smoke breaks outside the theater and didn't feel we missed much. I do love "Jenny" as well as her way too short rendition of "My Ship" (WHAT a lovely song!). "Poppins" was another obsession of mine as a child, much like Eglantine Price in BK&B I wanted to BE her, hahha. I had very understanding parents, hahah. The film has mixed reactions with parents and those I recommend it to, some love it, some find it too dated and corny, which is a shame, it's an absolute masterpiece and the jewel in Disney's crown. Andrews has a way about her that's, much like Doris Day, unique. Breathy, under the surface energy and this amazing CHARM. I suppose it is too bad she didn't do "Lady" but then again, who can forget Audrey appearing at the top of those stairs in THAT gown, with THAT hair. Breathtaking.
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