So much has been said and written about Audrey Hepburn already:
“Audrey was meek, gentle, and ethereal, understated both in her life and in her work. She walked among us with a light pace, as if she didn’t want to noticed.” - Sophia Loren
“Before I even met Audrey, I had a crush on her, and after I met her, just a day later, I felt as if we were old friends… Most men who worked with her felt both fatherly or brotherly about her, while harboring romantic feelings about her… She was the love of my life.” - William Holden.
“Audrey was known for something which has disappeared, and that is elegance, grace and manners … God kissed her on the cheek, and there she was.” - Billy Wilder
“Audrey sensed very early in her life and career that self-worth based on fame or beauty is very short-lived, and so she remained forever herself — realistic, aware, and caring.” - Robert Wolders
“Audrey was the kind of person who, when she saw someone else suffering, tried to take the pain on herself. She was a healer. She knew how to love.” - Shirley MacLaine
“She shared her joy with friends, but kept her unhappy moments to herself.” - Hubert de Givenchy
“I think that there are few people in one’s life that you never really feel that they’re gone. I have to remind myself that she isn’t around.” - Blake Edwards
“She believed in love. She believed love could heal, fix, mend, and make everything fine and good in the end… and it did. She left us with peace and serenity, and her passage was almost devoid of any pain.” - Sean Hepburn Ferrer
These stunning pics that show fashion styles of Audrey Hepburn in the 1960s.
“Audrey was meek, gentle, and ethereal, understated both in her life and in her work. She walked among us with a light pace, as if she didn’t want to noticed.” - Sophia Loren
“Before I even met Audrey, I had a crush on her, and after I met her, just a day later, I felt as if we were old friends… Most men who worked with her felt both fatherly or brotherly about her, while harboring romantic feelings about her… She was the love of my life.” - William Holden.
“Audrey was known for something which has disappeared, and that is elegance, grace and manners … God kissed her on the cheek, and there she was.” - Billy Wilder
Fashion styles of Audrey Hepburn in the 1960s |
“Audrey sensed very early in her life and career that self-worth based on fame or beauty is very short-lived, and so she remained forever herself — realistic, aware, and caring.” - Robert Wolders
“Audrey was the kind of person who, when she saw someone else suffering, tried to take the pain on herself. She was a healer. She knew how to love.” - Shirley MacLaine
“She shared her joy with friends, but kept her unhappy moments to herself.” - Hubert de Givenchy
“I think that there are few people in one’s life that you never really feel that they’re gone. I have to remind myself that she isn’t around.” - Blake Edwards
“She believed in love. She believed love could heal, fix, mend, and make everything fine and good in the end… and it did. She left us with peace and serenity, and her passage was almost devoid of any pain.” - Sean Hepburn Ferrer
These stunning pics that show fashion styles of Audrey Hepburn in the 1960s.
Audrey in a dress by Givenchy, photo by Jim Pringle, Rome, Jan. 8, 1960 |
Audrey in wool coat by Balenciaga and blouse and skirt by Cardin, photo by Pierluigi in Rome, 1960 |
Audrey and cat in publicity photo for "Breakfast at Tiffany's" by Frank Cronenweth, 1961 |
Audrey Hepburn in lace-trimmed blouse, 1961 |
Audrey Hepburn is wearing combination helmet and headscarf in classic French Provençal cotton print, photo by Pierluigi, Rome 1961 |
Audrey Hepburn photographed with Mr. Famous in her car by Pierluigi Praturlon for a fashion editorial in Rome (Italy), in March 1961 |
Audrey Hepburn, photo by Richard Avedon, Harper's Bazaar, September 1961 |
Audrey in publicity photo for "Breakfast at Tiffany's, 1961 |
Audrey is dressed in a traditional Scottish cap, the Glengarry is a boat-shaped cap without a peak made of thick wool with a bobble on top and ribbons in the back, photo by Howell Conant, 1961 |
Audrey Hepburn in iconic wide-brimmed straw hat she wore in the film "Breakfast at Tiffany's", short black cocktail dress and hat by Givenchy, photo by John Springer, 1961 |
Audrey dressed in Givenchy for a publicity still for the movie "Charade", 1962 |
Audrey Hepburn (as Gabrielle Simpson) photographed by Bob Willoughby at the Studio de Boulogne during the filming of “Paris When It Sizzles”, Paris (France), Summer of 1962 |
Audrey Hepburn at the villa she rented in France during the filming of "Paris When it Sizzles", photo by Bob Willoughby, 1962 |
Audrey Hepburn photographed (by Bud Fraker?) during the filming of “Charade” in Paris (France), Winter of 1962/63 |
Audrey Hepburn photographed by Howell Conant for a fashion editorial at a farm near her house in the Swiss Alps, February 1962 |
Audrey Hepburn wearing suit by Givenchy in scene from "Paris When It Sizzles", photo by Bob Willoughby, 1962 |
Audrey in hat by Givenchy, photo by Howell Conant, circa 1962 |
Audrey photographed by Howell Conant for Life magazine, May 1962 |
Audrey Hepburn in costume designed by Cecil Beaton for "My Fair Lady", the hat is of lavender silk with white silk roses, photo by Cecil Beaton, 1963 |
Audrey Hepburn, photo by Howell Conant, 1963 |
Audrey in Givenchy's ski-suit for the film "Charade", 1963 |
Audrey in one of the many creations of Cecil Beaton for "My Fair Lady", photo by Cecil Beaton, 1963 |
Audrey photographed by Cecil Beaton for the film "My Fair Lady", 1963 |
Audrey wearing coat by Givenchy in film "Charade", 1963 |
Audrey Hepburn as Gabrielle Simpson in the film "Paris When it Sizzles" with William Holden, directed by Richard Quine, 1964 |
Audrey Hepburn in bubble bath scene from the movie "Paris When it Sizzles", photo by Bob Willoughby (official still photographer on the film), 1964 |
Audrey Hepburn photographed by her friend Cecil Beaton (in April) for the American Vogue, edition of June 1964 |
Audrey in costume designed by Cecil Beaton for "My Fair Lady", photo by Cecil Beaton, 1964 |
Audrey in costume designed by Cecil Beaton for "My Fair Lady", photo by Cecil Beaton, 1964 |
Audrey in costume designed by Cecil Beaton for "My Fair Lady", photo by Cecil Beaton, 1964 |
Audrey in costume designed by Cecil Beaton for "My Fair Lady", photo by Cecil Beaton, 1964 |
Audrey Hepburn at the Studio de Boulogne, during the making of "How to Steal a Million" in Paris. Photograph by Douglas Kirkland, 1965 |
Audrey Hepburn at the Studio de Boulogne, during the making of "How to Steal a Million" in Paris. Photograph by Douglas Kirkland, 1965 |
Audrey Hepburn at the Studio de Boulogne, during the making of "How to Steal a Million" in Paris. Photograph by Douglas Kirkland, 1965 |
Audrey Hepburn at the Studio de Boulogne, during the making of "How to Steal a Million" in Paris. Photograph by Douglas Kirkland, 1965 |
Audrey Hepburn at the Studio de Boulogne, during the making of "How to Steal a Million" in Paris. Photograph by Douglas Kirkland, 1965 |
Audrey Hepburn at the Studio de Boulogne, during the making of "How to Steal a Million" in Paris. Photograph by Douglas Kirkland, 1965 |
Audrey Hepburn photographed by Douglas Kirkland at the Studio de Boulogne for the publicity of “How to Steal a Million”. Paris (France), November 1965 |
Audrey Hepburn wearing Givenchy, photo by Douglas Kirkland at the Studio de Boulogne for the publicity of “How to Steal a Million”, Paris, November 1965 |
Audrey photographed by Douglas Kirkland at the Studio de Boulogne during the making of “How to Steal a Million”, Paris, November 1965 |
Audrey Hepburn in two-piece knit sunsuit from Miss Dior for the film "Two for the Road", 1966 |
Audrey Hepburn photographed by Pierluigi Praturlon on the French Riviera, during the filming of “Two for the Road” for an fashion editorial and also for publicity photos, June 1966 |
Audrey Hepburn photographed by William Klein in Paris, September 1966 |
Audrey in Givenchy's black Chantilly-lace cocktail dress in a publicity still for the film "How to Steal a Million", 1966 |
Audrey in red bathingsuit in a scene from the film "Two For the Road", photo by Terry O'Neill, 1966 |
Audrey as Joanna Wallace photographed by Terry O’Neill for the publicity of “Two for the Road”, 1967 |
Audrey Hepburn as Joanna Wallace and photographed by Terry O’Neill for the publicity of “Two for the Road”, 1967 |
Audrey photographed by John Engstead for the publicity of “Wait Until Dark”, 1967 |
Audrey wearing Yves Saint Laurent, photo by Bud Fraker, Italian Vogue, Aug. 1967 |
Audrey Hepburn is such a favorite of mine. Thank you so much for the wonderful variety of photos. But more importantly, thanks for the time and diligence spent cataloguing each one so carefully! Truly a job well done!
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