
Audrey Hepburn in Breakfast at Tiffany’s Art Print
Buy at AllPosters.com
Ah, lady Audrey – I love her so.

From the category archives:

Ah, lady Audrey – I love her so.

We all know a more beautiful actress has never graced the earth than Audrey Hepburn. We might as well enjoy a video tribute that supports this fact, right? After you’ve watched the video, be sure to check out the other articles, pictures, and featured stories on one of Hollywood Yesterday’s favorite actresses, Audrey Hepburn. You’ll find all of these and more in the Audrey Hepburn category.

You know how some movies are just so special to you they give you goose bumps? My Fair Lady is one that gets me every single time. Audrey Hepburn, Rex Harrison – how could it not?
This amazingly wonderful movie will be shown on Turner Classic Movies tomorrow afternoon (December 11) at 12:45 – check your listings for the time where you live. BUT… that’s not all TCM has up their sleeve. Immediately before My Fair Lady, they’re showing Gigi (1958 – with Leslie Caron and Maurice Chevalier) and immediately after My Fair Lady, they’re showing the 1956 The King and I with Deborah Kerr, Yul Brynner and Rita Moreno!
You’d think they’d call it a day after that line up, wouldn’t you?
Nah. Starting at 8:00 tomorrow night, they’ll air a few of Bing Crosby’s best movies. First up is The Bells of Saint Mary (1936) co-starring Ingrid Bergman. Bing Crosby is a liberal priest who tries to soften the strict nun (Ingrid Bergman) who runs a boys’ school.
Immediately following The Bells of Saint Mary is 1945’s Pennies From Heaven with Bing Crosby, Madge Evans, and Louis Armstrong. In Pennies From Heaven, a singer gets involved with a grieving family and a haunted house.
After Pennies From Heaven, you can catch one of the best of the best, High Society (1956). In this musical version of The Philadelphia Story, tabloid reporters invade a society wedding. Bing Crosby is joined by none other than Grace Kelly and Frank Sinatra in this beautiful movie.
Next?! Road to Bali (1952), starring Bing Crosby, Bob Hope (!!!), and Dorothy Lamour. Two song-and-dance men (Bing Crosby and Bob Hope) are on the run. They compete for for a beautiful princess.
If you’re still awake and able to focus your eyes, they’ll show you another Bob Hope movie. I love Bob Hope like nobody’s business, so I know I’ll be taping this one. It’s the 1964 film A Global Affair. Bob Hope is joined by Yvonne De Carlo when a U.N. official tries to locate the mother of an abandoned baby.
I know where I’ll be tomorrow. As in all day. And night!
Living is like tearing through a museum. Not until later do you really start absorbing what you saw, thinking about it, looking it up in a book, and remembering – because you can’t take it in all at once. – Audrey Hepburn

Any day that I can talk about Audrey Hepburn is a good day for me. Love her, much.
The Art Poster Metal Framed Print – Audrey Hepburn – 1951 – Artist: National Archive- Poster Size: 14 X 11
(Is that a mouthful or what?) is a High Quality Framed Art Work. The beautiful photograph of Audrey in 1951 absolutely stops you in your tracks. Audrey possessed an other-worldly type of beauty that always has that effect.
The poster is framed using a Black metal frame with no matte – which just adds to its coolness.
Click through to take a closer look and to see the other delicious works of art the web site has.

God outdid Himself when he fashioned Audrey Hepburn. She was, at once, positively adorable AND drop dead gorgeous.

Our home office is decorated, appropriately enough, with stars and movies from “Hollywood Yesterday” – the deliciously glamorous era that’s often referred to as the Golden Era. Golden, indeed!
Given the fact that she’s a personal favorite, Audrey Hepburn is featured heavily in our office. In fact, she’s practically everywhere you look – which is just how I like it. I do, however, have room for the gorgeous art print above. There’s actually a wall directly behind my computer where it could hang and watch me work all day and all night. (Okay, I don’t actually work all day and night – but it sounded too good not to use.)
Click the image or links to take a closer look – you’ll fall in love with it, too.

Without a doubt, Maureen O’Hara’s one of the most beautiful actresses ever. Absolutely stunning. The hair, the voice, the figure, the face – a place for everything and everything in its place.
I’ve said it before, and I’m bound to say it again – I wish actresses today would try to capture the magic, mystery, class, and sophistication that actresses yesterday possessed. A few, in my opinion, do (Keira Knightley, Angelina Jolie, Natalie Portman, Scarlett Johansson, Hilary Swank, and Reese Witherspoon to name a few.) But for the most part, they’re way too blatant and brassy.
There’s just something different about Maureen O’Hara, Audrey Hepburn, Elizabeth Taylor, Ava Gardner, Grace Kelly, and Rita Hayworth. And that something different is very attractive.
To be sure, the same can be said about actors yesterday vs. actors today! There aren’t very many Clark Galbes, John Wyanes, Cary Grants, or Clint Eastwoods walking around today.
So many girl-y boys! If John Wayne walked through Hollywood today, he wouldn’t know whether to date or punch half the actors.
Eh, too much cranberry sauce – makes me mean.