Audrey Hepburn by Lawrence Fried, 1952
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Edie Sedgwick at the opening of the Edvard Munch exhibition at the Guggenheim Museum, New York City in October 1965.
Photographed by Lawrence Fried.
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Brian Jones and Bill Wyman (Rolling Stones), 1965 by Lawrence Fried
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Audrey Hepburn, Times Square, Photo by Lawrence Fried, 1951
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Groucho Marx and Mary Martin in rehearsal for a two-hour TV special celebrating the then ten-year partnership between composer Richard Rodgers and librettist-lyricist Oscar Hammerstein II, March 28, 1954. Groucho hosted the show, which was broadcast live.
Photo: Lawrence Fried via Iconic Images Ltd.
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Audrey Hepburn's photographs by Milton H. Greene featured in PEOPLE magazine's November 4, 2019 issue
The Ingenue. Hepburn (in 1951) in costume for Gigi.
Unseen Audrey
Six photographers share rare photos of Audrey Hepburn that capture her transformation from unknown to icon.
By Liz McNeil
Gamine Beauty. Milton H. Greene, who shot this photo in 1955, thought Hepburn's legs "were a little skinny," says his son Joshua.
Convertible Chic. "Because they were intimately close, there's an added excitement," says Joshua Greene of his father's photos.
Audrey Hepburn was just 22 years old when she arrived in New York City in 1951. Then an unknown fledgling actress, she had sailed from England and was set to make her American debut as the star of Gigi on Broadway. Photographer Milton H. Greene, then 29, had been asked by Life magazine to introduce her to a national audience—and he quickly became captivated by his beguiling subject. The two had a brief love affair before she met actor Mel Ferrer, whom she married in 1954. "He always loved the way she looked," says Greene's son Joshua, 65. "When you capture her right, with the right angle and the right light, she is extraordinarily beautiful. But if she's not captured correctly, she looks like a woman with a funny face."
Coffee Break. The family of Lawrence Fried, who took this 1951 shot, didn't know these images existed until they found the negatives after his death in 1983.
Broadway Bound. "Most of our father's photos of Audrey were never published," says Fried's daughter Tish Fried, who's now organizing his archives.
Always Givenchy. Audrey wearing her favorite French designer in a 1955 photograph by Norman Parkinson.
Greene's pictures of the doe-eyed beauty are among a trover of rare and never-before-seen images from half a dozen legendary photographers collected in a new book, Always Audrey. "Some of these rolls of film have never seen the light of day," says Terence Pepper, former head of photography for the National Portrait Gallery, who dug into long-forgotten archives to compile the book. "To see her when she's so young, when she's an ordinary person before she became a star—to see that transformation—is an astonishing discovery."
Farmhouse Friends. Audrey (in the Roman countryside in 1955) with her pet donkey Bimba, who would take her into the nearest village on an attached cart to shop.
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Johnny WOULD say "Is butter a carb?"
Absolutely!
I could also see him telling one of the cobras that their hair looks sexy pushed back.
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Truman Capote, 1972 by Lawrence Fried
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another day begins
Good morning everyone, today being Thursday I’m sharing a couple of doorways that I found along the St Lawrence (the river between Canada and the USA) It was a beautiful day for a drive .. a friend and i had an “outing” … there is a food stop along the hwy that runs along the river to Cornwall. It was a lovely day for a drive. the hamburgers are actually made with real meat patties,,, the fries…
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Audrey Hepburn in a violet evening dress
Photography by Lawrence Fried for The American Magazine
1952
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BECAUSE ONLY TRUE CINEPHILES WILL MAKE THE DAVID LEAN CONNECTION WITH "MAD MAX."
PIC(S) INFO: Spotlight on a new film still of Australian film actor Lachy Hulme as warlord of the Citadel, Immortal Joe," followed by film stills of the greatest historical film epic ever made, "Lawrence of Arabia" (1962), directed by David Lean.
"Stepping into the shoes of Immortan Joe on "Furiosa" brought even more unhinged action for [Lachy] Hulme to throw himself into. The film, he says, is “David Lean, but with motorbikes instead of camels. When you see 4,000 custom-made motorbikes come over a hill, you shit your pants.” Sounds like it’s going to be anything but mediocre."
-- "EMPIRE" Online, ""Furiosa is "David Lean, but with Motorbikes instead of Camels," Says New Immortan Joe, Lachy Hulme – Exclusive," by Ben Travis, c. March 11, 2024
Sources: www.empireonline.com/movies/news/furiosa-immortan-joe-lachy-hulme-exclusive, X, & https://filmfreedonia.com/2024/05/26/furiosa-a-mad-max-saga-2024.
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