Review: Julie Andrewsâ âHome Workâ a graceful look back at her Hollywood years
After her breakthrough in âMary Poppins,â Julie Andrews worried that taking the role of Maria in âThe Sound of Musicâ might lead to being typecast as a nanny. The short, blond look she sported in the second film was actually designed to cover up a hairstyling mishap that turned her normally brown hair bright orange. Visiting the Von Trapp villa in Austria for the location shooting turned out to be a disturbing experience once she learned that the place had been taken over during World War II by SS leader Heinrich Himmler.
Those are a few of the intriguing tidbits in Andrewsâ new book, âHome Work: A Memoir of My Hollywood Years,â written with daughter Emma Walton Hamilton. But unlike many Hollywood memoirs these days, it doesnât contain any shocking or titillating revelations.
For the record:
3:41 p.m. Oct. 13, 2019An earlier version of this article misidentified the title of Andrewsâ book as âHome Againâ in the final paragraph.
Instead, the 84-year-old British-born actress and singer comes across pretty much as the Julie Andrews that we admire on the screen â graceful, elegant and wholesome, but not particularly complicated or troubled.
âHome Workâ is the story of an ordinary person blessed with extraordinary gifts, including a soaring, angelic soprano voice, whose big struggle was to maintain that normalcy in a Hollywood rife with exploitation and excess.
As detailed in her previous book, 2008âs âHome: A Memoir of My Early Years,â Andrews got her start in show business at age just before her tenth birthday, standing on a beer crate to reach the microphone as she sang in her mother and stepfatherâs vaudeville act. By the time she was a teenager, she had become her familyâs main means of support, roaming England and trying to cheer up dreary dressing rooms with a bunch of flowers between twice-an-evening performances in smoke-filled halls full of inebriated adults.
The young Andrews, who never had time for an education, said she feared for her future in British vaudevilleâs dying days. She was saved by the grace of her talent, which led producers to cast her in British musical theater. Andrewsâ performance in âCinderellaâ at the London Palladium was so good she got an offer to cross the Atlantic and play the lead role in a Broadway production of âThe Boy Friend,â just before her 19th birthday.
During rehearsals, an American producer, Cy Feuer, took the inexperienced actress out to the theaterâs fire escape and gave her a bit of sage advice: Abandon any trace of camp or shtick, and play her character as simply and truthfully as she could. Andrews did just that and âThe Boy Friendâ became a smash hit.
That led Alan Jay Lerner and Frederick Loewe, those giants of the Broadway musical, to offer her the stage role of Eliza Doolittle in âMy Fair Lady,â where she honed her craft under the supervision of legendary director Moss Hart. After seeing her perform in âCamelot,â Walt Disney enticed Andrews to Hollywood for the lead in âMary Poppins.â
Andrews recounts how she headed west with then-husband, set-director Tony Walton, and their infant daughter Emma for a crash course in film acting alongside the more experienced comedian Dick Van Dyke.
Andrews admits she was unhappy about being passed over for the role of Eliza Doolittle in the film version of âMy Fair Lady,â in favor of non-singer Audrey Hepburn. (Marni Nixon, the famous Hollywood âghost singer,â did the actual vocals in the film.) But Andrews says she ultimately felt grateful for the snub, because it enabled her to star in âMary Poppins.â
Of all her films, âMary Poppinsâ gets the most lavish, detailed description in âHome Work,â from the ballet-influenced walk she developed for her character, to the advice she gave Van Dyke as he struggled to approximate a cockney accent. She recalls Disney in glowing terms â âalways very encouraging and full of bonhomieâ â and learned, to her amazement, about the daunting amount of editing, re-recording of dialogue and other tinkering that a major production required to get into theaters.
Andrewsâ debut film earned her a lead actress Oscar in 1965. By then, she already had another massive musical hit, âThe Sound of Music.â The most interesting part of that production for her was traveling to Austria to shoot on location, where she was moved by the beauty of the mountains and chilled to learn about the Himmler connection to the villa. âYou can literally feel the evil that once permeated those walls,â she recalls.
She reveals that her favorite song in the film is âEdelweiss,â even though she only got to sing it in the Von Trapp ensemble, not as a solo.
Back in Hollywood, Andrews â still in many ways a small-town English girl â struggled with press appearances and other requisites of stardom. She and Tony Walton drifted apart, due to the frequent separations required by their work. In an effort to save her marriage, Andrews sought help from a psychoanalyst and even briefly considered abandoning her acting and singing career, until her therapist advised her that it would take her a long time to become as good at anything else. Moreover, he explained, it was a shame to waste a gift that gave so much pleasure to others.
Andrewsâ first marriage didnât survive, but as she was leaving the therapistâs office one day, she had a chance encounter in the street with the man who would become the love of her life, director and writer Blake Edwards. Initially, he wanted to cast her in his film âDarling Lili,â but a romance soon blossomed and the two eventually married.
Andrewsâ portrait of Edwards, to whom she was married until his death at age 88 in 2010, is more revealing than anything she writes about herself. He is as complex as she is straightforward. She describes him as witty, insightful and kind, and a gifted cinematic storyteller, but also prone to depression and dependent upon painkillers to cope with a bad back. She writes that he became embittered by a bullying, callous Hollywood studio culture, which he battled to keep his films from being ruined by executivesâ meddling.
Andrews herself seems to float above the 1960s-70s counterculture tumult in Hollywood, an old-fashioned movie star who probably would have been more at home in the Golden Age of the 1940s. Nevertheless, the book documents her encounters with colorful figures such as Alfred Hitchcock, who directed her in âTorn Curtain,â and with the hard-living Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton. The lone intersection with âOnce Upon a Time ⌠in Hollywoodâ is when she and Edwards invited martial arts great Bruce Lee to lunch at their home, where he entertained them by springing from his chair into a flying side kick. (âCan Nureyev do this?â Lee asked.)
The most moving part of the book is Andrewsâ account of postwar Vietnam and Cambodia, which she visited in the early 1980s as part of a humanitarian delegation. (She has two adopted daughters, Amelia and Joanna, who were Vietnamese orphans.) She devotes more space and vivid detail in the book to those scenes of heart-wrenching deprivation and suffering than she gives to some of her movies. The trip, she notes, changed her âon a profound level,â giving her a new sense of purpose. She became an activist, lobbying for legislation to allow the Asian American children left behind by U.S. servicemen to immigrate to this country.
âI never anticipated any of it,â Andrews says of her film career. âI just took the opportunities that were in front of me and waded in.â
That degree of candor â and Andrewsâ refreshing unpretentiousness and gentle sense of bemusement at her lifeâs adventures â make âHome Workâ a book that will appeal to fans of her films, as well as anyone who wants to be reassured that being a celebrity doesnât have to involve scandal.
Home Work: A Memoir of My Hollywood Years
Julie Andrews
Hachette Books: 352 pages; $30
Kiger has written for GQ, Sierra magazine, Fast Company and History.com. Heâs also co-written two nonfiction books, âPoploricaâ and âOops.â
If you go
The Los Angeles Times Book Club and the Ideas Exchange welcome Julie Andrews in conversation with columnist Mary McNamara about âHome Work.â
When: 7:30 p.m., Nov. 18.
Where: Orpheum Theatre, 842 S. Broadway, Los Angeles
More info: latimes.com/bookclub
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