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Julie Andrews


Birth Place: Walton-on-Thames, Surrey, England, UK
Date of Birth: October 1, 1935
Heritage: British
Famous for: Her role as titular nanny in 'Mary Poppins' (1964)

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To a generation of cinema and TV audiences, Dame Julie Andrews will always be best remembered as the singing star of the Sixties films The Sound of Music and Mary Poppins. But of course there has been much more to Dame Julie's career than these two successes. She has been one of the world's best-loved screen and stage stars for more than 40 years. She has appeared in more than 30 movies and received acclaim for her musical stage performances on Broadway and in London's West End. She has totted up an impressive list of awards - including an Oscar for Best Actress and three Golden Globes. 

Julie Andrews was born Julie Elizabeth Wells on 1 October 1935 in Walton-on-Thames, Surrey, UK to parents Barbara and Ted. As a toddler (four years old), her parents separated, and Barbara formed a relationship with another Ted - Ted Andrews, a singer who hoped to make it big as a performer on the cabaret stage. Being the daughter of show people, Julie's distinctive, clear, singing style was ingrained during the lessons she had as a child. She made her - unbilled - professional debut at the age of 10 in her parents' variety act

At the age of 12, she made her London debut, singing operatic arias in the Starlight Roof revue.

Her New York stage debut as Polly Brown in the hugely successful musical The Boy Friend in 1954 was the turning point in her career.

Two years later, and she was creating the part of Eliza Doolittle in My Fair Lady, which became one of the most spectacular hits in Broadway history. She then conquered Broadway again as Queen Guinevere in Camelot.

But when it came to transferring her success as Eliza Doolittle onto film, Dame Julie lost the role to Audrey Hepburn in 1964.

Film glory was nonetheless waiting just around the corner, and that same year she secured her Oscar-winning role as the magical nanny in the children's fantasy Mary Poppins.

The following year, she starred in The Sound of Music - still a firm TV favourite and one of the top-grossing films of all time - and for which she was also nominated for another Oscar.

Golden Globe nominations followed for her roles in the film musicals Thoroughly Modern Millie and the Gertrude Lawrence biopic Star! She then won a Golden Globe in 1983 for her starring role in the movie Victor/Victoria, in which she starred with James Garner. Her other two Golden Globes were for Mary Poppins and The Sound of Music.

A quiet period away from the limelight followed as Dame Julie decided to concentrate on her personal life. She divorced her first husband, scenic designer Tony Walton, after nine years, and married Blake Edwards, 13 years her senior, in 1970.

As far as her career went, she appeared in a number of feature films during this period, including The Tamarind Seed, 10 and SOB - all directed by Edwards - before returning to the New York stage in 1993 in Putting It Together.

In 1995, she was back on Broadway reprising her movie role in Victor/Victoria on the stage. But in 1997, after missing more than 30 performances of the show, she quit for good to have surgery on non-cancerous nodules in her throat - an operation that she says has robbed her of her voice.

In the summer of 1998 she made a tentative step back to singing when she recorded the vocal part of Polynesia The Parrot for the London stage show Doctor Dolittle.

But in December 1999, she took steps to sue the US hospital which operated on her throat by launching a medical malpractice suit.

Despite not being able to sing Dame Julie has not let the grass grow under her feet. In 2000 she played the part of the widowed English countess Felicity in the film version of Noel Coward's play Relative Values. Her latest film The Princess Diaries in which she plays the queen of a fictitious European country, called Genovia, who must turn her shy teenage granddaughter into a Princess, opened in the US on 3 August 2001.

While busier than ever acting, writing children's books and her autobiography, the main focus for Dame Julie remains her desire to perform on stage again and use her voice because ultimately Dame Julie will remain best-known - and loved - for her sunny persona, pristine image and cut-glass voice.

Credit: divasthesite.com

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