julie andrews

Among Andrews’ forays into television were much-acclaimed specials, including one that she made with Carol Burnett in 1971, Julie and Carol at Lincoln Center, and an Emmy-winning show, The Julie Andrews Hour (1972). [1]

Julie Andrews has been a beloved and much-honored star of stage, screen and television for more than half a century. [2]

Julie Andrews made her way from Vaudeville to Broadway to Hollywood and back again — singing all the way — and her movies have encompassed some of the business’s biggest blockbusters as well as most expensive bombs. [3]

When, in spite of rave reviews, she was the only cast member nominated for a Tony Award that year, she declined the nomination. [1]

In 1989 she became the first actress to be given the special Tribute award of the British Academy of Film and Television Arts. [2]

From her Broadway stage triumphs, her many motion picture successes added to her long list of top rated television specials and a recording career equaled by few, there can be little doubt that Ms. Andrews is truly an entertainment phenomenon. [4]

Probably the most famous role of Julie’s career, that of Maria von Trapp in THE SOUND OF MUSIC (1965) was oddly enough one she was skeptical about taking due to the sometimes overly-sugary sweetness of the Broadway version of Rodgers and Hammerstein’s musical. [3]

Julie Andrews is still best-known for her roles as Mary Poppins in the film of that name (1964) and Maria von Trapp in The Sound of Music (1965). [1]

Julie’s supercalifragilisticexpialidocious film debut performance as the Banks Family’s no-nonsense, English nanny (with a little more up her sleeve than those around her realize) won her the Academy Award for Best Actress of the year and the film itself was nominated for an incredible thirteen Oscars, taking home five of them. [3]

Radio and stage successes, including her performance in a London Palladium production of Cinderella when she was 20, led her to Broadway, where she starred in The Boyfriend (1954), My Fair Lady (1956) and Camelot (1960). [1]

During the course of her career she has also won five Golden Globe awards; two for being the world’s favorite actress and one for her performance in the film “Victor/Victoria,” a role she reprised on stage for the Broadway production in 1995. [2]

But from nanny to nun to German spy, wholesome or sexually ambiguous, Julie has proved herself a talented actress and comedienne — and of course there’s always that voice. [3]

Andrews was a former British child actress and singer who first came to Broadway in 1954 with The Boy Friend, and rose to prominence starring in other musicals such as My Fair Lady and Camelot, and in musical films such as Mary Poppins (1964) and The Sound of Music (1965): the roles for which she is still best known. [5]

Her massive successes in the film musicals Mary Poppins (in which she played a magical nanny to two pre-World War I British children) and The Sound of Music (in which she played an aspiring nun-turned-governess to seven pre-World War II Austrian children) coalesced in the public mind into the character of a sweet-voiced, proper Englishwoman quickly ready to soothe childish traumas by crooning about “A Spoonful of Sugar” or “My Favorite Things.” [1]

After years of successful musical performances on Broadway, Walt Disney gave Julie the chance to make her mark in movies when he offered her the title role in his live-action musical adaptation of the popular P.L. Travers children’s book MARY POPPINS (1964). [3]

Sources:
[1] Julie Andrews: Biography from Answers.com
[2] Julie Andrews Biography
[3] Reel Classics: Julie Andrews
[4] Julie Andrews Online
[5] Julie Andrews - Wikipedia

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