Before Audrey Hepburn became the most elegant woman in cinema, she was a starving child in Nazi-occupied Holland who ate tulip bulbs to survive, carried messages for the Dutch Resistance, and nearly died of malnutrition. The grace and poise that defined her screen presence were forged in wartime suffering she rarely discussed — and the humanitarian work she devoted her final years to was not celebrity philanthropy but a debt she felt she owed.
This episode traces Hepburn from occupied Arnhem through her unlikely path to ballet, Broadway, and Hollywood, the films that made her an icon, and the UNICEF ambassadorship that she considered the most important work of her life.
- Hepburn’s childhood under Nazi occupation — starvation, resistance work, and the trauma she carried
- The path from ballet dancer to Broadway sensation to Roman Holiday and instant stardom
- Breakfast at Tiffany’s, Funny Face, and the Givenchy partnership that defined mid-century elegance
- Her final decade as a UNICEF ambassador and why she considered it more meaningful than acting
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