When Julie Andrews fixes your tie.
So adorable!!!!!

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@julieandrewsrules
When Julie Andrews fixes your tie.
So adorable!!!!!
Julie and Emma
Immortal Goddess Dame Julie Andrews was honoured with the Golden Lion Lifetime Achievement Award at the 76th Venice International Film Festival on September 3, 2019.
Look at all that gorgeousness!
“Hello, I’m the new governess, Captain!”
Julie Andrews at a meet-the-press event in Salzburg at the start of location shooting for The Sound of Music, 28 April 1964. Photographs by Otfried Schmidt.
Look at this sweetie!!! So gorgeous!
Oscar-winning actress and singer Julie Andrews will be honored by the Venice Film Festival with its Golden Lion award for lifetime achievement.
Best known for her iconic roles in “Mary Poppins” and “The Sound of Music,” Julie Andrews has starred in more than 40 movies, including a memorable performance as Victoria Grant and Count Victor Grezhinski in “Victor Victoria” (1982), which was directed by her late husband, Blake Edwards. He also directed Andrews in “10” (1979) and in “S.O.B.” (1981).
Venice Film Festival Artistic Director Alberto Barbera noted that Andrews went out of her way “to avoid remaining confined” as a family movies icon by accepting roles that were “diverse, dramatic, provocative and imbued with scathing irony,” he said, citing her role as a war widow with a romantic penchant for falling in love with soldiers in Arthur Hiller’s anti-war romcom “The Americanization of Emily.”
“I am so honored to have been selected as this year’s recipient of the Golden Lion for Lifetime Achievement,” said Andrews, who thanked the fest’s parent organization, the Venice Biennale, “for this acknowledgement of my work.”
Julie Andrews
Andrews and Plummer sat next to each other at the center of the long table, their backs to the room. When they spoke, they leaned close to each other, their heads almost touching.
Gradually, people at other tables started noticing them, shifting forward to see if they could believe their eyes. After all, the last time most of us saw the two of them together, they were climbing over that mountain to freedom.
And 50 years later, damn if they weren’t right here. Safe. And still a family. - Vanity Fair, The Sound of Music’s 50th Anniversary
Julie Andrews and Carol Burnett performing “The Scarecrow Song" on The Garry Moore Show, aired 26 September 1961 on CBS
As a nod to their show-stopping performance of “Big D” five months earlier, Julie and Carol essayed another musical comic duet when Julie made her second guest appearance on The Garry Moore Show. This time they opted for a routine based around “The Scarecrow Song” from The Wizard of Oz. As Moore explains in his introduction, an eleventh hour spanner was thrown in the works when the producers were informed they couldn’t use the scarecrow costumes as originally planned due to copyright issues, so Julie and Carol had to perform in ‘rehearsal clothes’.
“Whoever prevented Moore from getting permission should have had his head examined,” wrote one reviewer. “Not that it mattered,” he added, “The girls did a top-flight job”(Messina, 80). Most others agreed. “[T[here’s no substitute for talent,” asserted syndicated UPI critic, Fred Danzig, “Miss Andrews and Carol Burnett…were outstanding”(Danzig: 14).
Staged by many of the same creative personnel who would go on to produce Julie and Carol at Carnegie Hall the following year, this early performance contains several elements that would find their way into that later landmark special: the comic refrain of “Wouldn’t It Be Loverly”, Carol’s gentle take-off of Julie’s accent, even some of the steps from Ernest Flatt’s remarkably athletic choreography. And this second duet teaming on The Garry Moore Show certainly confirmed the infectious chemistry between these two disparate but wonderfully complementary performers, heralding a long and splendid association.
References
Danzig, Fred. “Television in Review: Dialing and Filing.” The Daily Republican. 27 September1961: 14.
Messina, Matt. “Moore is Back.” Daily News. 28 September 1961: 80.
Disclaimer: This is a fan preservation project; it was created for criticism and research, and is completely nonprofit; it falls under the fair use provision of the United States Copyright Act of 1976, 17 U.S.C. section 107.
THESE TWO!!!!
Julie Andrews photographed at home, 1960s
SO PRECIOUS! Look at that gorgeous sunny face! <3
annehathaway: The importance of grace; The knowledge that power is nothing without respect; Why one must have patience, positivity, perspective, manners, kindness, and humility Always, To everyone, (No exceptions); The joy in treating people as a gift rather than a burden; How far choosing gratitude can get you… If I know anything about any of this, It’s because I was lucky enough to have learned from the very best at the very beginning. Happy Birthday Julie, Queen Eternal. All my love, Annie
This is the sweetest thing ever. Happy Birthday to the most precious human being. <3
Look at her precious face <3
Her freckled face
PRECIOUS FRECKLED FACE! And those eyes <3
Julie Andrews in Victor Victoria || 1982
For heaven’s sake!
i”M SCREAMING THIS IS A BEATON PIC THAT I”VE NVER SEEN BEFORE
Such a cutie!
Julie Andrews on the set of Mary Poppins, 1964
Look at this gorgeous cutie!
Julie Andrews
A ray of sunshine... <3
Julie Andrews