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Julie as Queen Guenevere in the Broadway production of Lerner
and Lowe's Camelot.
JULIA ELIZABETH WELLS was born on October 1, 1935 in Walton-on-Thames,
a suburb of London. Her father, Ted, was a school teacher and her mother,
Barbara, taught piano lessons. Julie also had an aunt who ran a small dancing
school, and as a youngster she was already learning ballet and tap; not
to mention the fact that by the age of three, Julie had been taught to
read and write by her father.
In 1939, Julie's mother got a job as an accompanist at a music hall
in Bognor Regis where she joined up with a tenor named Ted Andrews and
the two became a vaudeville team. During the war, Julie and her younger
brother John were evacuated to a riding school in Kent and Barbara and
Ted Andrews toured Britain together, entertaining the troops. When Julie
was four, her mother divorced Ted Wells and married Andrews, who began
giving singing lessons to Julie. Gradually Julie was incorporated into
the couple's music hall act, and eventually the family changed her last
name to Andrews to make billing for the act easier.
At the age of seven, Julie was taken to audition for singing teacher
Lillian Stiles-Allen, who though impressed with her talent, was reluctant
to train Julie for fear of damaging her young vocal chords. Throat specialists
finally determined that little Julie had a fully developed adult larynx,
explaining her incredible four-octave range and removing any fear of possible
damage.
As her vocal training continued, Julie became a popular British child
performer and at the age of twelve was cast in her first West End revue,
Starlight Roof. It was her performance with the Broadway company
of The Boy Friend in 1954 that brought Julie her American stardom
however, and many more New York successes were soon to follow. After a
year with The Boy Friend, Julie auditioned for and won the role
of Eliza Doolittle in Lerner and Loewe's new musical version of Pygmalion,
My Fair Lady. The show was a hit and Julie received her first Tony
Award nomination for her performance, playing the role opposite
Rex
Harrison in New York for a total of two years, and then for another
sixteen months in London (when she married her childhood sweetheart, Tony
Walton).
Back in New York, Julie earned a second Tony nomination for her portrayal
of Queen Guenevere in Lerner and Loewe's Camelot, and she played
this role for two years before leaving in 1962 to give birth to her daughter
Emma. Julie's Broadway career would then take a thirty year hiatus, as
Walt Disney brought
her to Hollywood to make her film debut in
MARY
POPPINS (1964) with Dick Van Dyke.
Winning an Academy Award as Best Actress for her performance, Julie went
on the following year to star as a nun-turned-governess in the movie musical
smash of the century, THE
SOUND OF MUSIC (1965), which even today remains one of the biggest
blockbusters in cinema history.
Though many of her subsequent films (like THOROUGHLY MODERN MILLIE
(1967) with Mary Tyler Moore and DARLING LILI (1970) with
Rock
Hudson) were not commercially successful, Julie (having divorced Walton)
married LILI's director Blake
Edwards who eventually directed her to another Academy Award-nominated
performance in VICTOR/VICTORIA (1982) with
Robert
Preston, James Garner, and an Oscar-winning score by
Henry
Mancini. Recently Julie reprised this role on Broadway, though after
much success (and another Tony nomination), at age 62 she finally gave
her last performance, citing vocal trouble as her reason for passing the
torch on to Raquel Welch. The show closed soon after.
Today Julie continues to live with Edwards and their two adopted
children, and has even written a few successful children's books under
the name of Julie Edwards, including The Last of the Really Great Whangdoodles
and Mandy. In 2003, she appeared on the 75th Annual Academy Awards
during a segment of the telecast honoring previous Oscar winners. |