Funny Face


9:00 pm - 11:00 pm, Today on WKUW Nostalgia Network (40.5)

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About this Broadcast
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Stanley Donen's ultrachic spin into the world of fashion photography.

1957 English Stereo
Drama Romance Music Comedy Adaptation Musical Comedy-drama Dance

Cast & Crew
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Audrey Hepburn (Actor) .. Jo Stockton
Fred Astaire (Actor) .. Dick Avery
Kay Thompson (Actor) .. Maggie Prescott
Robert Flemyng (Actor) .. Paul Duval
Dovima (Actor) .. Marion
Virginia Gibson (Actor) .. Babs
Sue England (Actor) .. Laura
Ruta Lee (Actor) .. Lettie
Alex Gerry (Actor) .. Dovitch
Iphigenie Castiglioni (Actor) .. Armande
Jean Del Val (Actor) .. Hairdresser
Albert D'arno (Actor) .. Beautician
Nina Borget (Actor) .. Assistant Hairdresser
Marilyn White (Actor) .. Receptionist
Dorothy Colbert (Actor) .. Receptionist
Louise Glenn (Actor) .. Junior Editor
Heather Hopper (Actor) .. Junior Editor
Cecile Rogers (Actor) .. Junior Editor
Nancy Kilgas (Actor) .. Melissa
Emilie Stevens (Actor) .. Assistant Dance Director
Paul Smith (Actor) .. Steve
Karen Scott (Actor) .. Gigi
Gabriel Curtiz (Actor) .. Man Next to Hand Stand
Peter Camlin (Actor) .. Man Buyer
Elizabeth Slifer (Actor) .. Mme. La Farge
Donald Lawton (Actor) .. Airport Clerk
Karine Nordman (Actor) .. French Girl
Genevieve Aumont (Actor) .. French Actress
Nesdon Booth (Actor) .. Southern Man
George Dee (Actor) .. Seedy Man
Marcel De La Brosse (Actor) .. Seedy Man
Albert Godderis (Actor) .. Seedy Man
Jerry Lucas (Actor) .. Bruiser
Jack Chefe (Actor) .. Frenchman
Jan Bradley (Actor) .. Crying Girl
Jerry Chiat (Actor) .. Man on Head
Elsa Peterson (Actor) .. Woman Buyer
Fern Barry (Actor) .. Southern Wife
Michel Auclair (Actor) .. Prof. Emile Flostre
Heather Ames (Actor) .. Junior Editor
Brandon Beach (Actor) .. Fashion Show Guest
Paul Bisciglia (Actor) .. Photographer
Lulu Mae Bohrman (Actor) .. Fashion Show Guest
Paul Bradley (Actor) .. Fashion Show Guest
Joe Brooks (Actor) .. Fashion Show Guest
Ralph Brooks (Actor) .. Fashion Show Guest
Buddy Bryan (Actor) .. Specialty Dancer
George Calliga (Actor) .. Fashion Show Guest
Steve Carruthers (Actor) .. Photographer
Geneviève Aumont (Actor) .. French Actress
Sunny Harnett (Actor) .. Specialty Dancer
Don Powell (Actor)
Diane Du Bois (Actor) .. Mimi

More Information
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Did You Know..
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Audrey Hepburn (Actor) .. Jo Stockton
Born: May 04, 1929
Died: January 20, 1993
Birthplace: Brussels, Belgium
Trivia: Magical screen presence, fashion arbiter, shrine to good taste, and tireless crusader for children's rights, Audrey Hepburn has become one of the most enduring screen icons of the twentieth century. Best-known for her film roles in Breakfast at Tiffany's, My Fair Lady, Roman Holiday and Charade, Hepburn epitomized a waif-like glamour, combining charm, effervescence, and grace. When she died of colon cancer in 1993, the actress was the subject of endless tributes which mourned the passing of one who left an indelible imprint on the world, both on and off screen.Born into relative prosperity and influence on May 4, 1929, Hepburn was the daughter of a Dutch baroness and a wealthy British banker. Although she was born in Brussels, Belgium, her early years were spent traveling between England, Belgium, and the Netherlands because of her father's job. At the age of five, Hepburn was sent to England for boarding school; a year later, her father abandoned the family, something that would have a profound effect on the actress for the rest of her life. More upheaval followed in 1939, when her mother moved her and two sons from a previous marriage to the neutral Netherlands: the following year the country was invaded by the Nazis and Hepburn and her family were forced to endure the resulting hardships. During the German occupation, Hepburn suffered from malnutrition (which would permanently affect her weight), witnessed various acts of Nazi brutality, and at one point was forced into hiding with her family. One thing that helped her through the war years was her love of dance: trained in ballet since the age of five, Hepburn continued to study, often giving classes out of her mother's home.It was her love of dance that ultimately led Hepburn to her film career. After the war, her family relocated to Amsterdam, where the actress continued to train as a ballerina and modeled for extra money. Hepburn's work led to a 1948 screen test and a subsequent small role in the 1948 Dutch film Nederlands in Zeven Lessen (Dutch in Seven Lessons). The same year, she and her mother moved to London, where Hepburn had been given a dance school scholarship. Continuing to model on the side, she decided that because of her height and lack of training, her future was not in dance. She tried out for and won a part in the chorus line of the stage show High Button Shoes and was soon working regularly on the stage. An offer from the British Pictures Corporation led to a few small roles, including one in 1951's The Lavender Hill Mob. A major supporting role in the 1952 film The Secret People led to Monte Carlo, Baby (1953), and it was during the filming of that movie that fate struck for the young actress in the form of a chance encounter with Colette. The famed novelist and screenwriter decided that Hepburn would be perfect for the title role in Gigi, and Hepburn was soon off to New York to star in the Broadway show. It was at this time that the actress won her first major screen role in William Wyler's 1953 Roman Holiday. After much rehearsal and patience from Wyler (from whom, Hepburn remarked, she "learned everything"), Hepburn garnered acclaim for her portrayal of an incognito European princess, winning an Academy Award as Best Actress and spawning what became known as the Audrey Hepburn "look." More success came the following year with Billy Wilder's Sabrina. Hepburn won a Best Actress Oscar nomination for her performance in the title role, and continued to be a fashion inspiration, thanks to the first of many collaborations with the designer Givenchy, who designed the actress' gowns for the film.Hepburn also began another collaboration that year, this time with actor/writer/producer Mel Ferrer. After starring with him in the Broadway production of Ondine (and winning a Tony in the process), Hepburn married Ferrer, and their sometimes tumultuous partnership would last for the better part of the next fifteen years. She went on to star in a series of successful films during the remainder of the decade, including War and Peace (1956), 1957's Funny Face, and The Nun's Story (1959), for which she won another Oscar nomination.Following lukewarm reception for Green Mansions (1959) and The Unforgiven (1960), Hepburn won another Oscar nomination and a certain dose of icon status for her role as enigmatic party girl Holly Golightly in Breakfast at Tiffany's (1961). The role, and its accompanying air of cosmopolitan chic, would be associated with Hepburn for the rest of her life, and indeed beyond. However, the actress next took on an entirely different role with William Wyler's The Children's Hour (1961), a melodrama in which she played a girls' school manager suspected of having an "unnatural relationship" with her best friend (Shirley MacLaine).In 1963, Hepburn returned to the realm of enthusiastic celluloid heterosexuality with Charade. The film was a huge success, thanks in part to a flawlessly photogenic pairing with Cary Grant (who had previously turned down the opportunity to work with Hepburn because of their age difference). The actress then went on to make My Fair Lady in 1964, starring opposite Rex Harrison as a cockney flower girl. The film provided another success for Hepburn, winning a score of Oscars and a place in motion picture history. After another Wyler collaboration, 1965's How to Steal a Million, as well as Two for the Road (1967) and the highly acclaimed Wait Until Dark (1967)--for which she won her fifth Oscar nomination playing a blind woman--Hepburn went into semi-retirement to raise her two young sons. Her marriage to Ferrer had ended, and she had married again, this time to Italian doctor Andrea Dotti. She came out of retirement briefly in 1975 to star opposite Sean Connery in Robin and Marian, but her subsequent roles were intermittent and in films of varying quality. Aside from appearances in 1979's Bloodline and Peter Bogdanovich's 1980 They All Laughed, Hepburn stayed away from film, choosing instead to concentrate on her work with starving children. After divorcing Dotti in the early 1980s, she took up with Robert Wolders; the two spent much of their time travelling the world as part of Hepburn's goodwill work. In 1987, the actress was officially appointed UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador; the same year she made her final television appearance in Love Among Thieves, which netted poor reviews. Two years later, she had her final film appearance as an angel in Steven Spielberg's Always.Hepburn devoted the last years of her life to her UNICEF work, travelling to war-torn places like Somalia to visit starving children. In 1992, already suffering from colon cancer, she was awarded the Screen Actors' Guild Achievement Award. She died the next year, succumbing to her illness on January 20 at her home in Switzerland. The same year, she was posthumously awarded the Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.
Fred Astaire (Actor) .. Dick Avery
Born: May 10, 1899
Died: June 22, 1987
Birthplace: Omaha, Nebraska
Trivia: Few would argue with the opinion that American entertainer Fred Astaire was the greatest dancer ever seen on film. Born to a wealthy Omaha family, young Astaire was trained at the Alvienne School of Dance and the Ned Wayburn School of Dancing. In a double act with his sister Adele, Fred danced in cabarets, vaudeville houses, and music halls all over the world before he was 20. The Astaires reportedly made their film bow in a 1917 Mary Pickford vehicle, same year of their first major Broadway success, Over the Top. The two headlined one New York stage hit after another in the 1920s, their grace and sophistication spilling into their social life, in which they hobnobbed with literary and theatrical giants, as well as millionaires and European royalty. When Adele married the British Lord Charles Cavendish in 1931, Fred found himself soloing for the first time in his life. As with many other Broadway luminaries, Astaire was beckoned to Hollywood, where legend has it his first screen test was dismissed with "Can't act; slightly bald; can dance a little." He danced more than a little in his first film, Dancing Lady (1933), though he didn't actually play a role and was confined to the production numbers. Later that year, Astaire was cast as comic/dancing relief in the RKO musical Flying Down to Rio, which top-billed Dolores Del Rio and Gene Raymond. Astaire was billed fifth, just below the film's female comedy relief Ginger Rogers. Spending most of the picture trading wisecracks while the "real" stars wooed each other, Astaire and Rogers did a very brief dance during a production number called "The Carioca." As it turned out, Flying Down to Rio was an enormous moneymaker -- in fact, it was the film that saved the studio from receivership. Fans of the film besieged the studio with demands to see more of those two funny people who danced in the middle of the picture. RKO complied with 1934's The Gay Divorcee, based on one of Astaire's Broadway hits. Supporting no one this time, Fred and Ginger were the whole show as they sang and danced their way through such Cole Porter hits as "Night and Day" and the Oscar-winning "The Continental." Astaire and Rogers were fast friends, but both yearned to be appreciated as individuals rather than a part of a team. After six films with Rogers, Astaire finally got a chance to work as a single in Damsel in Distress (1937), which, despite a superb George Gershwin score and top-notch supporting cast, was a box-office disappointment, leading RKO to re-team him with Rogers in Carefree (1938). After The Story of Vernon and Irene Castle (1939), Astaire decided to go solo again, and, after a few secondary films, he found the person he would later insist was his favorite female co-star, Rita Hayworth, with whom he appeared in You'll Never Get Rich (1942) and You Were Never Lovelier (1946). Other partners followed, including Lucille Bremer, Judy Garland, Betty Hutton, Jane Powell, Cyd Charisse, and Barrie Chase, but, in the minds of moviegoers, Astaire would forever be linked with Ginger Rogers -- even though a re-teaming in The Barkeleys of Broadway (1949) seemed to prove how much they didn't need each other. Astaire set himself apart from other musical performers by insisting that he be photographed full-figure, rather than have his numbers "improved" by tricky camera techniques or unnecessary close-ups. And unlike certain venerable performers who found a specialty early in life and never varied from it, Astaire's dancing matured with him. He was in his fifties in such films as The Band Wagon (1953) and Funny Face (1957), but he had adapted his style so that he neither drew attention to his age nor tried to pretend to be any younger than he was. Perhaps his most distinctive characteristic was making it look so easy. One seldom got the impression that Astaire worked hard to get his effects, although, of course, he did. To the audience, it seemed as though he was doing it for the first time and making it up as he went along. With the exceptions of his multi-Emmy-award-winning television specials of the late '50s and early '60s, Astaire cut down on his dancing in the latter stages of his career to concentrate on straight acting. While he was superb as a troubled, suicidal scientist in On the Beach (1959) and was nominated for an Oscar for his work in The Towering Inferno (1974), few of his later films took full advantage of his acting abilities. (By 1976, he was appearing in such films as The Amazing Dobermans.) In 1981, more than a decade after he last danced in public, Astaire was honored with a Lifetime Achievement Award from the American Film Institute. While this award was usually bestowed upon personalities who had no work left in them, Astaire remained busy as an actor almost until his death in 1987. The same year as his AFI prize, Astaire joined fellow show business veterans Melvyn Douglas, Douglas Fairbanks Jr., and John Houseman in the movie thriller Ghost Story.
Kay Thompson (Actor) .. Maggie Prescott
Born: November 09, 1902
Died: July 02, 1998
Trivia: Though best-remembered for penning the delightful Eloise series of childhood adventure books, Kay Thompson was also an actress, a singer/songwriter, and one of the entertainment industry's finest vocal arrangers. Thompson launched her long, varied career in the 1930s as a night-club singer and songwriter. By mid-decade, she had become the primary vocal arranger on the popular radio shows Your Hit Parade, The Chesterfield Show, and Tune-Up Time. During this period, Thompson often worked with Fred Waring and Andre Kostelanetz. She arranged vocals with Hugh Martin for the Broadway show Hooray for What! in 1937 and worked with him on the film Manhattan Merry-Go-Round (1937), which also marked her debut as a performer in movies. In the mid-'40s, Martin was the chief vocal arranger at MGM. When he was drafted, he immediately suggested that Thompson replace him at the studio. While at MGM, Thompson worked on such major features as Ziegfeld Follies (1946), Good News (1947), and Vincente Minnelli's The Pirate (1948). Thompson worked closely with Minnelli's former wife, Judy Garland, and was godmother to their daughter Liza Minnelli; later Thompson assisted mother and daughter with their live performances. In 1956, Thompson made waves as an actress with her performance as Maggie Prescott in the Audrey Hepburn classic Funny Face. As an author, Thompson published her first Eloise book, Eloise: A Book for Precocious Grownups, in 1955. The story of a mischievous firebrand six-year-old living in New York's Plaza Hotel, it spawned three popular sequels. Thompson later founded Eloise Ltd. to market character-related merchandise. The books led to a television special. Thompson was married twice, once to bandleader Jack Jenney and once to producer William Spier. Thompson was residing in Liza Minnelli's home when she passed away on July 2, 1998.
Robert Flemyng (Actor) .. Paul Duval
Born: January 03, 1912
Died: May 22, 1995
Trivia: British actor Robert Flemyng worked steadily in both London and Broadway after his stage debut in 1931. Head Over Heels (1936) was his first film, but he wouldn't return to moviemaking full time until after his World War II military service--a conspicuous period for Flemyng, who was awarded the Military Cross and the OBE. The actor settled into a long film career playing dignified character roles in 1947, starting with Bond Street. Perhaps his flashiest movie role (albeit still played with a measure of dignity) was the necrophiliac title character in The Horrible Dr. Hitchcock (1962). In 1992, Robert Flemyng was still pursuing his life's work, appearing with Jeremy Irons, Theresa Russell and Joel Grey in the moody biopic Kafka.
Dovima (Actor) .. Marion
Born: January 01, 1926
Died: January 01, 1990
Virginia Gibson (Actor) .. Babs
Born: April 09, 1928
Sue England (Actor) .. Laura
Born: July 17, 1930
Ruta Lee (Actor) .. Lettie
Born: May 30, 1936
Birthplace: Montreal, Quebec
Alex Gerry (Actor) .. Dovitch
Born: October 06, 1904
Iphigenie Castiglioni (Actor) .. Armande
Born: August 23, 1895
Jean Del Val (Actor) .. Hairdresser
Born: November 17, 1891
Died: March 13, 1975
Trivia: French character actor Jean Del Val was a regular in American films from at least 1927. In the early days of the talkies, he offered his services as translator and vocal coach for the French-language versions of American films. Many of his later roles were fleeting but memorable: he's the French aviator in Block-Heads (1938) who rescues over-aged doughboy Stan Laurel from the trenches ("Why, you blockhead. Ze war's been over for twenty years!") and the French radio announcer who opens Casablanca (1942) by spreading the news of the murder of two German couriers carrying letters of transit. He enjoyed a larger role in Columbia's So Dark the Night (1946), a film seemingly conceived as a showcase for the best of Hollywood's foreign-accented bit players. Active in films until the 1960s, Jean del Val played a crucial non-speaking role in Fantastic Voyage (1966): he's the comatose scientist whose arterial system and brain are explored by the miniaturized heroes.
Albert D'arno (Actor) .. Beautician
Died: January 01, 1977
Nina Borget (Actor) .. Assistant Hairdresser
Marilyn White (Actor) .. Receptionist
Dorothy Colbert (Actor) .. Receptionist
Louise Glenn (Actor) .. Junior Editor
Heather Hopper (Actor) .. Junior Editor
Born: September 16, 1976
Cecile Rogers (Actor) .. Junior Editor
Born: February 01, 1928
Nancy Kilgas (Actor) .. Melissa
Born: November 07, 1930
Emilie Stevens (Actor) .. Assistant Dance Director
Paul Smith (Actor) .. Steve
Karen Scott (Actor) .. Gigi
Gabriel Curtiz (Actor) .. Man Next to Hand Stand
Peter Camlin (Actor) .. Man Buyer
Elizabeth Slifer (Actor) .. Mme. La Farge
Donald Lawton (Actor) .. Airport Clerk
Karine Nordman (Actor) .. French Girl
Genevieve Aumont (Actor) .. French Actress
Nesdon Booth (Actor) .. Southern Man
Born: January 01, 1920
Died: January 01, 1964
George Dee (Actor) .. Seedy Man
Born: January 01, 1900
Died: January 01, 1974
Marcel De La Brosse (Actor) .. Seedy Man
Born: August 04, 1902
Albert Godderis (Actor) .. Seedy Man
Born: January 01, 1880
Died: January 01, 1971
Jerry Lucas (Actor) .. Bruiser
Jack Chefe (Actor) .. Frenchman
Born: April 01, 1894
Died: December 01, 1975
Trivia: A mustachioed supporting player from Russia, Jack Chefe (sometimes credited as Chefé) played exactly what he looked and sounded like: headwaiters. That was also his occupation when not appearing in films, of which he did literally hundreds between 1932 and 1959, serving such stars as Carole Lombard (My Man Godfrey, 1936), Jeanette MacDonald (Bitter Sweet, 1940), Bob Hope (My Favorite Brunette, 1947), and even Dick Tracy (in the 1945 RKO feature film). Once in a while, Chefe managed to escape typecasting, playing one of the legionnaires in Laurel and Hardy's Flying Deuces (1939) and a croupier in The Big Sleep (1946).
Jan Bradley (Actor) .. Crying Girl
Born: July 06, 1943
Jerry Chiat (Actor) .. Man on Head
Elsa Peterson (Actor) .. Woman Buyer
Born: December 23, 1897
Fern Barry (Actor) .. Southern Wife
Born: September 24, 1909
Michel Auclair (Actor) .. Prof. Emile Flostre
Born: September 14, 1922
Died: January 07, 1988
Trivia: German-born actor Michel Auclair made his first impression upon international audiences with his supporting appearance in Jean Cocteau's La Belle et La Bete (1946). He gradually developed into a leading man in the post-war French cinema, with few appearances outside his adopted country. As his career continued into the 1970s, he could be seen on occasion in such international productions as The Day of the Jackal (1973), but still he was hardly a household name in the United States. Michel Auclair's most memorable English language appearance was his fourth-billed turn as Professor Emile Flostre in the Fred Astaire/Audrey Hepburn musical Funny Face (1957).
Sunny Hartnett (Actor)
Heather Ames (Actor) .. Junior Editor
Brandon Beach (Actor) .. Fashion Show Guest
Born: January 01, 1878
Died: January 01, 1974
Paul Bisciglia (Actor) .. Photographer
Born: July 30, 1928
Lulu Mae Bohrman (Actor) .. Fashion Show Guest
Paul Bradley (Actor) .. Fashion Show Guest
Joe Brooks (Actor) .. Fashion Show Guest
Born: December 14, 1923
Ralph Brooks (Actor) .. Fashion Show Guest
Born: September 23, 1915
Buddy Bryan (Actor) .. Specialty Dancer
George Calliga (Actor) .. Fashion Show Guest
Born: January 01, 1896
Died: January 01, 1976
Steve Carruthers (Actor) .. Photographer
Geneviève Aumont (Actor) .. French Actress
Sunny Harnett (Actor) .. Specialty Dancer
Don Powell (Actor)
Diane Du Bois (Actor) .. Mimi
Claudette Colbert (Actor)
Born: September 13, 1903
Died: July 30, 1996
Birthplace: Paris, France
Trivia: Paris-born actress Claudette Colbert was brought to New York at the age of seven by her banker father. She planned an art career after high school graduation, studying at the Art Student's League. Attending a party with actress Anne Morrison, the 18-year-old was offered a three-line bit in Morrison's new play The Wild Westcotts. That ended her art aspirations, and Colbert embarked on a stage career in 1925, scoring her first big critical success in the 1926 Broadway production of The Barker, in which she played a duplicitous snake charmer. One year later, the actress made her first film at Long Island's Astoria studio, For the Love of Mike (1927), but the film was unsuccessful and she enjoyed neither the experience nor her young director, Frank Capra. So back she went to Broadway, returning to films during the talkie revolution in The Hole in the Wall (1929), which was also the movie-speaking debut of Edward G. Robinson. Once again, Colbert disliked film acting; but audiences responded to her beauty and cultured voice, so she forsook the stage for Hollywood. Colbert's popularity (and salary) skyrocketed after she was cast as "the wickedest woman in history," Nero's unscrupulous wife Poppaea, in the Biblical epic The Sign of the Cross (1932). Colbert expanded her range as a street-smart smuggler's daughter in I Cover the Waterfront and in the pioneering screwball comedy Three-Cornered Moon (both 1933), but it was for a role she nearly refused that the actress secured her box-office stature. Virtually every other actress in Hollywood had turned down the role of spoiled heiress Ellie Andrews in Columbia's It Happened One Night (1934), and when director Frank Capra approached an unenthusiastic Colbert, she wearily agreed to appear in the film on the conditions that she be paid twice her normal salary and that the film be completed before she was scheduled to go on vacation in four weeks. Colbert considered the experience one of the worst in her life -- until the 1935 Academy Awards ceremony, in which It Happened One Night won in virtually all major categories, including a Best Actress Oscar for her. Colbert spent the next decade alternating between comedy and drama, frequently in the company of her most popular co-star, Fred MacMurray. She gained a reputation of giving 110 percent of her energies while acting, which compensated for her occasional imperviousness and her insistence that only one side of her face be photographed (which frequently necessitated redesigning movie sets just to accommodate her phobia about her "bad side"). Colbert remained a top money-making star until her last big hit, The Egg and I (1947), after which she lost some footing, partly because of producers' unwillingness to meet her demands that (under doctor's orders) she could only film a short time each day (her doctor was her husband). She hoped to jump-start her career in the role of Margo Channing in All About Eve, but those plans were squelched when she injured her back and had to relinquish the character to Bette Davis. Traveling the usual "fading star" route, Colbert made films in Europe and a budget Western in the U.S. before returning triumphantly to Broadway, first in 1956's Janus, then in the long-running 1958 comedy Marriage Go Round. The actress also appeared on television, although reportedly had trouble adjusting to live productions. In 1961, she returned to Hollywood as Troy Donahue's mother in Parrish. It would be her last film appearance until the 1987 TV movie, The Two Mrs. Grenvilles -- in which she far outclassed her material. Still a prominent figure in the Hollywood hierarchy, Colbert retired to her lavish home in California, where she frequently entertained her old friends Ronald and Nancy Reagan. Claudette Colbert died in 1996 in Bridgetown, Barbados, at the age of 92.