The beauty who danced on Ferragamo


I've been watching some of Audrey Hepburn's films recently. Hepburn in the film changes different faces: she is a noble princess born with a gold spoon, but also a sparrow into a phoenix flower girl; A poor nun struggling to endure, and a social butterfly dreaming of a rich husband. But no matter how the role changes, she always remains the same night like beauty.

Ever since she hit the big screen in 1953 with Roman Holiday, Audrey Hepburn and her style have remained popular to this day. Men loved her, women loved her, those who were old loved her, boys and girls whose lives had only just begun loved her.

There is no doubt that Hepburn is one of the most successful goddesses in recent history. Her appearance, her features, her life, her words and deeds, and even her dress, have been sought after by countless generations.

It's no exaggeration to say that every day, every night, on every corner, there are actresses trying to emulate Hepburn's style.

Like Anne Hathaway, the great beauty of Hollywood in the United States, and AngelaBaby in China.

At first glance, they look pretty good. But put them next to Hepburn's face and they stand out.

In the golden age of Hollywood, when actresses were all curvaceous and curvaceous, Audrey Hepburn became the darling of Hollywood with her neat and perfect features and tall and slender figure.

The first film in her life, Roman Holiday, won her the Oscar for Best Actress.

At the time, the film critic called her "a breeze from somewhere that can sweep the film industry," but the film critic must not have thought that this wind has been blowing until now, so that she has become the ultimate dream of plump girls.

With her small waist, flat shoes, and simple style, Hepburn immediately beat the stereotype of the plump, sensual woman that had prevailed in the West for centuries.

Her lightning-fast popularity seems accidental, but it is the inevitable result of the general trend.

In the post-World War II world, everything was changing, especially the social status of women. Many women are entering the workforce and getting a college education, and they are rushing in droves into fields that men have occupied for millennia.

At the same time, women are looking for role models. This role model is not the delicate doll in the male mind who needs to be rescued and led at any time.

They need the woman they think she is. The one who can represent their weak but independent, beautiful and strong hero of the world.

It was in this social atmosphere that Audrey Hepburn was born.

Hepburn was naturally beautiful, but she was too tall and lanky because of food shortages during World War II.

Seemingly delicate and naive, her eyes are always so gentle and firm, leisurely.

All this can not help but make people feel that her beauty, delicate but powerful.

Her body, too androgynous because of her early hardships, became her trademark and set a style for almost a century.

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