Fifth
Avenue, 5 A.M.' takes you through
the back
door of 'Tiffany's
By Craig Wilson, USA TODAY
It's one
of the most famous scenes in film history. Audrey Hepburn steps out of a cab in
the early morning darkness, looks up at the Tiffany & Co. building on Fifth
Avenue, strolls over to a window and begins to nibble on a Danish pastry as she
eyes the jewels inside.
Her hair is swept up, her
demeanor that of quiet sophistication, her little sleeveless dress is black. Of
course.
If only it were that simple.
Much has been written about Truman
Capote’s novella Breakfast at Tiffany’s, and just as much has been written
about the movie of the same name. Author Sam Wasson is now adding his own take
on the classic in Fifth Avenue, 5
A.M.: Audrey Hepburn, Breakfast at Tiffany's, and the Dawn of the Modern Women.
Anyone even slightly interested in Capote/Hepburn/Breakfast at Tiffany's will delight
in his account, although a lot of it is old news.
Yes, Capote was not happy with the film
version, with its possibility of multiple endings. Yes, Marilyn Monroe was
Capote's first choice for Holly Golightly. Yes, Hepburn didn't even want the
part, thinking it was not the image she wanted to project. She didn't like
Danish pastries, either. She wanted to eat ice cream in the opening scene, but
director Blake Edwards convinced her that ice cream was not for breakfast.
There were some who didn't even like the
movie's now-classic theme, Moon River.
But through intensive research and
interviews, Wasson is able to tell the story from an insider's point of view,
giving readers a behind-the-scenes look at what it took to make the movie — the
egos, the budget restraints, the folks at Tiffany's who had never before
allowed cameras inside. In short, it's a good page-turner even if we do know
the ending.
There are some surprises, too. Hepburn wasn't
a beauty?
"Her legs were too long, her waist
was too small, her feet were too big and so were her eyes, nose and the two
gaping nostrils in it," writes Wasson. "When she smiled she revealed
a mouth that swallowed up her face and a row of jagged teeth that wouldn't look
too good in close-ups."
And then there was Hepburn's virginal
image to deal with. Holly Golightly was anything but chaste, and in the
puritanical late '50s, nice girls did not sleep around. Did the movie set the
stage for the free-sex '60s?
You be the judge. Just remember what Ms.
Golightly believed: Nothing bad can ever happen to you at Tiffany's.
http://www.usatoday.com/life/books/reviews/2010-07-11-wasson-review_N.htm?csp=obinsite
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