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Charlie met a true queen today… @JulieAndrews! #TODAYPuppy pic.twitter.com/EpwrCdyzp2
— TODAY (@TODAYshow) June 29, 2017

The Helpmann Award nominations, honouring Australia’s live performances, have been announced and they’re just lovely.
Simultaneous events in Adelaide, Brisbane, Melbourne, Perth and Sydney on Monday night have revealed the nominees across 42 categories, with Dame Julie Andrews’ classic production of My Fair Lady leading the way with nine nominations.
Andrews came to Australia last year to direct the production, for Opera Australia and John Frost, in keeping with the original Lerner and Loewe production in which she made her Broadway debut as Eliza Doolittle 60 years ago.
My Fair Lady is up for best musical against strong contenders The Book Of Mormon, with eight nominations, and Kinky Boots and Aladdin with seven each.
Local theatre productions, Belvoir’s The Drover’s Wife and Melbourne Theatre Company’s Jasper Jones, have both been nominated several times including in the Best Play category.
AAP
WE HAVE grown accustomed to her face. Accustomed to the blossom in her cheeks, the bluish twinkle in her eyes.
But Dame Julie Andrews still has the sort of star power no amount of familiarity can erase.
Slipping into her seat at the opening of My Fair Lady in Brisbane, wearing dark glasses, the beloved stage and screen star was easily spotted. And, as the lights dimmed ahead of the overture, ripples of applause swelled into a tsunami of affection.
A sustained roar that had the original Eliza Doolittle — not to mention Mary Poppins and Maria von Trapp — standing briefly and waving back with embarrassed thanks.
“Goodness me, what an ovation,’’ the 81-year-old says the morning after.
But Andrews — directing an Australian revival of Lerner and Loewe’s classic Broadway musical — is quick to swivel the spotlight.
“This Australian company, they work so hard and give me everything I could possibly ask for,’’ she says. “I think of them almost as my second family.’’
Andrews — sauntering into a hotel anteroom in floral jacket, black slacks and suede shoes — seems especially taken with Anna O’Byrne, the Melbourne singer (Love Never Dies) cast as Eliza in her acclaimed 60th anniversary production.
“Anna is wonderful,’’ she says. “Her voice is gorgeous and she’s finding things in the role that I’m thrilled about, things I would never have thought of.’’
Andrews was only 20, with just one big show under her belt (The Boyfriend), when she landed the coveted role of Eliza opposite Rex Harrison’s Professor Henry Higgins. They were the toast of Broadway after My Fair Lady opened in New York on March 15, 1956. Audiences seeing the show on London’s West End were just as ecstatic.
“I did My Fair Lady for almost 3½ years, eight performances a week,’’ Andrews recalls. “It was a marathon.’’
No archival record remains of that astounding production. Eliza — the Covent Garden flower seller transformed from a “squashed cabbage leaf’’ into an English rose — was defined instead by Audrey Hepburn in the Oscar-winning 1964 Hollywood movie My Fair Lady.
Julie Andrews as Eliza Doolittle in My Fair Lady.
“Audrey and I became good friends and one day she said to me, ‘Julie, you should have done the role (on screen) … but I didn’t have the guts to turn it down’,” Andrews says. “In fact, that’s not the reason I didn’t do it. Not because Audrey wanted it but because I wasn’t known at that time. On Broadway I was known but they (Hollywood producers) wanted a huge box-office name.’’










