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Posted on May 19, 2017 / by admin in 2017, Julie's Green Room, netflix, News

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Posted on May 05, 2017 / by admin in 2017, Australia, News

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.

“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.’’

Ironically, at the 1965 Academy Awards, it was Andrews — not Hepburn — who claimed the Best Actress Oscar: for Mary Poppins. Walt Disney had seen Andrews as Guinevere in Camelot — the fabled Lerner and Loewe musical that followed My Fair Lady — and decided she was “practically perfect’’ to play P.L. Travers’ magical nanny.

Mary Poppins opened the door to The Sound of Music, where Andrews’ do-re-mi charm
in the Bavarian Alps, and mastery of Rodgers and Hammerstein music, earned her another Oscar nomination.

“I was the lucky lady asked to do those roles,’’ she says airily.

But was this dream run just luck or good judgment?

“Young students ask me (that) all the time … where the good fortune comes in is, you never know when a great role is going to float past,” she says. “The thing is, do your homework.
Be ready when they do.’’

This is the sort of sensible advice Andrews dispenses on Julie’s Greenroom, a new Netflix show where she joins Jim Henson puppets (her “Greenies”) in teaching kids — and kids at heart — about the “beautiful world of the arts’’.

“I did a lot of touring in my youth,’’ she says, “and I learnt very quickly that giving is what
it’s all about. It’s about the gift of making an audience feel great and forget their cares, if only for a few hours.’’

But do actors ever really learn how to handle success? The Sound of Music, a megahit, made Andrews the America’s biggest film star in 1966.

“It certainly knocked me sideways for a while,’’ she says. “There’s a great wave of people coming at you and it does take a certain amount of discipline.

“You have to collect yourself, keep your head and realise this is not the way it’s always going to be. It’s a dream life for a little while.’’

 

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Posted on April 12, 2017 / by admin in 2017, Facebbook, Julie's Green Room, netflix, News
Posted on March 15, 2017 / by admin in 2017, Julie's Green Room, netflix, News, Tv

Our relationship with music begins before almost everything else, an acoustic connection which is created even before a baby is born, Broadway legend Julie Andrews says.

“What is the first thing a mum does to a baby?” the 81-year-old star of The Sound of Music and Mary Poppins asks, in that tone which both gently challenges but also reassures that the answer is coming in a moment. “She sings to it.”

 

 

Andrews, in collaboration with her daughter Emma Walton-Hamilton, is turning that very gentle idea into a television series, Julie’s Greenroom, which steps into the early childhood education space using melody, poetry and puppetry.

The Netflix series, developed in collaboration with Judy Rothman Rofe, with whom Andrews and Walton-Hamilton have worked previously, seems to consciously step into the Sesame Street space, complete with puppets from the Henson Company.

 

 

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Posted on February 13, 2017 / by admin in 2017, Julie's Green Room, netflix, News
Posted on June 10, 2016 / by admin in 2017, Julie's Green Room, netflix, News, Tv

GUEST STARS TO INCLUDE ALEC BALDWIN, SARA BAREILLES, TITUSS BURGESS, CAROL BURNETT, CHRIS COLFER, JOSH GROBAN, ELLIE KEMPER, AND IDINA MENZEL, AMONG OTHERS

Beverly Hills, Calif., June 2, 2016 – Netflix, the world’s leading Internet TV network, announced today that award-winning actress Julie Andrews will star in Julie’s Greenroom, a new preschool show from The Jim Henson Company that features an all-new puppet cast of kids learning about the performing arts. The series will be available exclusively to Netflix members globally in early 2017.

Andrews, who created the series with her daughter Emma Walton Hamilton and Judy Rothman-Rofė, will executive produce and star as Ms. Julie – the director of the Wellspring Center for the Performing Arts in which she teaches performing arts workshops in the theatre and its “Greenroom.”

Ms. Julie and her devoted assistant Gus (Giullian Yao Gioiello) bring the performing arts to a new generation of kids known as the “Greenies,” played by original puppet characters built by the renowned Jim Henson’s Creature Shop. The Greenies are a diverse group of kids who are mesmerized by all that the arts and creativity has to offer. Over the course of the season, with Ms. Julie’s guidance and inspiration from the visiting guest artists, the kids create an entirely original new show, that is a mashup of all the performing arts including mime, music, dance, improv, circus arts, voice and more.

Most episodes will feature an original song and every episode will feature a guest star who engages the kids in a specific area of the performing arts. The incredible array of confirmed guest stars will include Alec Baldwin, Sara Bareilles, Joshua Bell, Tituss Burgess, Carol Burnett, Chris Colfer, Robert Fairchild, Josh Groban, David Hyde Pierce, Bill Erwin, Ellie Kemper, Idina Menzel, Tiler Peck, and Stomp.

Ms. Andrews commented that “this project represents the fulfilment of a long held dream to educate children about the wonder of the arts. I am thrilled to be partnering with my daughter and long time coauthor, Emma, to bring this show to life along with our co-creator, Judy Rothman-Rofė. We could not be more honored to be working with the extraordinary Jim Henson Company. We are equally delighted to be premiering as a Netflix original production.”

 

“It’s been an incredible treat to work with Julie on this project,” said Andy Yeatman, Director of Global Kids Content at Netflix. “This show is all about awakening children’s interest in the performing arts while introducing a new era of puppets to the viewers.”

“The best of the best have joined together to bring Julie’s Greenroom to Netflix,” said Lisa Henson, CEO of The Jim Henson Company. “Our award-winning director, Tony-nominated puppeteers, Broadway composer, and accomplished guest artists, led by the incomparable Julie Andrews, together will inspire kids to explore, appreciate and celebrate all forms of performing arts.”

Julie’s Greenroom began shooting this May in Long Island, New York. The thirteen 30-minute episodes will premiere globally on Netflix in early 2017. Julie’s Greenroom is a Netflix Original produced by The Jim Henson Company and is executive produced by Julie Andrews, Emma Walton Hamilton and Steve Sauer, and Lisa Henson and Halle Stanford for the The Jim Henson Company. Emmy Award® winning actor and writer Joey Mazzarino is co-producer and director, Tom Keniston is producer, and Emmy Award® winner Bill Sherman joins the series as composer.

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