Review by New York Times Review
As depicted in a memoir and a biography, Julie Andrews's life was not always sunny. JULIE ANDREWS'S memoir is full of crisp locutions like "poor unfortunate" and "banished to the scullery" and "trivet," a characteristically precise term that the dictionary defines as "an iron tripod placed over a fire for a cooking pot or kettle to stand on." It opens with a soppy poem she wrote about England, but what follows is a decisively unsoppy account of a typically dismal English childhood, complete with cramped lodgings and brutish relatives, which Andrews tells briskly and without self-pity. Trivets come into it because, as is so often the case with the theatrically wellto-do, Andrews has refashioned herself out of trivet-level origins. The story starts in Walton-on-Thames, a village in the south of England, where she grew up. Her great-grandmother was a servant, her great-grandfather a gardener, and both grandparents on her mother's side died of syphilis, the only response to which is: blimey, they didn't put that in the press release for "Mary Poppins." (The book's tone addresses precisely this kind of joke and seems to implore, with weary finality, Enough already.) Many celebrity memoirs overegg the rotten aspects of a childhood in order to flatter the achievements that follow it, but Andrews resists this. Her approach is restrained, and the quality of her prose such that you are reminded she is already an established children's author. Her maternal grandfather was a rogue who served time for going AWOL from the army and whose philandering effectively killed his wife, who died shortly after he did, when Andrews's mother was still a young woman. The portrait of Barbara Morris by her daughter is touching; she was a talented classical pianist who, despite her best efforts, eventually sank, like her father, into alcoholism. "My mother was terribly important to me, and I know how much I yearned for her in my youth," Andrews writes, "but I don't think I truly trusted her." Her father, Ted Wells, was a teacher, a kind, gentle man whom Andrews draws in loving contrast to her stepfather, Ted Andrews, a vaudevillian whose name she was made to adopt when her parents divorced and her mother married him. There are two major revelations in "Home." The first is that Ted Andrews's well-documented alcoholism and violence extended to creepier transgressions, which necessitated his stepdaughter putting a lock on her door after he twice, drunkenly, tried to get into bed with her. The second is something that before she came to write the book she hadn't even told her siblings: one evening when she was 14 and driving her inebriated mother back from a party, Barbara told her that her father was not, in fact, Ted Wells, but the man whose party they had just attended, with whom Julie remembered "feeling an electricity ... that I couldn't explain." Andrews's bluff delivery forestalls introspection; she lets these events speak for themselves. In light of them, her famous circumspection looks less like a stylistic than a moral choice. Tellingly, her strategy with Ted Andrews was to pretend he didn't exist. (She treated him like a "temporary guest" in the house.) After giving the matter a great deal of thought, she turned down her biological father's offer to get to know him and was offended when, during the height of her fame in "My Fair Lady," he turned up at an after-party: "I didn't like his attitude, and certainly didn't like him horning in on something that should have been my dad's province." To his credit, she says, he didn't persist beyond an annual Christmas card, and she later heard he had died. We never learn his name. The rest of the book is a jolly romp through an England that no longer exists, full of stout aunts and alcoholic uncles with nicknames like Hadge, the backdrop to Andrews's burgeoning fame in radio and music hall. After taking singing lessons, she joined her mother and stepfather's vaudeville act and by the age of 15 was so successful she was paying the mortgage on the family home. Her party piece was the polonaise from "Mignon," with its impossible top F, which she had been hitting since the age of 12 - she had a "youthful 'freak' voice." She was, she writes, "sensitive, scared, foolish" and "a complete wimp." She was also shy and terribly lonely. She did an early screen test for MGM, and the word came back: "She's not photogenic enough for film." There are occasional flashes of the piety that some later found so annoying. Andrews writes of how, as a teenager, she wished that her mother would buck up and try harder: "I longed for her to be as disciplined as I was trying to be. I felt the act could have been so much better if only she had cared to try." And when she gets going on how marvelous the royal family is, she sounds like an emissary for the English Tourist Board. But most of the book is painfully shrewd and written with real delicacy and pathos. Celebrity memoirs often get dramatically less interesting once their subjects become famous. After her breakthroughs on Broadway in "The Boy Friend" and "My Fair Lady," Andrews deftly ends things as she leaves Britain for Los Angeles to make "Mary Poppins," accompanied by her first husband, the set and costume designer Tony Walton, and their baby, Emma. To continue with the story you can skip to Page 118 of Richard Stirling's "Julie Andrews: An Intimate Biography," an extensive cut-and-paste job that suspends its reverential tone only with the author's panicked discovery that his subject may be close to finishing a rival book: "I pondered why she should be writing it at all if, as I surmised, she were to be so selective. She certainly did not need the money." Poor Richard! Except for a few unrevealing interviews, Stirling, an actor as well as a writer, is reliant on pre-existing material. There is a rehash of some entertaining run-ins on the set of "Hawaii" between Andrews and Richard Harris, who called her "condescending and mean," and there is the novelist Penelope Mortimer's damning summation: "Miss Andrews depresses me. ... If her vowel sounds weren't quite so pure, and her expression was less totally confident, I might be able to feel a twinge of sympathy for her." It is interesting to reread the critics' original responses to her films. Pauline Kael thought "The Sound of Music" would probably be "the single most repressive influence on artistic freedom in movies for the next few years." The rest is a slog through press coverage, mainly of her second marriage, to Blake Edwards, and her five children. Bizarre emphasis is put on the importance of her zodiac sign, and there are lots of breathy lines like "Julie Andrews, the singing nun, would sing no more." There are also unintentionally funny observations like "The retroussé nose still surprises," which raises the question: when were you last surprised by Julie Andrews's nose? Neither book tells the whole story, but Andrews's, at least, is as revealing for what it doesn't say as for what it does. Andrews did an early screen test for MGM, and the word came back: 'She's not photogenic enough for film.' Emma Brockes writes for The Guardian and is the author of "What Would Barbra Do? How Musicals Changed My Life."
Copyright (c) The New York Times Company [October 27, 2009]
Review by Booklist Review
Famous singer and actress Andrews details her turbulent and often lonely childhood, unusual upbringing, and the difficult journey to her ultimate success as a star of stage and screen. In an engaging, chatty tone, she describes her early years, from the air-raids, bombings, and rationing of World War II, to her parents' ugly divorce and her new life in London featuring a creepy stepfather and a mother descending into alcoholism. It was actually Andrews' new stepfather who, despite his shadiness, encouraged her to pursue singing and a life in the theater. After years of grueling singing and dancing lessons, she began performing in London dramatic productions, and by the time she was a teenager, she was financially supporting her entire family. Andrews clearly and straightforwardly details the events and sometimes ugly occurrences she encountered along the way. It was a well-regarded London performance that eventually led to her first role on Broadway in The Boyfriend, which then led to her breakout roles in My Fair Lady and, soon after, Camelot. Packed with anecdotes about other famous actors, including Rex Harrison and Richard Burton, Andrews' book will appeal to her many fans.--Hughes, Kathleen Copyright 2008 Booklist
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Andrews, who has written several children's books (The Great American Mousical; Mandy), both solo and with her daughter, now dances in a different direction with this delightful remembrance of her own childhood and engrossing prelude to her cinematic career. Spanning events from her 1935 birth to the early 1960s, she covers her rise to fame and ends with Walt Disney casting her in Mary Poppins (1963). Setting the stage with a family tree backdrop, she balances the sad struggles of relatives and hard drinkers with mirthful family tales and youthful vocal lessons amid rationing and the London Blitz: "My mother pulled back the blackout curtains and gasped-for there, snuggly settled in the concrete square of the courtyard, was the incendiary bomb." A BBC show led to a London musical at age 12: "My song literally stopped the show. People rose to their feet and would not stop clapping." Her mother's revelation of her true father left her reeling when she was 15, but she continued touring, did weekly BBC broadcasts and was Broadway-bound by 1954 to do The Boyfriend. The heart of her book documents the rehearsals, tryouts and smash 1956 opening of My Fair Lady. Readers will rejoice, since Andrews is an accomplished writer who holds back nothing while adding a patina of poetry to the antics and anecdotes throughout this memoir of bittersweet backstage encounters and theatrical triumphs. (Apr. 1) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review
Andrews's memoir looks to be the first in a series chronicling this much-loved star's life, as it spans only her early years through her stage success in Camelot (1960). Her story begins in 1935 England, when she was born to an aspiring vaudevillian mother and a well-liked father who was a teacher. Her parents divorced, and her mother married Canadian tenor Ken Andrews; together, they performed in music halls across England. When Julie's voice was "discovered," she was made part of the act and began her professional career at 12, becoming the youngest solo performer at a Royal Command Performance. As her fame grew, she landed a role in Broadway's The Boyfriend, and at age 18, her successful musical comedy career began. Celebrity-memoir-lovers will enjoy her personal anecdotes and her humor, but this is more than the usual tell-all. Andrews paints a detailed and evocative picture of postwar England and the life of a child star. A best-selling children's author (The Great American Mousical), she has never told her own story before. A highly recommended, welcome addition to the genre.-Rosellen Brewer, Sno-Isle Libs., Marysville, WA (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.