Shirley MacLaine; Audrey Hepburn as Holly Golightly in ‘Breakfast at Tiffany’s’.Photo:Getty Images; Courtesy Everett Collection
Getty Images; Courtesy Everett Collection
Certain roles are inseparable from the actors who portrayed them.
Who can imagine, for instance, anyone butMeryl Streepas the title character inThe Devil Wears Prada? And wouldSex and the City’s Carrie Bradshaw have beenSex and the City’s Carrie Bradshaw with any actress other than Emmy winnerSarah Jessica Parkerplaying her?
Shirley MacLaine in 2023.Steven Simione/Getty
Steven Simione/Getty
It could have happened, MacLaine, 90, reveals in her new bookThe Wall of Life: Pictures and Stories from This Marvelous Lifetime. The Holly Golightly role was initially offered to her, she says; of course, she turned it down. The rest is cinematic history.
“I didn’t want to have to worry about my weight to be able to wear all those outfits and do all those fittings,” she writes in the book, adding that she also “didn’t think it was a very good script.”
Although she writes that she “doesn’t really regret” her decision, in hindsight, she tells PEOPLE, it’s the one film she didn’t do that she wishes she had done. Too bad about those pesky fittings!
Penguin Random House/ Crown Publishing
“Well, listen, I’m a well-known disliker of fittings,” she explains in an exclusive interview. “I don’t like fittings, and I knew that would take a lot of fittings.” Also, she adds, “I wasn’t sure about the script because it was so much about how I would look, therefore, about how many fittings. That’s really it. I couldn’t stand the idea.”
“I wish I’d had the patience for those wardrobe fittings.”
So what did she think of the movie? “I never saw it,” she says. “I haven’t seen it. I don’t know because I still think it’s about wardrobe.”
Hepburn would go on to score an Oscar nomination forBreakfast at Tiffany’s. And ironically enough, she and MacLaine would costar in MacLaine’s follow-up toThe Apartmentand Hepburn’s very next film, 1961’sThe Children’s Hour. In the book, MacLaine says she “adored” working with Hepburn.
Audrey Hepburn (left) and Shirley MacLaine in 1961’s ‘The Children’s Hour’.Courtesy Everett Collection
Courtesy Everett Collection
“She taught me a little about dressing; I taught her a little about cussing,” she writes, adding that they remained friends for years.
At the time of its release,The Children’s Hour, based on Lillian Hellman’s lesbian-themed 1934 play, was a risky move for two big stars.
“No question about it,” MacLaine says. “But Audrey and I both grew up in the ballet world, so we had no problems with how to accept that. She was a dancer, too. Not as professional as I was, she gave it up earlier, I think. But of course, we grew up in a gay world, and so we just wanted to do our part in championing it.”
source: people.com