Tuesday, June 23, 2015

ECONOMY COMPARISON OF THE USA, CHINA AND RUSSIA

 

 

 

 

 

The individual states in America (pictured) have economic activity that rivals that of entire countries. Above, each state is labelled with a country that has a similar GDP

 

   
   

Map of US shows how individual states have as much economic power as several major countries

  • California would be 8th largest economy in the world at more than $2.3trillion, about the size of Brazil
  • Texas, which grew by more than 5 per cent in 2014 , is second biggest, roughly on par with Canada at $1.6trillion
  • Even Mississippi, the poorest state by per capita GDP, has economy the same size as Slovakia at $104billion

A map comparing the gross domestic products US states to other countries shows the massive scale of the country's economy.

The largest US states are seen rivaling global economic players that rank in the International Monetary Fund's top 10.

However, even small and poor American states have similar 2014 GDPs, or the values of all the goods and serviced produced during last year, to entire nations.

The individual states in America (pictured) have economic activity that rivals that of entire countries. Above, each state is labelled with a country that has a similar GDP

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The individual states in America (pictured) have economic activity that rivals that of entire countries. Above, each state is labelled with a country that has a similar GDP

The new map, created by the conservative American Enterprise Institute think tank, received a new version after data was released by the Department of Commerce's Bureau of Economic Analysis.

California continued to be the most powerful economic state in the country, with a GDP of $2.3trillion that roughly rivaled Brazil's and would be the eighth largest economy in the world.

The state's 38.8million people churned out more money than countries such as India ($2.04trillion GDP), which has a population of more than 1.2billion, according to the AEI.

Other powerhouse states such as New York and Florida matched EU countries Spain and the Netherlands, respectively.

 

California has a diverse economy that would be the eighth largest in the world on its own. Above, a tractor at a vegetable field in the Edna Valley The state has a GDP roughly the same size as Brazil's. Above, Christ the Redeemer stands above Rio de Janeiro

California, (left) which has a diverse economy that would be the eighth largest in the world on its own, has a GDP roughly the same size as Brazil's

New data released by the Bureau of Economic Analysis shows that area in the west of the United States experienced strong growth in 2014

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New data released by the Bureau of Economic Analysis shows that area in the west of the United States experienced strong growth in 2014

FACT BOX TITLE

 

US State GDP (in millions)

California $2,311,616

Texas $1,648,036

New York $1,404,518

Florida $839,944

Illinois $745,875

Pennsylvania $662,890

Ohio $583,261

New Jersey $549,099

North Carolina $483,126

Georgia $476,483

Virginia $463,613

Massachusetts $459,937

Michigan $451,516

Washington $427,052

Maryland $348,631

Indiana $317,840 

Minnesota $316,204

Colorado $306,663

Tennessee $300,604

Wisconsin $292,891

Missouri $284,462

Arizona $284,156

Connecticut $253,036

Louisiana $251,397

Oregon $215,677

Alabama $199,440

South Carolina $190,304

Kentucky $188,602

Oklahoma $183,501

Iowa $170,613

Kansas $147,075

Utah $141,410

Nevada $132,064

Arkansas $121,395

District of Columbia

Nebraska $112,159

Mississippi $104,851

New Mexico $92,959

Hawaii $77,389

West Virginia $75,337

New Hampshire $71,552

Idaho $63,952

Delaware $62,756

Alaska $57,080

Maine $55,838

North Dakota $55,136

Rhode Island $54,960

South Dakota $45,867

Montana $44,269

Wyoming $44,190

Vermont $29,613

Country GDP (in millions)

Brazil $2,353,025

Canada $1,788,717 

Spain $1,406,855 

Netherlands $866,354 

Saudi Arabia $752,459 

Switzerland $712,050 

Nigeria $573,652 

Poland $546,644 

Taiwan $529,550

Norway $500,244 

Austria $437,123 

Iran $404,132 

UAE $401,647 

Colombia $384,901 

South Africa $350,082 

Malaysia $326,933 

Singapore $308,051 

Israel $303,771 

Egypt $286,435 

Philippines $284,927 

Finland $271,165 

Chile $257,968 

Pakistan $250,136 

Ireland $246,438 

Portugal $230,012 

Peru $202,948 

Romania $199,950 

New Zealand $198,118 

Vietnam $186,049 

Bangladesh $185,415 

Kuwait $172,350 

Hungary $137,104 

Ukraine $130,660 

Angola $128,564 

Morocco $109,201 

Ecuador $100,755 

Slovakia $99,971 

Oman $77,755 

Belarus $76,139 

Sri Lanka $74,588 

Syria $71,998 

Uzbekistan $62,619 

Kenya $60,770 

Croatia $57,159 

Bulgaria $55,837 

Uruguay $55,143 

Ethiopia $52,335 

Tanzania $47,932 

Panama $43,784 

Yemen $43,229 

Paraguay $29,704

 

Spain has roughly the same GDP as the state of New York at around $1.4trillion. Above, beachgoers in Sanlucar de Barrameda Though economic engines such as New York City (pictured, New York Stock Exchange) rival major countries, even the smallest state, Vermont, has a GDP as big as Paraguay's

 

The entire country of Spain (left) has roughly the same GDP as the state of New York (right) at around $1.4trillion

North Dakota, saw the highest per cent change in GDP with 6.3 per cent growth, largely due to increasing amounts of shale oil activity in the Bakken formation.

The boom helped it jump from about the size of Uzbekistan to about the size of Uruguay based on IMF World Economic Outlook data.

Texas, the US's second largest economy, also saw strong growth at 5.2 per cent. The growth helped it move from about the size of Australia last year to a little smaller than Canada's economy this year at $1.6trillion.

However, even Vermont, which had the smallest economy at $29billion, came just short of Paraguay's GDP.

Mississippi, which is the poorest American state at $31,551 GDP per capita, still has as large an economy as Eastern Europe's Slovakia despite its economy shrinking 1.3 per cent in 2014.

The US produced 22.4 per cent of the world's GDP in 2014, according to AEI economist Mark Perry. Bureau of Economic Analysis officials said that it grew 2.2 per cent in 2014.

At a little less than $18trillion it has the largest economy, though China's is thought to be bigger when compared using purchasing power parity.

 

 

 

 

China will overtake America to become world's biggest economy within a decade

  • IHS report says America will be knocked off its economic perch in 2014
  • Chinese GDP is growing rapidly thanks to a surge in consumer spending
  • Nominal GDP predicted to reach $28.3trillion, up from $10trillion
  • USA's current GDP is $17.4trillion, and is expected to be $27.4trillion in 2024
  • Chinese consumer spending expected to triple over next decade
  • Using different method of measuring, China could surpass USA this year
  • But analysts have warned structural reform is needed for them to cope

China will overtake America to become the world's biggest economy in just 10 years, according to a report.

The U.S. has been the world's economic leader for more than a century, but now, a huge rise in consumer spending in China is expected to see it passed in 2024.

Chinese consumer spending is predicted to triple over the next decade, according to an IHS report - increasing from $3.5trillion to $10.5trillion.

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Chinese nominal GDP is predicted to reach $28.3trillion in 2024 thanks to increased consumer spending

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Chinese nominal GDP is predicted to reach $28.3trillion in 2024 thanks to increased consumer spending

This would boost their GDP to $28.3trillion, surpassing the USA's expected $27.4trillion - using today's prices.

U.S. GDP is currently still significantly higher than China's - $17.4trillion compared with $10trillion.

But with experts predicting China's consumer spending to grow at an average rate of 7.7 per cent per year, things look set to change.

Using the same method of measuring as IHS, China was not expected to surpass America until 2028, a Centre for Economics and Business Research report said.

Rajiv Biswas, IHS's chief Asia economist, said: 'China's economy is expected to re-balance towards more rapid growth in consumption, which will help the structure of the domestic economy as well as growth for the Asia Pacific (APAC) as a region.

'China's economy will play an even bigger role as a key driver of global trade and investment flows.'

If IHS's predictions are correct, China will hold one-fifth of the world's GDP by 2025 - up from 12 per cent today.

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China unveils colossal new £500 million duty-free mall

This surge in Chinese consumer spending will also help other South East Asian countries, as they will benefit from increased trade.

While the IHS study says China will take 10 years to overtake the U.S. economy, another method of measuring suggests it may actually happen this year.

The IHS report is based on nominal GDP, which does not accurately reflect the cost of living, whereas the purchasing power parity method (PPP) measures the relative value of different currencies.

Although it was not expected to overtake America until 2019 under PPP measurements, China may actually manage it in 2014, according to a World Bank backed report, which measured China's economy to be 87 per cent of the size of America's in 2011.

Despite this all sounding like good news for the Chinese, experts have warned that they need structural reform to make this level of growth more sustainable in the long run.

The International monetary Fund (IMF) has advised China to target a safer growth rate of seven per cent in 2015, as without structural reform, growth could slow down dramatically, to as low as 2.5 per cent by 2030.

Elsewhere in Asia, the IHS report also expects India's consumer market to grow quickly, and overtake Japan by 2023.

By then, the Chinese consumer market is predicted to be three times larger than that of their Japanese neighbours.

 

For more than a decade oil income and consumer spending have delivered growth to Vladimir Putin’s Russia. Not any more

 

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  • MALINA, a trendy restaurant in a city south of Moscow, was empty on a recent Thursday evening. “A crisis,” the manager explained nervously. Some meat and fish dishes were missing. “Sanctions,” he added with a sigh. The signs of a country in the economic doldrums are visible in Moscow, too. Tour operators are going out of business; shops and small businesses are up for sale; LED displays outside bureaux de change send spirits sinking.

    Russia’s economy is teetering on the verge of recession. The central bank says it expects the next two years to bring no growth. Inflation is on the rise. The rouble has lost 30% of its value since the start of the year, and with it the faith of the country’s businessmen. Banks have been cut off from Western capital markets, and the price of oil—Russia’s most important export commodity—has fallen hard. Consumption, the main driver of growth in the previous decade, is slumping. Money and people are leaving the country.

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    This is not the mid-1980s, when a collapse in the oil price paved the way for perestroika and the eventual collapse of the Soviet Union. Nor is it 1998, when the country defaulted on its debts. While the overall mood is clearly depressed, it is a long way from panic. Russia’s total foreign debt is just 35% of GDP; it has a private sector which can be surprisingly agile and adaptable and is contributing some growth by substituting things made at home for imported goods; most importantly, it has a floating exchange rate that mitigates some of the oil-price shock.

    No longer affordable

    But the oil-backed consumption-led economy which has provided nearly 15 years of growth (it took a stumble in 2008-09, during the global financial crisis) has hit the buffers. It was already slowing before the oil price began to fall and adventurism in Ukraine was met by Western sanctions. Indeed some see the Ukrainian conflict as a response to the country’s economic woes—an attempt to shore up through patriotic fervour the support that president Vladimir Putin can no longer buy by boosting living standards.

    In 2007, when oil was $72 a barrel, the economy managed to grow at 8.5%; in 2012 oil at $111 a barrel bought growth of just 3.4%. Between 2010 and 2013, when oil prices were high, the country’s net outflow of capital was $232 billion—20 times what it was between 2004 and 2008. Russian economists are now debating how long before the economy faces collapse. Most think it can totter on for two years or so. But there is a real chance things could get a lot worse a lot sooner.

    The depreciation of the rouble, which closely tracks the oil price, has helped Russia cushion its budget as that price has slumped (see chart). When the oil price falls, so does the rouble; thus in rouble terms the amount of money the oil brings in stays roughly the same. But it cannot buy as much. Russia imports a great deal—the total value of imported goods, $45 billion in 2000, was $341 billion in 2013—and so a devalued rouble quickly stokes inflation. It is predicted to reach 9% by the end of this year; for food the rate is higher still. If it is to compensate the population for this loss in its spending power, the government will have to run a bigger deficit. If it does not it will face discontent.

    A weak rouble also makes servicing foreign debt more expensive. Russia’s sovereign debt is just $57 billion, but its corporate debt is ten times as high. Some of it has been racked up by state corporations and national energy companies, which gives it a quasi-sovereign status. And by the end of 2015 Russian firms will have to repay about $130 billion of foreign debt.

    Mr Putin, who came to power in the wake of the 1998 default, knows the value of money and believes enough of it solves everything. He started off strongly averse to low reserves and high debt, and saw that the country’s reserves built up accordingly. In the run-up to the global financial crisis Russia had reserves of $570 billion—almost a third of GDP. This served the country well after the crisis hit; the government spent $220 billion refinancing banks and defending the rouble.

    In 2011, though, despite the high oil price, Russia’s reserves stopped increasing. Money was spent instead on raising salaries and pensions and financing the armed forces. The increase in military spending, up 30% since 2008, was the main reason Alexei Kudrin, Russia’s prudent finance minister, chose to resign in 2011.

    At the same time Russian firms went on a borrowing spree. They have increased their foreign-currency debt by some $170 billion in the past two years. Yevgeny Gavrilenkov, the chief economist at Sberbank CIB, the largest state bank, says most of this money settled offshore; only a very small part was invested in the Russian economy. Kirill Rogov of the Gaidar Institute for Economic Policy points to one of the reasons why. When a company can be swallowed by the state at any time, more debt will make it less appetising prey. This growing debt meant, Mr Rogov notes, that instead of preparing itself for a crisis, Russia has prepared a crisis for itself.

    This does not mean that Russia is anywhere close to a sovereign default like that of 1998. Then government debt was 50% of GDP and reserves just 5% of GDP. Today Russia is still running a current-account surplus of about $50 billion because it is importing less. Mr Putin’s restrictions on food imports, presented as tit-for-tat counter-sanctions, are more a way of preserving currency reserves and stimulating farms; Russia imports half its food. Food production is now growing at between 6% and 10%, albeit from a very low base. Other imports, such as medicines, are not so quickly replaced; as in Soviet days, petrodollars keep the shelves stocked.

    The drop in oil prices in 2008-09 was met with a 40% increase in government spending. With reserves lower, and with the government needing to either keep those reserves available for bail-outs or to risk some big companies and banks going bust, that is not an option this time. Instead the country faces a period of stagflation. Renewed growth will require new investment and, most crucially, reform. What Russia needs most is what Mr Putin has done most to deny it: more competition.

    A game of favourites

    At a recent conference German Gref, the head of Sberbank, remarked that “[Soviet leaders] didn’t respect the laws of economic development. Even more, they didn’t know them, and in the end this caught up with them. It is very important for us to learn from our own history.”

    Even though his state is as reliant on oil money as the Soviet Union was, Mr Putin thinks he has done some of that learning. But as someone who believes that the state must keep tabs on everything, including the free market, he remains mistrustful of open competition. While Russia has a nominally free-market economy, it is one highly skewed by the misallocation of capital and resources to firms run by cronies.

    The Kremlin distributes oil rent via state banks to firms and projects which it selects on the basis of their political importance and their pro-Putin stance. Most of the contractors for the Sochi Olympics, which cost Russia a staggering $50 billion, were firms run by Mr Putin’s friends; most of the money took the form of credit from state banks. A number of these loans are unlikely to be paid back. Indeed, such loans are one of the reasons why the central bank has been forced to triple its provision of liquidity to the banks since the middle of last year.

    Most of this money provided by the central bank, says Mr Gavrilenkov, ended up on the foreign-exchange market, putting pressure on the rouble. Since the central bank was known to intervene regularly to keep the rouble within a currency corridor, the banks could place one-way bets on the devaluation of the rouble. As a result the Russian financial sector expanded by 11.5% in 2013, although GDP grew by only 1.3%. In the past few weeks the central bank said it will intervene in an ad hoc way with as much money as it sees fit. This makes speculation a lot riskier. The central bank said it would also curb the refinancing of the banks. If it can stick to this in the face of lobbying pressure from state firms and banks demanding cheap liquidity and fresh equity, the currency could stabilise.

    That pressure, however, will be immense, particularly if the economy starts to shrink. Rosneft, Russia’s national oil company, run by Igor Sechin, Mr Putin’s close confidant, is already asking the government for money, in part to help it repay $30 billion of debt which it took on when buying a successful private company, TNK-BP. “We can easily utilise 1.5 trillion-2 trillion roubles ($32 billion-$43 billion) from the National Wealth Fund,” Mr Sechin said recently. If so, what is to stop the next handout?

    Pumping money into Rosneft would be exactly the sort of misallocation that underlies the economy’s weakness. The energy sector, which accounts for 20% of GDP, grew by a meagre 1% on average over the past decade. The industry has not been cutting costs or developing new production; it has been busy being nationalised instead, and offers textbook examples of the woes of state-owned enterprises (see article) While the state still had money, it could afford to buy out private owners, as it did in the case of TNK-BP. Now it simply wrestles oil firms away from their owners, as it is doing in the case of Bashneft, a medium-sized but fast-growing oil firm which is being expropriated from Vladimir Yevtushenkov, a billionaire who is under house arrest. Political loyalty—and Mr Yevtushenkov was certainly loyal—is no protection against raiding.

    During the fat years, Mr Putin had an easy job satisfying all. Now he will face a tough decision whether to support the inefficient energy sector and the military-industrial complex with public money or rely on the more dynamic flexible small and medium-sized companies to pull Russia out of the crisis. There have been reports that Mr Putin plans to give a speech on economic liberalisation to parliament next month. But, if he runs true to form, when faced with a crisis he will stick with the state sector run by his friends rather than ceding control and trusting private firms which will demand reforms and, in the end, political freedoms.

    The echo of 1913

    The state of the Russian economy will affect Russia’s actions beyond its borders. In 2013 the Russian people were better off than at any previous point in history. Their priorities, says Mikhail Dmitriev, the head of New Economic Growth, a think-tank, switched from economic survival to imperial resurgence. Mr Dmitriev compares the moment to 1913—the Russian economy’s last successful year before the first world war and the Bolshevik revolution. Then, too, there was patriotic euphoria; it did not survive the onset of losses in the war.

    While people still support Mr Putin and Russia’s annexation of Crimea, they are starting to calculate the costs. Mr Dmitriev, who accurately predicted street protests in Moscow in 2011, argues that economic dissatisfaction is growing, although support for Mr Putin remains at a record high. “People’s priorities are switching back to basic survival needs,” he says: “salaries, social benefits, jobs.”

    Protests driven by economic and also social issues have already started. Even in Moscow where the mood for protest is low, teachers and doctors have come out onto the streets to protest against pay cuts and restructuring. More protests are planned before the end of the month. Opinion polls show that most people neither support a real war in Ukraine nor are prepared for their children to fight in it. Alexei Tsulik, a small-time farmer who is counting on his 22-year-old only son for help, speaks for an increasing number when he says: “It is none of our business. We have plenty to do here on the farm.”

     

     

     

     

    Monday, June 22, 2015

    A TRIBUTE TO AUDREY HEPBURN

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Icon: Audrey Hepburn lived in fear of being kidnapped and taken to a military brothel as so many other girls had been

    Memory: Publicity stills of Paris When It Sizzles showed Audrey Hepburn and William Holden together and hinted at the passion between them

     
       

    How Audrey Hepburn weighed only 88 pounds, suffered from jaundice and anemia, survived on boiled grass and tulip bulbs and had her dream of becoming a ballerina crushed by the Nazi occupation of the Netherlands

    • Surviving the German occupation, at 16 Audrey suffered from asthma, jaundice, acute anemia and edema, new book by her son reveals
    • 'We ate nettles and ... tried to boil grass – in addition to tulips,' she said
    • Audrey's anemia left her with dark circles under her eyes
    • She thought her feet too long, her ears and nose too large
    • She was crazy about chocolate, believing it would 'banish sadness'
    • She also had a passion for pasta and ice cream, 'which she ate with a greediness worthy of a mischievous little scamp' but never gained weight
    • Her idea of heaven was being with boyfriend Robert Wolders, her two sons at home and the dogs, a good movie, a wonderful meal, and great television

    Audrey Hepburn, who captivated the world with her riveting performances, international goodwill work and unique beauty, never escaped the effect the Nazi occupation of Arnhem in the Netherlands in 1944-45 had on her life.

    Nazi occupiers starved more than four million people and Audrey escaped death only by a 'hairbreadth' and lost everything that mattered to a young girl: her home, her father vanished, relatives were shot or deported, and her own life was always at risk with the Allied bombing raids.

    'We ate nettles and everyone tried to boil grass – in addition to tulips – but I really couldn't stand it,' she said.

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    Tiny dancer: Audrey Hepburn's dream of becoming a ballerina was thwarted by the Nazi occupation of Arnhem in the Netherlands. The World War II interrupted Audrey's private schooling in London and her dreams of being a classical ballerina. It put her five years behind the training of other girls who had better food and shelter during the War, her son writes in his new book

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    Tiny dancer: Audrey Hepburn's dream of becoming a ballerina was thwarted by the Nazi occupation of Arnhem in the Netherlands. The World War II interrupted Audrey's private schooling in London and her dreams of being a classical ballerina. It put her five years behind the training of other girls who had better food and shelter during the War, her son writes in his new book

    Fifteen-year-old Audrey Hepburn-Ruston had been hovering close to death for months, sick with jaundice, her legs and feet swollen from oedema caused by malnutrition, so weak with hunger that she could barely climb the stairs in her grandfather’s home, just outside Arnhem.

    Beautiful: During the Second World War Audrey Hepburn-Ruston had been hovering close to death for months and was so weak with hunger she could barely climb the stairs

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    Beautiful: During the Second World War Audrey Hepburn-Ruston had been hovering close to death for months and was so weak with hunger she could barely climb the stairs

    Audrey’s mother was a Dutch aristocrat, but her father was English and they had been living in Britain before the war.

    Following her parents’ divorce, when war began Audrey’s mother took her back to Holland, believing they would be safer as it was neutral. But the Germans invaded in 1940 and the young Audrey watched her Jewish neighbours being herded into trucks, men into one truck, women into another, babies into another.

    ‘We did not yet know that they were going to their death,’ she would remember years later.

    She lived in fear of being kidnapped and taken to a military brothel as so many other girls had been. She was once picked up by the Germans to work on their kitchens but managed to escape.
    She began working for the Resistance, carrying messages in her shoes.

    But in April 1945 as the fighting came closer, she and her family took refuge in the cellar as the Germans and Allies fought from house to house. ‘Once in a while, you’d go up and see how much of your house was left, and then you’d go back under again,’ she recalled.

    Icon: Audrey Hepburn lived in fear of being kidnapped and taken to a military brothel as so many other girls had been

    Icon: Audrey Hepburn lived in fear of being kidnapped and taken to a military brothel as so many other girls had been

    Then on the morning of April 29, the shelling and shooting stopped. Audrey heard voices and singing, and smelt English cigarettes. They crept upstairs and opened the front door to find the house surrounded by English soldiers all aiming their guns at them.

    ‘I screamed with happiness, seeing all these cocky figures with dirty bright faces and shouted something in English … a cheer went up that they’d liberated an English girl.’

    At the war’s end, she returned to London and began training as a ballet dancer, but her slight physique meant that she would never reach the top.

    She became a chorus girl then had a series of small parts in British films before being picked for the lead role in the play Gigi on Broadway aged 22, which in turn launched her Hollywood career.

    In the week she was liberated by British troops in Holland, far away to the east, BBC journalist Richard Dimbleby — father of David and Jonathan — was reporting from the liberated concentration camp Belsen on the living skeletons he encountered there.

    Pin thin: Luca Dotti says his mother had a healthy appetite but never put on weight.  She came away from those early years with a passion for good food, family, home and garden – as well as being burdened with delicate health

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    Pin thin: Luca Dotti says his mother had a healthy appetite but never put on weight.  She came away from those early years with a passion for good food, family, home and garden – as well as being burdened with delicate health

    Her diet consisted mostly of endive, a leafy, crisp green vegetable, digging up and eating tulip bulbs and drinking enough water to feel full.

    Surviving the German occupation, at 16 she weighed 88 pounds and suffered from asthma, jaundice, acute anemia and a serious form of edema.

    But she survived – unlike 22,000 others who died during the Dutch famine when the Nazis confiscated food and fuel for themselves. The Dutch were left to die from starvation and freeze to death.

    'Mum carried the war with her for her entire life,' writes her son Luca Dotti, in a loving tribute to his mother that he calls a 'kitchen table biography', including recipes of her favorite dishes in Audrey at Home, Memories of My Mother's Kitchen, which is published by Harper Design.

    The Second World War interrupted 5'6' Audrey's private schooling in London and her dreams of being a classical ballerina. It put her five years behind the training of other girls living in London who had better food and shelter during the War. Her parents were afraid of the bombing in London and made her return to The Netherlands.

    Disappointed that she wouldn't be on stage as a dancer, she applied what she learned from her rigorous dance training to her career as an actress.

    But behind the movie star persona was a woman who worked hard to get back what she had lost: home, family and the security of a kitchen.

    She came away from those early years with a passion for good food, family, home and garden – as well as being burdened with delicate health. 

    Audrey Hepburn's life: Her greatest achievements (related)

    Mr. Famous: Audrey adored her dogs and loved relaxing with her first beloved Yorkshire terrier Mr. Famous, at the home of one of her best friends in Los Angeles. Mr. Famous appeared with her in a scene in Funny Face and started a lap-dog trend among celebrities when she carried him everywhere

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    Mr. Famous: Audrey adored her dogs and loved relaxing with her first beloved Yorkshire terrier Mr. Famous, at the home of one of her best friends in Los Angeles. Mr. Famous appeared with her in a scene in Funny Face and started a lap-dog trend among celebrities when she carried him everywhere

    Sadness: Audrey as a teenager with her mother, Dutch baroness Ella Van Heemstra in 1946, Note the dark circles under Audrey's eyes

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    Sadness: Audrey as a teenager with her mother, Dutch baroness Ella Van Heemstra in 1946, Note the dark circles under Audrey's eyes

    Audrey's anemia left her with dark circles under her eyes that fostered one of many complexes throughout her life including viewing her feet as being too long, and her ears and nose as too large.

    To regain strength after the war, she consumed a lot of spinach, muesli, liver and of course, chocolate. The war also left her with food addictions.

    She was crazy about chocolate believing that it helped to 'banish sadness'.

    When she was given a box of chocolates as a young girl, 'I used to eat them all without stopping until every last one was gone', she confessed.

    'Now if I get a box of good chocolates, it will last a while, maybe for two hours.

    Hearing her parents argue, she ate 'fingernails, bread or chocolate'.

    At the end of the German occupation, a Dutch soldier gave her seven chocolate bars she believed helped her through those final days of hunger.

    Chocolate was always within arm's reach in a chest of drawers in her living room and a little evening chocolate became a habit throughout her life as well as chocolate cake with whipped cream baked in her kitchen that she made herself.

    Pasta was another serious food addiction – 'She couldn't do without pasta', Luca writes.

    No matter how much she ate, she never gained weight and did not limited herself to small portions but 'she would help herself to second servings of plates overflowing with pasta. This was how she often ended a meal…' where in many Italian families pasta is the first course.

    After returning home from traveling, 'a plate of spaghetti al pomodoro was always waiting for her'.

    She even traveled with pasta, olive oil and Parmigiano-Reggiano cheese in her suitcase.

    Hepburn's first marriage to actor Mel Ferrer (left) lasted almost fifteen years. In 1968 she met  Italian psychiatrist Andrea Dotti (right) and within a year they were married. The couple had one son, Luca in 1969, before divorcing thirteen years later

    Audrey Hepburn and the man she described as the love of her life, actor Robert Wolders. They were together until her death in 1993

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    Audrey Hepburn and the man she described as the love of her life, actor Robert Wolders. They were together until her death in 1993

    Along with her profound love for pasta and chocolate, 'she had an excessive passion for ice cream, which she ate with a greediness worthy of a mischievous little scamp'.

    Vanilla ice cream sweetened with a variety of condiments was another favorite.

    Wine and a good Scotch were on her list of vices.

    Audrey smoked as a young girl and developed a nicotine habit that continued all her life.

    At the end of the war and the liberation by the Allied troops, the smell of British gas and British cigarettes represented freedom to the young girl.

    'When I ran out to welcome the soldiers, I inhaled their petrol [gas] fumes as if it were a priceless perfume and I demanded a cigarette, even though it made me choke.'

    British cigarettes became her first choice all her life. First an actress, she began acting in minor film roles in London in 1951. Major roles followed from Hollywood movie studios.

    Hepburn's first marriage to actor Mel Ferrer in 1954 lasted almost fifteen years during which she had two miscarriages, one occurring after falling from a horse and breaking her spine in four places on the Mexican set of The Unforgiven in 1959.

    Hepburn had to take a break from filmmaking and gave birth to the couple's only child, Sean, in 1960. She had two more miscarriages before they divorced in 1968.

    That same year she met the Italian psychiatrist Andrea Dotti and within a year they were married. The couple had one son, Luca in 1969, before divorcing thirteen years later.

    Her next love was Dutch actor Robert Wolders, the widower of screen star Merle Oberon. Hepburn said those years with Wolder were the happiest years of her life.

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    Luca Dotti writes about his mother's passion for pasta, chocolate and ice cream as well as his fondest memories of the Holywood legend in his new book

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    Luca Dotti writes about his mother's passion for pasta, chocolate and ice cream as well as his fondest memories of the Holywood legend in his new book

    'It's going to sound like a thumping bore, but my idea of heaven is Robert and my two sons at home – I hate separations – and the dogs, a good movie, a wonderful meal, and great television all coming together. I am really blissful when that happens. My goal was not to have huge luxuries. As a child, I wanted a house with a garden, which I have today. This is what I dreamed of,' she told Larry King on October 21, 1991.

    'She was happiest not wearing makeup and at home with the dogs and the flowers and giggling away or going to the movies, not being a movie star at all, not being this idol for millions of people all over the world', stated her close friend in Hollywood, Doris Brynner.

    Hepburn spent the last third of her life as a UNICEF goodwill ambassador traveling the world on humanitarian missions.

    She was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom by George H.W. Bush in December 1962.

    Three months earlier, in September 1992, she checked into Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles suffering from abdominal pains. A laparoscopy revealed metastasized abdominal cancer that had spread from her appendix. 

    Two surgeries could not remove it and she returned to her Swiss chalet for her last Christmas. She succumbed at age sixty-three to the rare appendiceal cancer on 20 January 1993 in her sleep.

    Her final days were spent at La Paisible in Switzerland – the house in the country with a garden and fruit trees that she had always dreamed of owning.

     

     

    Aubrey Hepburn Preview

    A new photo book sheds light on the life of Audrey Hepburn during the prime of her career, capturing her behind-the-scenes on set as well as in the privacy of her home.

    Bob Willoughby's Audrey Hepburn features 280 pages filled with photographs of the late Hollywood icon, from her arrival in Hollywood in 1953 until 1966, three years after she shot to fame in My Fair Lady.

    In one of the more intimate images, Hepburn is seen doting on her baby son Sean, who was born in 1960, as her The Children's Hour co-star James Garner smiles in the background.

    Scroll down for video

    Behind-the-scenes: A new book features rarely seen candid photos of Audrey Hepburn from 1953 to 1966. (Pictured: Sean, Audrey's son by Mel Ferrer, plays with his mother while actor James Garner beams)

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    Behind-the-scenes: A new book features rarely seen candid photos of Audrey Hepburn from 1953 to 1966. (Pictured: Sean, Audrey's son by Mel Ferrer, plays with his mother while actor James Garner beams)

    Downtime: The portraits were all taken by the late Hollywood photographer Bob Willoughby, her friend and confidante. (Pictured: The actress at the villa the Ferrers rented while shooting Paris When It Sizzles)

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    Downtime: The portraits were all taken by the late Hollywood photographer Bob Willoughby, her friend and confidante. (Pictured: The actress at the villa the Ferrers rented while shooting Paris When It Sizzles)

    Sean, whose father was Hepburn's first husband Mel Ferrer, giggles from his crib as his glamorous mother laughs with him.

    Another photo shows the actress reclining against a tree beside a pond, which was located at the villa that the Ferrers rented while shooting 1964 film Paris When It Sizzles.

    Sporting her signature short bangs, Hepburn wears a knee-length pink skirt and white shirt and looks demurely at the camera, her bare feet planted on the tree trunk.

    The portraits in the book, which hits stores in September costs $54 on Amazon, were all taken by the late Hollywood photographer Bob Willoughby, who passed away in 2009.

    Everyday life: Hepburn takes her pet fawn Pippa or 'Ip' shopping in Gelson's supermarket, in Beverly Hills

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    Everyday life: Hepburn takes her pet fawn Pippa or 'Ip' shopping in Gelson's supermarket, in Beverly Hills

    Keeping fit: She wore a striking red leotard to do some exercising and stretching in the garden

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    Keeping fit: She wore a striking red leotard to do some exercising and stretching in the garden

    Interactions: In one particularly striking photo, she is seen looking downcast with her Green Mansions co-star Anthony Perkins, who is seemingly attempting to cheer her up

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    Interactions: In one particularly striking photo, she is seen looking downcast with her Green Mansions co-star Anthony Perkins, who is seemingly attempting to cheer her up

    He said of meeting the Belgian-born star for the first time: 'She took my hand like… well a princess, and dazzled me with that smile that God designed to melt mortal men's hearts.'

    From that first encounter, the pair became fast friends, and Willoughby was often at her side to capture her at her most candid moments.

    He even snapped a photo of her shopping at a Beverly Hills grocery store with her pet fawn Ip, whom she met on the set of 1959's Green Mansions, directed by her then-husband Mel Ferrer.

    Timeless beauty: Audrey Hepburn in Breakfast at Tiffany's

    Close comrades: Hepburn pictured with Bob Willoughby, who passed away in 2009

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    Close comrades: Hepburn pictured with Bob Willoughby, who passed away in 2009

    Enraptured: Willoughby said of meeting the star (pictured in 1953) for the first time: 'She took my hand like... well a princess, and dazzled me with that smile that God designed to melt mortal men's hearts'

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    Enraptured: Willoughby said of meeting the star (pictured in 1953) for the first time: 'She took my hand like... well a princess, and dazzled me with that smile that God designed to melt mortal men's hearts'

    Getting in character: Hepburn grins as she greets the international press, who were invited to attend the first day of shooting of My Fair Lady

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    Getting in character: Hepburn grins as she greets the international press, who were invited to attend the first day of shooting of My Fair Lady

    Classic beauty: The star wears striking earrings during a photo session at Paramount Studios in 1953

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    Classic beauty: The star wears striking earrings during a photo session at Paramount Studios in 1953

    'Beverly Hills habitués are fairly blasé about what they see, but Audrey being followed around town by this lovely creature stopped everyone in their tracks,' the photographer once said of her unusual pet.

    Willoughby also captured her interacting with her co-stars while shooting her movies, revealing aspects of her personality rarely seen in pictures.

    In one particularly striking photo, she is seen looking downcast while sitting on a camera boom with her Green Mansions co-star Anthony Perkins, who is seemingly attempting to cheer her up.

    At work: Here she chats with director George Kukor on the set of My Fair Lady while Assam, her Yorkshire terrier, sits in the basket of the bike she used to cycle around the studio grounds

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    At work: Here she chats with director George Kukor on the set of My Fair Lady while Assam, her Yorkshire terrier, sits in the basket of the bike she used to cycle around the studio grounds

    On set: The actress pictured in a still from one of her most famous films, My Fair Lady

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    On set: The actress pictured in a still from one of her most famous films, My Fair Lady

    Fashion sense: She wears a dress designed for her by Givenchy while reclining on a bed in Paris When It Sizzles

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    Fashion sense: She wears a dress designed for her by Givenchy while reclining on a bed in Paris When It Sizzles

    Captivating: Hepburn pictured flaunting her famous doe eyes in a still from Paris When It Sizzles

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    Captivating: Hepburn pictured flaunting her famous doe eyes in a still from Paris When It Sizzles

    And another behind-the-scenes photo sees her chatting with director George Kukor on the set of My Fair Lady.

    While the pair converse, Assam, her Yorkshire terrier, sits in the basket of the bike the actress used to cycle around the studio grounds.

    Willoughby, who was credited by Popular Photography as 'the man who virtually invented the photojournalistic motion picture still,' shot many stars in his career, including Judy Garland, Marilyn  Monroe, Natalie Wood and James Dean.

    Picture perfect: Willoughby, who shot many stars in his career including Judy Garland, Marilyn  Monroe and Natalie Wood, was known to consider Hepburn (pictured in 1953) his favorite

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    Picture perfect: Willoughby, who shot many stars in his career including Judy Garland, Marilyn Monroe and Natalie Wood, was known to consider Hepburn (pictured in 1953) his favorite

    Popular subject: The star climbs into the Paramount Studios car waiting to return her to the hotel after a photo session with photographer Bud Fraker

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    Popular subject: The star climbs into the Paramount Studios car waiting to return her to the hotel after a photo session with photographer Bud Fraker

    Muse: Willoughby is pictured examining a still of Audrey Hepburn

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    Muse: Willoughby is pictured examining a still of Audrey Hepburn

    But above them all, he was known to consider Hepburn as his unequivocal favorite. 'As Hepburn's career soared following her Oscar-winning US debut in Roman Holiday, Willoughby became a trusted friend, framing her working and home life,' reads a description of the book.

    His historic, perfectionist, tender photographs seek out the many facets of Hepburn's beauty and elegance, as she progresses from her debut to her career high of My Fair Lady in 1963.

    'Willoughby's studies, showing her on set, preparing for a scene, interacting with actors and directors, and returning to her private life, comprise one of photography's great platonic love affairs and an unrivalled record of one of the 20th century's touchstone beauties.'

    The real tragic love of Audrey Hepburn's life - how Hollywood star cried 'like a hurt child' when lover Bill Holden refused to have children then returned to his wife
    • Hepburn and Holden filmed romantic comedy Sabrina together in 1954 and she fell madly in love with him

    • Their chemistry on-screen was matched by their romance off it and Hepburn knew he was the love of her life

    • Holden was married and invited Hepburn to meet his wife Ardis like he did with other mistresses - but she sensed that this was different

    • Hepburn begged Holden to leave his wife and have children with her - but his answer was the cruelest blow: he had had a vasectomy

    • Heartbroken, Hepburn ended the relationship and accepted a proposal from Mel Ferrer

    • But new book details final humiliation for her: studio insisted engagement was announced at Holden's marital home

    As she arrived at the Georgian-style villa in Hollywood designed by noted architect Paul Williams, Audrey Hepburn had good reason to be nervous.

    Inside was not just her boyfriend who she was madly in love with - his wife was there waiting to meet her too.

    Bill Holden, her co-star in the 1954 romantic comedy Sabrina, had asked her round to meet Ardis as he had done with many of his previous mistresses.

    The mother of his three children, Ardis had long learned to look the other way so long as Holden came home to her each night.

    But with Hepburn, Ardis sensed something different – and she was scared.

    Chemistry: A publicity still from Sabrina which was intended to emphasize their on-screen chemistry. But what those watching the movie did not know was how deeply Audrey Hepburn and William Holden had fallen in love

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    Chemistry: A publicity still from Sabrina which was intended to emphasize their on-screen chemistry. But what those watching the movie did not know was how deeply Audrey Hepburn and William Holden had fallen in love

    Love: As their on-screen relationship sizzled, so too did their off-screen romance. It was intense, and Holden's wife knew that this time she had a fight on her hands for her husband, who had strayed before

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    Love: As their on-screen relationship sizzled, so too did their off-screen romance. It was intense, and Holden's wife knew that this time she had a fight on her hands for her husband, who had strayed before

    Couple: William Holden and his wife Ardis pictured together. Hepburn was a 'wife's worst nightmare' – a cultured beauty who was well spoken and had completely entranced her husband.

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    Couple: William Holden and his wife Ardis pictured together. Hepburn was a 'wife's worst nightmare' – a cultured beauty who was well spoken and had completely entranced her husband.

    Triangle: The posters promoted the love triangle at the center of Sabrina. Behind the scenes was Audrey Hepburn's greatest love

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    Triangle: The posters promoted the love triangle at the center of Sabrina. Behind the scenes was Audrey Hepburn's greatest love

    According to a new book about their affair, Hepburn was a 'wife's worst nightmare' – a cultured beauty who was well spoken and had completely entranced her husband.

    It didn't take Ardis long to realize what she had to do; as soon as they closed the front door and waved her goodbye 'the gloves came off and (she) went into attack mode', author Edward Epstein writes.

    In no uncertain terms she gave him an ultimatum and 'demanded that Bill stop seeing that woman'.

    It was a demand he would ignore, but the relationship would come to an end weeks later for a reason that would break Hepburn's heart - and leave her feeling utterly betrayed.

    Epstein recounts the episode in 'Audrey and Bill' which describes in detail her little-told affair with Holden for the first time.

    He explains how they fell in love despite disapproval from Hepburn's mother and having come from completely different backgrounds.

    He was the son of a schoolteacher and an industrial chemist from small town Illinois who had only just found fame a few years earlier with his roles in Sunset Boulevard and Stalag 17.

    She was the daughter of European nobility, a symbol of fashion who had beaten Elizabeth Taylor for her role in Roman Holiday, which earned her the Best Actress Oscar.

    At the time filming of Sabrina was due to start, Hepburn, who grew up in England, had recently broken off her engagement to James Hanson, the wealthy British industrialist and a member of the House of Lords, a parting which Epstein describes as 'unpleasant'.

    She had moved to Los Angeles where she became the toast of the dinner party circuit where media mogul Jules Stein threw a party for her at his mansion, an unheard of honor for a newcomer.

    Holden was 'obsessive' about meeting Hepburn, Epstein writes, and he rightly pegged her as someone who wanted the man to make the first move – which he duly did.

    Things progressed quickly and blossomed into 'all-out passion' and their on-screen chemistry spilled over into the dressing room.

    Hepburn saw Holden as her 'guardian angel' and a 'red blooded American male'.

    Irony: Sabrina saw Audrey Hepburn play the woman at the center of a love triangle with Humphrey Bogart (left) and William Holden (right). In fact, Holden was the center of the real-life triangle between her and his wife

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    Irony: Sabrina saw Audrey Hepburn play the woman at the center of a love triangle with Humphrey Bogart (left) and William Holden (right). In fact, Holden was the center of the real-life triangle between her and his wife

    Golden age: Audrey Hepburn rose to the heights at the peak of Hollywood's power and glamor. 

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    Golden age: Audrey Hepburn rose to the heights at the peak of Hollywood's power and glamor.

    Reunited: Paris When It Sizzles in 1964 put the couple back together but it was a flop - the fireworks between them were long gone and the critics cruelly dubbed it 'Paris When It Fizzles'

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    Reunited: Paris When It Sizzles in 1964 put the couple back together but it was a flop - the fireworks between them were long gone and the critics cruelly dubbed it 'Paris When It Fizzles'

    Holden saw Hepburn as his 'ultimate prima ballerina' – she had studied the dance in her youth and her posture showed she had been classically trained.

    He took her out for dinner most evenings after filming or to out of the way spots where they shared romantic walks. Holden would later call her 'the love of my life'.

    Epstein writes: 'The couple shared an emotional intimacy that precluded words. One smile from him and she knew she was understood'.

    Miraculously they managed to keep their affair out of the tabloid newspapers, even though they were caught in an intimate moment when a member of the Sabrina crew barged into Holden's dressing room without knocking.

    Had it become public it would have been catastrophic for Hepburn – her Cinderella image would have been ruined and she would have been labelled a home wrecker.

    But that did not mean she would avoid meeting Ardis, a former actress whose stage name was Brenda Marshall and who was close friends with Nancy Reagan.

    Holden set up the meeting and when Hepburn laid eyes on her rival she was 'impressed', Epstein writes.

    Facade: William Holden and his wife Ardis Ankerson. She knew that he strayed but had passed off previous mistresses as un-threatening - until she met Hepburn

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    Facade: William Holden and his wife Ardis Ankerson. She knew that he strayed but had passed off previous mistresses as un-threatening - until she met Hepburn

    lacking magic: Paris When It Sizzles was supposed to capture the same romantic fervor as Sabrina, but it flopped as the chemistry was gone

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    lacking magic: Paris When It Sizzles was supposed to capture the same romantic fervor as Sabrina, but it flopped as the chemistry was gone

    Memory: Publicity stills of Paris When It Sizzles showed Audrey Hepburn and William Holden together and hinted at the passion between them

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    Memory: Publicity stills of Paris When It Sizzles showed Audrey Hepburn and William Holden together and hinted at the passion between them

    Marriage: Unable to contemplate a childless union with Holden, Hepburn married Mel Ferrer. The couple are seen together in 1961

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    Marriage: Unable to contemplate a childless union with Holden, Hepburn married Mel Ferrer. The couple are seen together in 1961

    In Hepburn's eyes Ardis was 'beautiful; the role of injured wife did not suit her.'

    Epstein says: 'But the beautiful Ardis brought out the competitive spirit in Audrey. Hepburn held her head high, gave out one of her killer smiles and said: 'Oh, I'm so happy to meet you'.

    'Ardis' heart must have frozen at the sight of her – here was this radiant creature, fifteen years younger than she, who wasn't merely beautiful but had unique qualities of class and an almost spiritual grace.

    'The others Bill had brought home were beautiful, but not like this; this she was not prepared for.

    'Unlike many Hollywood beauties away from the camera Audrey even had a beautiful speaking voice! There was nothing strident or uncultured in this package. She was a wife's worst nightmare, and to compound matters, she seemed like a nice person.'

    Over the evening Ardis saw that 'there was much more going on' that with her husband's previous liaisons – a realization that made her demand they stop seeing each other.

    Holden and Hepburn's affair did end, but it was over the issue of children, not his wife's wishes.

    Epstein writes that during their time together Hepburn spoke 'often' of having children and that she wanted three or four babies so that she could retire from acting to raise them.

    He writes: 'Once while chatting brightly about the names of their future children, suddenly an embarrassed smile, tinged with fear, crept into Bill's face.

    'He told her that the one thing, the only thing they could not have together, was children. He would recall the fixed expression in her eyes; how she stood looking at him like a hurt, bewildered child.'

    Roman Holiday starring Audrey Hepburn & Gregory Peck

    Unforgettable: The role that came to define Audrey Hepburn was Breakfast At Tiffany's but it came many years after her romance with Holden, which she was to say was the greatest of her life

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    Unforgettable: The role that came to define Audrey Hepburn was Breakfast At Tiffany's but it came many years after her romance with Holden, which she was to say was the greatest of her life

    Hollywood couple: Nancy and Ronald Regan with Bill and Ardis Holden, on left, after the Reagan's wedding at the Holden's house in Toluca Lake, California, 1952.

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    Hollywood couple: Nancy and Ronald Regan with Bill and Ardis Holden, on left, after the Reagan's wedding at the Holden's house in Toluca Lake, California, 1952.

    Epstein writes how Hepburn's eyes 'searched his face' as he explained that he had undergone a vasectomy some years earlier at his wife's urging.

    Hepburn's reaction was one of shock. She could not believe he had waited until now to tell her this.

    Holden hoped she would not hate him but the 'trusting, simple part of their relationship' was gone.

    Epstein writes that Hepburn 'ended their affair on the spot' – she felt that she had no other choice.

    At that point Mel Ferrer re-entered her life.

    Hepburn was pleased to see the troubled actor and director because his 'attentiveness and sense of romantic urgency' was the perfect tonic to Holden.

    Ferrer already had four children from previous relationships but he convinced Hepburn she would be the focus of his life.

    He was from a better background than Holden as well and his father was a well known Cuban American surgeon.

    Hepburn knew she was at a weak point in her life but went along with it anyway, and accepted when he proposed.

    But before the wedding she faced one final indignity.

    To put any rumors to bed about her and Holden, Paramount, the studio to which she was signed, decided to stage an evening at Holden's house during which Hepburn would announce her engagement to Ferrer.

    Timeless beauty: Audrey Hepburn in Breakfast at Tiffany's

    Beauty: Hepburn was known for her looks but it was her personality which made Holden's wife fear her 

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    Beauty: Hepburn was known for her looks but it was her personality which made Holden's wife fear her

    Scene: The love triangle movie Sabrina was publicized with pictures of Hepburn and Holden together

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    Scene: The love triangle movie Sabrina was publicized with pictures of Hepburn and Holden together

    Style: The immaculately dressed and tailored Hollywood couple epitomized its golden era - but behind the scenes an affair was playing out, ultimately doomed by his inability to have children with her

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    Style: The immaculately dressed and tailored Hollywood couple epitomized its golden era - but behind the scenes an affair was playing out, ultimately doomed by his inability to have children with her

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    With Holden and his wife present, what clearer sign could there be that nothing had been going on?

    Epstein writes that, as one would imagine, conversation was somewhat 'forced'.

    He writes: 'A synthetic cordiality filled the room. Audrey's eyes avoided Bill's. His bloodshot eyes underscored his angst. He was clearly a man carrying a torch'.

    In later years Hepburn and Holden would look back on their time together by marveling at the innocence of it all, and how unencumbered by life's burdens they were.

    Hepburn had a son with Ferrer, her first of her two husbands. He sacrificed his own career for hers but became her tormentor because he was so jealous about her success.

    Hepburn became a screen legend thanks to her iconic role in Breakfast at Tiffany's, but suffered a huge backlash after being cast in the title role for My Fair Lady because many felt it belonged to Julie Andrews.

    Holden eventually did divorce Ardis and dated French actress Capucine before she ended their relationship due to his long-standing alcohol problem.

    He also saw tragedy too and killed another driver with Ferrari in Tuscany, a scandal for which he was given an eight month suspended prison sentence.

    Holden and Hepburn were reunited on screen in Paris When it Sizzles which was released in 1964 after spending years on the cutting room floor.

    But critics dubbed it 'Paris when it fizzles' because by then the magic between the two of them was gone – even on the silver screen.