Katharine Hepburn, an icon of feminist strength and spirit who brought a chiseled beauty and patrician bearing to such films as The Philadelphia Story and The African Queen, has died. She was 96.
Hepburn died Sunday at 2:50pm (1850 GMT) Sunday at her home in Old Saybrook with family by her side, said Cynthia McFadden, a friend of Hepburn and executor of her estate. Hepburn, who had been in declining health in recent years, died of old age, McFadden said.
"Through her films generations to come will discover her humor, her grace, her keen intelligence," McFadden said in a statement from the family at a news conference near Hepburn's home, where the actor spent much of her childhood. "She was and always will be an American original. She died as she lived, with dignity and grace."
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The lights will dim on Broadway at 8pm Tuesday (0000 GMT Wednesday) in her honor, said Patricia Armetta-Haubner, a spokeswoman for the League of American Theaters and Producers.
McFadden said that according to Hepburn's wishes, there will be no memorial service and burial will be private at a later date.
"I think every actress in the world looked up to her with a kind of reverence and a sense of `oh boy, if only I could be like her,'" actress Elizabeth Taylor said in a statement.
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During her 60-year career, she won a record four Academy Awards and was nominated 12 times, which stood as a record in the acting categories until Meryl Streep surpassed her nomination total in 2003. Her Oscars were for Morning Glory, 1933; Guess Who's Coming to Dinner, 1967; The Lion in Winter, 1968; and On Golden Pond, 1981.
Despite her success, Hepburn always felt she could have done more.
"I could have accomplished three times what I've accomplished," she once said. "I haven't realized my full potential. It's disgusting."
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But, she said, "Life's what's important. Walking, houses, family. Birth and pain and joy -- and then death. Acting's just waiting for the custard pie. That's all."
Hepburn, the product of a wealthy, freethinking New England family, was forthright in her opinions and unconventional in her conduct.
She dressed for comfort, usually in slacks and sweater, with her red hair caught up in a topknot. She married only once, briefly, and her name was linked to Howard Hughes and other famous men, but the great love of her life was Spencer Tracy. They made nine films together and remained close companions until Tracy's death in 1967.
Her Broadway role in Warrior's Husband brought a movie offer from RKO, and she went to Hollywood at US$1,500 a week to star opposite John Barrymore in the 1932 film A Bill of Divorcement. The lean, athletic actress with the well-bred manner became an instant star. The voice Tallulah Bankhead once likened to "nickels dropping in a slot machine" became one of Hollywood's most-imitated.
Hepburn's third movie, Morning Glory, brought her first Oscar. A string of parts followed -- Jo in Little Women, the ill-fated queen in Mary of Scotland, the rich would-be actress in Stage Door, the madcap socialite of Bringing Up Baby, the shy rich girl in Holiday.
A theater chain owner branded her and other stars "box-office poison" after several of Hepburn's roles received a cool reception from critics, and her film career waned.
Undaunted, Hepburn acquired the rights to a comedy about a spoiled heiress, and, after it was rewritten for her, took it to the New York stage. The Philadelphia Story was a hit.
She returned to Hollywood for the 1940 film version, which featured James Stewart and Cary Grant. Once again she was a top star, with a contract at MGM for Woman of the Year, Keeper of the Flame, Sea of Grass, Dragon Seed, Without Love, State of the Union, Pat and Mike and Adam's Rib.
Her first film with Tracy was Woman of the Year, in 1942. Legend has it that when they met she commented, "I'm afraid I'm a little big for you, Mr. Tracy." His reply: "Don't worry, I'll cut you down to size."
One critic compared them to "the high-strung thoroughbred and the steady workhorse."
Tracy never divorced his wife, who outlived him by 15 years; Hepburn, though she led a PBS tribute to Tracy in 1986, rarely mentioned their private relationship.
"I have had 20 years of perfect companionship with a man among men," she said in 1963. "He is a rock and a protection. I've never regretted it." In another interview, she discussed their special screen magic, saying they represented "the perfect American couple."
"The ideal American man is certainly Spencer -- sports loving, man's man, strong-looking, big sort of head, boar neck and so forth. And I think I represent a woman. I needle him, and I irritate him, and I try to get around him, and if he put a big paw out and put it on my head, he could squash me. And I think that is the romantic ideal picture of the male and female in this country."
After leaving MGM in 1951, Hepburn divided her time between the stage -- she appeared in Shaw's The Millionairess and Shakespeare's As You Like It -- and film. She coolly braved a jungle for The African Queen and did her own balloon flying in the low-budget Olly Olly Oxen Free.
She co-starred with Taylor and Montgomery Clift in Suddenly Last Summer, with Jason Robards Jr. in Long Day's Journey into Night, with Laurence Olivier in the TV movie Love Among the Ruins and with Henry Fonda in On Golden Pond, which won both of them Oscars.
She coaxed the ailing Tracy back onto the set for their roles as wealthy, liberal parents faced with the interracial marriage of their daughter in Guess Who's Coming to Dinner. Tracy died before the film's release.
Though an early appearance in The Lake promoted Dorothy Parker's famously scathing remark that Hepburn "ran the gamut of emotions from A to B," she worked as tirelessly on stage as in movies.
She starred in the musical Coco in 1969. When she broke an ankle during A Matter of Gravity in 1976, she went on in a wheelchair. Fans flocked to see her on Broadway in West Side Waltz, in 1982, and when the show moved on to Boston, Hepburn displayed her outspokenness by ordering out a spectator who disturbed her by taking pictures.
Hepburn nearly lost a foot in a car accident in late 1982 and spent almost three weeks in a hospital. But by the end of the year she was back before the cameras, co-starring with Nick Nolte in Grace Quigley, a comedy about a woman teaming with a hit man to help old people who want to die.
"I don't believe in shocking people, but if I got sick and was no longer of any use to myself or anyone else, I would find a way of ending it," she once said.
For many years, she divided her time between New York and Connecticut. Even well into her 70s, she was restless with energy, arising at dawn and going to bed at 7pm when she wasn't appearing in a play or making another film.
She took to writing; her first book, The Making of `The African Queen': Or, How I Went To Africa With Bogart, Bacall and Huston and Almost Lost My Mind made her a best-selling author at 77. She followed it up with Me: Stories of My Life in 1991.
In 1994, Warren Beatty persuaded a reluctant Hepburn to fly out to Los Angeles and play his aunt in the romantic comedy Love Affair. She also appeared in a television movie, One Christmas.
Among the honors coming her way in later years: In 1999, a survey of screen legends by the American Film Institute ranked her No. 1 among actresses.
She was born in Hartford, Connecticut, on May 12, 1907, one of six children of Thomas N. Hepburn, a noted urologist and pioneer in social hygiene, and Katharine Houghton Hepburn, who worked for birth control and getting the vote for women. Hepburn is survived by a sister, Margaret Hepburn Perry; a brother, Robert Hepburn; and 13 nieces and nephews.
"My parents were much more fascinating, as people, than I am," the actress once said. "Mother was really left of center; women's suffrage was her great cause, and I remember appearing at all the local fairs carrying huge flocks of balloons that said `Votes for Women.' I almost went up with them."
Young Kate was educated by tutors and at private schools, entering Bryn Mawr in 1924. After graduating, she joined a stock company in Baltimore.
She made her New York debut in These Days in 1928, the same year she married Philadelphia socialite Ludlow Ogden Smith. She divorced him in 1934 and later remarked, "I don't believe in marriage. It's bloody impractical to love, honor and obey. If it weren't, you wouldn't have to sign a contract."
But she also lauded "Luddy" for opening doors in New York for a raw young actress. She berated herself as behaving like :"a pig" toward him.
"At the beginning I had money; I wasn't a poor little thing. I don't know what I would have done if I'd had to come to New York and get a job as a waiter or something like that.
``I think I'm a success, but I had every advantage -- I should have been," she said.
She had various health problems in later years, including hip replacement surgery and tremors similar to Parkinson's disease.
In a 1990 interview, she told The Associated Press: "I'm what is known as gradually disintegrating. I don't fear the next world, or anything. I don't fear hell, and I don't look forward to heaven."
"There comes a time in your life when people get very sweet to you," she said in another interview. "I don't mind people being sweet to me. In fact, I'm getting rather sweet back at them.
"But I'm a madly irritating person, and I irritated them for years. Anything definite is irritating -- and stimulating. I think they're beginning to think I'm not going to be around much longer. And what do you know -- they'll miss me, like an old monument."
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