The first house, designed by Paul Williams, was located on North Delfern Drive in Holmby Hills, Los Angeles, and it was purposely defaced to evade historical preservation status, then demolished by the owner to make way for a huge house currently under construction. It was home to Eva Gabor, Frank Sinatra and Mia Farrow, Anita Louise, and astronaut David Scott, among others. I visited the house when owned by the Scotts and saw Eva Gabor's large "Green Acres" birdhouse, which was a replica of the show's barn shown in the opening credits. The estate was beautiful and historic and should still be here in my opinion.
But for a Dutch Baroness and a British banker, if you could call her father that was honestly very very small, it just being a simple row house where in a city like Ixelles there are some of the most stunning and expensive homes in the world! These are just words making something normal seem as if it were special!
Oh and a final fun little thing, this was not Audrey's family home, her grandfather was allowed to use this house only because he was the mayor, just like when a President gets to live in the White House, it doesn't make it their!
The first house is NOT how it looked when she owned it. If that's how this video begins I'm not going to waste my time watching more in hopes that it'll get a little more honest.
Let's also not forget that Arnhem was mostly populated with Nazis during WW2, it even has a battle named after it that slowed down the freeing of Europe! And having a cellar under a kitchen isn't a bomb shelter but just a space where coal was kept; some grand houses even had 2 to 3 underground levels where they stocked coal, food, and whine!
Please why do you want to say resistance during WW2 when even Audrey herself has always denied being part of anything because she was just a little girl; really learn to do some research instead of finding posh sounding words to make something normal look spectacular when it isn't!
COMMENT: Which of these lovely homes of Audrey Hepburn do you find the most captivating?
The first house, designed by Paul Williams, was located on North Delfern Drive in Holmby Hills, Los Angeles, and it was purposely defaced to evade historical preservation status, then demolished by the owner to make way for a huge house currently under construction. It was home to Eva Gabor, Frank Sinatra and Mia Farrow, Anita Louise, and astronaut David Scott, among others. I visited the house when owned by the Scotts and saw Eva Gabor's large "Green Acres" birdhouse, which was a replica of the show's barn shown in the opening credits. The estate was beautiful and historic and should still be here in my opinion.
Is this Matt Berry’s voice?
But for a Dutch Baroness and a British banker, if you could call her father that was honestly very very small, it just being a simple row house where in a city like Ixelles there are some of the most stunning and expensive homes in the world! These are just words making something normal seem as if it were special!
A final thing, by law she was Belgian, born in Belgium so she was Belgian with Dutch and British heritage!
Oh and a final fun little thing, this was not Audrey's family home, her grandfather was allowed to use this house only because he was the mayor, just like when a President gets to live in the White House, it doesn't make it their!
The first house is NOT how it looked when she owned it. If that's how this video begins I'm not going to waste my time watching more in hopes that it'll get a little more honest.
Let's also not forget that Arnhem was mostly populated with Nazis during WW2, it even has a battle named after it that slowed down the freeing of Europe! And having a cellar under a kitchen isn't a bomb shelter but just a space where coal was kept; some grand houses even had 2 to 3 underground levels where they stocked coal, food, and whine!
Please why do you want to say resistance during WW2 when even Audrey herself has always denied being part of anything because she was just a little girl; really learn to do some research instead of finding posh sounding words to make something normal look spectacular when it isn't!