What is the best Audrey Hepburn movie?
Timeless glamour meets genuine dramatic depth — her filmography balances iconic classic roles with underrated gems spanning four decades. Which one stands above the rest?

Roman Holiday
A 1953 romantic comedy in which Hepburn's Oscar-winning debut as a runaway European princess who falls for an American journalist in Rome launched her into stardom.

Breakfast at Tiffany's
A 1961 film in which Hepburn plays free-spirited New York socialite Holly Golightly, earning her third Oscar nomination and defining a generation's idea of glamour.

My Fair Lady
A 1964 Best Picture-winning musical in which Hepburn transforms from a Cockney flower girl into an elegant lady under a pompous phonetics professor.

The Nun's Story
A 1959 drama widely considered one of Hepburn's finest performances, as a Belgian nun torn between religious devotion and her own will, earning her fourth Oscar nomination.

Sabrina
A 1954 Billy Wilder romantic comedy in which Hepburn earned her second Oscar nomination playing a chauffeur's daughter transformed by Paris who returns to win two brothers' hearts.

Charade
A 1963 Hitchcock-esque romantic thriller set in Paris in which Hepburn plays a widow caught up in a deadly mystery alongside Cary Grant.

Wait Until Dark
A 1967 thriller in which Hepburn gives a gripping performance as a blind woman terrorized by criminals in her own apartment, earning her fifth and final Oscar nomination.

Two for the Road
A 1967 drama in which Hepburn gives what many critics consider her most emotionally raw performance as a woman reflecting on twelve years of marriage.

Funny Face
A 1957 musical in which Hepburn plays a bookish Greenwich Village shopgirl discovered and transformed into a fashion model by a photographer played by Fred Astaire.

How to Steal a Million
A 1966 Paris caper in which Hepburn must steal her father's forged sculpture from a museum before it is authenticated, holding a rare 100% on Rotten Tomatoes.

War and Peace
A 1956 grand epic adaptation of Tolstoy's novel in which Hepburn brings warmth and spirit to the beloved heroine Natasha Rostova alongside Henry Fonda.

Robin and Marian
A 1976 elegiac take on the Robin Hood legend in which Hepburn plays an aged Maid Marian reunited with Robin Hood after years apart, praised as one of her most affecting later performances.

The Children's Hour
A 1961 drama in which Hepburn plays a teacher whose life is destroyed by a student's malicious lie, a bold and serious dramatic turn.

Love in the Afternoon
A 1957 Billy Wilder romantic comedy in which Hepburn plays a young Parisian cellist who falls for a worldly American playboy.

Always
A 1989 Steven Spielberg film featuring Hepburn's final screen role — a radiant, otherworldly cameo as an angel guiding a deceased pilot's spirit.
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