Research: Film: Funny Face (1957)
Project 03 Body and Experience

Iconic Dance Scene
Jo protests, and pops off into one of the most iconic dance scenes in cinematic history.

“Isn’t it time you realized that dancing is nothing more than a form of expression or release? There’s no need to be formal or cute about it. As a matter of fact, I rather feel like expressing myself now. And I could certainly use a release!”
Directed by Stanley Donen and choreographed by Eugene Loring, Hepburn’s counter culture expression is a bursting, joyful, and electric interpretive dance that matches the scene’s saturated colours. The jazzy music is titled Basal Metabolism (How Long Has This Been Going On).
Hepburn’s approach to fashion reflected her Funny Face character’s views about dance; it, too, was an expression and a release. And, fittingly, Hepburn’s style in turn relied on dance for inspiration.
While her collaboration with Hubert de Givenchy is legendary – in Hepburn, he found a muse for his cinched waists and full skirts – she is also remembered for the black Capri pants and Salvatore Ferragamo ballet flats made famous in Funny Face. These emphasised her dancer’s physique, and sent women the world over into a terpsichorean-style frenzy they still haven’t recovered from. (Just witness the enduring popularity of ballet flats.)
With her vivid style and incomparable elegance, Audrey Hepburn truly is the patron style saint of ballerinas.