Audrey Hepburn is forever linked to the elegance of Hollywood’s Golden Age, but some of the most profound artistic inspiration of her life arrived much later—and from an unexpected place. In 1982, after attending a screening of E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial, Hepburn was so emotionally overwhelmed that she did something entirely out of character for a classic film icon: she sat down and wrote a multi-page letter to its director, Steven Spielberg.
“It touched me deeply,” Hepburn reportedly said after the screening, according to her son Luca Dotti. The film’s story of a gentle, stranded alien searching for home struck her at a fundamental level—not as spectacle, but as pure human emotion. Hepburn didn’t see E.T. as a science-fiction adventure. She saw it as a study in love, vulnerability, and compassion, rendered with extraordinary restraint.
What moved her most was Spielberg’s ability to evoke empathy without explanation. Hepburn admired how the film trusted silence, glances, and physical presence over dialogue—an approach that mirrored her own acting philosophy. She was especially taken by the performances of the young cast, including Henry Thomas and Drew Barrymore, whose naturalism she felt carried the film’s emotional weight without artifice.
Soon after the screening, Hepburn wrote Spielberg a heartfelt letter—often described as three pages long—praising his sensitivity and calling the film a rare expression of universal empathy. Dotti later recalled that during the movie, his mother squeezed his hand and whispered, “This man is a genius.” For Hepburn, who had survived wartime Europe and later dedicated her life to humanitarian work, E.T. echoed deeply personal themes of displacement, innocence, and the longing for safety.
That letter would quietly change cinema history.
Several years later, Spielberg reached out to Hepburn with an offer that surprised her: a role in his romantic drama Always. He cast her as Hap, an angelic guide—a role written not for a legend, but for a presence defined by grace and moral clarity. Hepburn accepted, delighted by the invitation and touched that Spielberg saw her not as an icon, but as a person.
Always became Hepburn’s final screen appearance. In keeping with her values, she donated her entire salary from the film to UNICEF, where she served as a Goodwill Ambassador during the last years of her life.
The connection between Hepburn and E.T. remains one of cinema’s quiet miracles. A 1950s star found truth in a 1980s blockbuster, recognized its soul, and reached out—not as a celebrity, but as an artist. One letter of admiration became a friendship, and one science-fiction film gave Audrey Hepburn the perfect, angelic farewell.