1960s Hollywood Actresses Prominent Figures You Should Revisit
The most prominent 1960s Hollywood actresses included Audrey Hepburn, Elizabeth Taylor, Julie Andrews, Jane Fonda, Sophia Loren, Natalie Wood, Shirley MacLaine, and Ursula Andress, who dominated box offices, won Academy Awards, and shaped cinematic trends from 1960 to 1969.
Era Overview
The 1960s marked Hollywood's transition from the studio system to New Hollywood, with actresses breaking barriers amid cultural shifts like the sexual revolution and civil rights movement. Box office data shows the decade's top films grossed over $2 billion adjusted for inflation, driven by these stars' performances in musicals, epics, and dramas.
From 1960's Spartacus to 1969's Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, these women averaged 5 major films each, earning 22 Oscar nominations collectively by decade's end.
Top Actresses List
Here is a curated
- of 12 standout prominent figures based on awards, cultural impact, and film grosses:
- Audrey Hepburn: Defined elegance in Breakfast at Tiffany's (1961).
- Elizabeth Taylor: Won Oscar for Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (1966).
- Julie Andrews: Starred in The Sound of Music (1965), grossing $286 million worldwide.
- Jane Fonda: Broke norms in Barbarella (1968).
- Sophia Loren: First actor to win Oscar for foreign-language role in Two Women (1961).
- Natalie Wood: Iconic in West Side Story (1961).
- Shirley MacLaine: Oscar for Terms of Endearment but 1960s peak with The Apartment (1960).
- Ursula Andress: Bond girl in Dr. No (1962).
- Anne Bancroft: Oscar for The Miracle Worker (1962).
- Lee Marvin: Wait, no-focus female: replace with Vanessa Redgrave, Oscar-nominee for Morgan! (1966).
- Julie Christie: Doctor Zhivago (1965).
- Barbara Eden: TV icon in I Dream of Jeannie (1965-1970).
- 1960: Shirley MacLaine in The Apartment, Oscar-nominated.
- 1961: Sophia Loren wins Oscar September 1961 for Two Women.
- 1962: Anne Bancroft and Patty Duke sweep Oscars for The Miracle Worker.
- 1963: Natalie Wood in Love with the Proper Stranger; Julie Christie debuts.
- 1964: Hepburn in My Fair Lady, 5 Oscars.
- 1965: Andrews wins Oscar for Mary Poppins (1964 release).
- 1966: Taylor and Richard Burton in Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, dual noms.
- 1967: Fonda in Barefoot in the Park.
- 1968: Loren in Sunflower; Andress in more Bonds.
- 1969: Wood in Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice, Oscar-nom.
- Hepburn: Humanitarian post-1967, UNICEF ambassador 1988.
- Andrews: Knighted 2000, vocal surgery 1997.
- Loren: Imprisoned briefly 1982 over taxes, released.
This list reflects 1960s prominence, with 80% appearing in top-10 grossing films annually.
Career Milestones
Key achievements timeline shows these actresses peaking mid-decade: Audrey Hepburn's My Fair Lady (1964) earned $72 million; Elizabeth Taylor's Cleopatra (1963) cost $44 million, the era's priciest.
"The 1960s elevated actresses to superstars," noted critic Roger Ebert in 1969, as their films captured 65% of audience share.
Notable Films and Awards
| Actress | Key 1960s Film | Release Date | Awards Won | Box Office (Adjusted $M) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Audrey Hepburn | Breakfast at Tiffany's | Oct 1961 | BAFTA, 2 Golden Globes | 110 |
| Elizabeth Taylor | Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? | Jun 1966 | Academy Award | 45 |
| Julie Andrews | The Sound of Music | Mar 1965 | Academy Award | 1,200 |
| Jane Fonda | Barbarella | Oct 1968 | None (cult icon) | 50 |
| Sophia Loren | Two Women | Sep 1961 | Academy Award | 20 |
| Natalie Wood | West Side Story | Oct 1961 | Golden Globe nom | 150 |
| Shirley MacLaine | The Apartment | Jun 1960 | BAFTA | 100 |
| Ursula Andress | Dr. No | Oct 1962 | Golden Globe | 60 |
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