Audrey Kathleen Ruston was born on May 4, 1929, in Ixelles, Brussels, to a British-born banker and a Dutch noblewoman. Her parents' marriage ended when she was six. She was raised in the Netherlands — in Arnhem — which placed her under German occupation from 1940 to 1945. The five years of occupation were formative: she witnessed executions, experienced hunger so severe she ate tulip bulbs and nettle soup to survive, and lost family members to Nazi labor camps. She trained as a ballet dancer throughout the occupation in secret lessons, and her experience of genuine suffering coexisted with an extraordinary inner discipline and an understanding of human fragility that would define her work and her humanitarian career.
After the war she moved to London, continued ballet training, and began modeling and small theatrical roles to support herself. Roman Holiday (1953) — in which she played a princess escaping protocol for a day of Roman freedom opposite Gregory Peck — won her the Academy Award for Best Actress at twenty-four and immediately made her one of the most beloved film stars in the world. The combination of her physical grace, extraordinary emotional transparency on screen, and the quality of genuine vulnerability that her wartime childhood had given her produced a screen presence unlike anything the studio system had previously seen.
The decade from 1953 to 1963 — Sabrina, War and Peace, Funny Face, The Nun's Story, Breakfast at Tiffany's, Charade — established her as one of the most complete film performers of the Golden Age. Her style — captured by Hubert de Givenchy across two decades — defined refined femininity for the entire second half of the twentieth century. She achieved EGOT status (Emmy, Grammy, Oscar, Tony) and Presidential Medal of Freedom.
Her retirement from acting in the late 1960s to raise her children, and her return as a UNICEF Special Ambassador (1988–1993), represents the INFP's most complete life arc: the artistic career in service of genuine emotional expression, followed by the deliberate redirection of public influence toward the most vulnerable people in the world. She visited Ethiopia, Sudan, Bangladesh, Vietnam, Honduras, and Somalia, bringing attention to famine and child poverty with genuine personal engagement rather than managed charity appearance. She died on January 20, 1993, from appendiceal cancer, having completed a final UNICEF mission to Somalia just months before.