A lyrical salute to legendary singer Julie Andrews.
Hedlund begins with Andrews’ early years listening to her distant mother’s first husband (biologically not her father, though that’s what he’s called here throughout) reading aloud, “his voice wrapped around the house like a hug.” The author then chronicles young Julie’s parents’ divorce and her unwilling move to London during the Blitz, life-changing voice lessons with a renowned teacher, and rise to stardom from first appearances on vaudeville stages (where the sound of “accolades of audiences filled her heart”) to a command performance at 13 before the queen, her singing “underscored by the hum of her father’s love.” The tale then cuts abruptly to a closing montage that fast-forwards seven decades, during which the performer and later writer “wrapped her voice around the world like a hug,” to a closing personal note from the author. In Urbinati’s watercolor-style illustrations, a slender child poses theatrically at various ages in a lyrical flow of private and public moments enhanced with evocative sprays of pearls and flowers. Faces are white throughout until final glimpses of the grande dame with a diverse group of modern young fans. (This book was reviewed digitally.)
Sketchy and rhapsodic but at least affords glimpses of influential figures and formative experiences.
(timeline) (Picture-book biography. 6-9)