The young Hepburn was a tomboy who liked to call herself Jimmy and cut her hair short. Thomas Hepburn was eager for his children to use their minds and bodies to the limit and taught them to swim, run, dive, ride, wrestle, and play golf and tennis. Golf became a passion of Hepburn's; she took daily lessons and became very adept, reaching the semi-final of the Connecticut Young Women's Golf Championship. She loved swimming in Long Island Sound, and took ice-cold baths every morning in the belief that "the bitterer the medicine, the better it was for you". Hepburn was a fan of films from a young age and went to see one every Saturday night. She would put on plays and perform for her neighbors with friends and siblings for 50 cents a ticket to raise money for the Navajo people.
In 1928, Katharine traveled to Boston to get her first job the stage. She was criticized for her shrill voice, but she kept going. She went to New York City to study with a voice tutor. She stayed in New York and made her broadway debut on November 12, 1928 in a play called These Days. In a couple years, Hepburn started to get positive reviews, and a scouting agent from Hollywood discovered her. She left for Hollywood in July of 1932, and the rest is history...
I enjoyed your write-up -- I didn't know about her parents' activism. No wonder Hepburn was the way she was!
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