AP - 15 May 07  
            By David Germain  
             
        Queen Julie: Andrews Returns As Matronly Monarch In 'Shrek' 
             
          
          Julie   Andrews has been Hollywood royalty for decades. Lately, she's had   the parts to prove it with queenly roles in ''The Princess   Diaries'' and ''Shrek'' films. Andrews - who reprises her voice role in ''Shrek the Third'' as Queen   Lillian, mother-in-law to Mike Myers' ogre and mom   to Cameron   Diaz's ogre princess - is a pragmatic monarch. 
          Since throat surgery ruined the glorious singing voice of the star of ''Mary Poppins,'' ''The Sound of   Music,'' ''Victor/Victoria'' and other films, Andrews finds other ways to   express herself, continuing to moonlight as a children's author and   director. 
          Though she managed a subdued little musical number in 2004's ''The   Princess Diaries 2: Royal Engagement,'' Andrews said she has not recovered her   singing voice in the 10 years since the surgery. 
          ''No, sadly,'' Andrews said in an interview to promote ''Shrek the   Third.'' ''I'm not singing. My daughter, the one that I write with, said   something so lovely. I was bemoaning the fact that I wasn't singing and how much   I missed it. And she said, 'Mom, you've just found a different way of using your   voice by writing.' It made me feel so much better. ... 
          ''I do miss singing with an orchestra, the beauty of it all. I miss   the music. But at least I am able to still contribute, which is lovely.'' 
          Andrews, 71, has referred to her talent as ''my freak four-octave   voice,'' which gave her an early start in show business in England. The daughter   of music-hall performers, Andrews was singing on stage as a child and was still   in her teens when she debuted on Broadway. 
          She quickly became a Broadway superstar as Eliza Doolittle in ''My   Fair Lady'' and followed that musical as Guinevere in ''Camelot,'' though   success in Hollywood initially was elusive. 
          Andrews was passed over in favor of Audrey Hepburn for the big-screen   version of ''My Fair Lady.'' But Walt Disney cast her as the perky, singing   nanny in 1964's ''Mary Poppins,'' a screen debut that earned Andrews the   best-actress Academy Award. That same year, Hepburn was not even nominated for   ''My Fair Lady.'' 
          A year later, Andrews was nominated for best actress in ''The Sound of   Music,'' and she earned a third nomination for 1982's ''Victor/Victoria,'' one   of seven films she made with her husband, director Blake Edwards. 
          Andrews' voice problems developed while she was performing in the   Broadway production of ''Victor/Victoria'' in the mid-1990s. She underwent   surgery to remove non-cancerous nodules, but the operation left her without her   singing voice. 
          She sued two doctors and Mount Sinai hospital in New York and settled   out of court in 2000, with no terms disclosed. 
          By then, Andrews had long since established herself as a children's   author, a sidelight that became increasingly important with her singing career   over. Her books include ''Mandy,'' ''Little Bo,'' ''The Last of the Really Great   Whangdoodles'' and her ''Dumpy the Dump Truck'' tales. 
          Andrews and daughter Emma Walton Hamilton write together and oversee   a collection of children's stories under Andrews' name that includes their own   works, tales by others and books that had gone out-of-print. 
          The writing career began about 30 years ago during a simple game with her children ''that   required the paying of a forfeit,'' Andrews said. ''I was the first to lose, and   I said, 'What shall my forfeit be?' 
          ''My eldest daughter said, 'Write me a story,' and I thought, OK,   because I used to make up little tales for them. I thought a couple of pages of   an Aesop's fable would be fine, but she was my new stepdaughter, and I thought,   well, maybe I can really make something of this and give her a gift.'' 
          The pages piled up, husband Edwards urged her on, and ''when the book   was finished, I felt empty and I wanted to do it again,'' Andrews said. ''It's   been going on like that since.'' 
          After another children's book, William Steig's ''Shrek!'', became the   basis for the 2001 animated hit, Andrews was brought in for 2004's ''Shrek 2''   as the voice of Lillian, wife of the frog king Harold. 
          ''We were thinking, OK, we need a queen who has really got it   together but has got to have a sense of humor because of the world she lives   in,'' said ''Shrek the Third'' producer Aron Warner. ''Her husband's a frog, her   daughter's an ogre. So we had to have someone we knew could laugh but could also   carry that sort of regalness. 
          ''Julie's an icon and a dream to work with. We were just talking   about how sometimes during her recording sessions, we would sit there and go,   'That's Julie Andrews.' You need to be paying attention to the lines and not the   fact that it's Julie Andrews, and I wasn't listening.'' 
          Though her singing career is behind her, Andrews does get to hum a   tune in ''Shrek the Third.'' In a dizzy moment for Queen Lillian, she trills   through a few bars of ''My Favorite Things,'' one of the songs Andrews belted   out in ''The Sound of Music.'' 
          ''It felt like a charmingly wicked thing to do,'' Andrews said. 
          Andrews has directed for the stage and hopes to do it again amid her   writing and acting work, which she hopes will include future ''Shrek''   films. 
          ''I'm lucky, because I have this job, and I have my wonderful   publishing job. I seem to have spread, which makes me feel great, and I'm   getting to the age where I love to think about directing now,'' Andrews said.   ''I just love to keep myself active, because I've always been active. So as long   as I do something that I love, I'm happy.'           
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