One of Edwards' earliest films, about a quirky New York socialite named Holly Golightly, was also one of his most iconic, thanks to a memorable leading performance by Audrey Hepburn and the Oscar-winning song "Moon River."
A year later, Edwards tackled the very serious subject of alcoholism when he directed Jack Lemmon and Lee Remick as a couple quickly spiraling downward as a result of their addiction to the bottle.
Edwards will undoubtedly be most remembered for bringing the bumbling Inspector Clouseau to the screen by way of comic genius Peter Sellers. The beloved slapstick farce spawned several sequels, including Edwards' well-received 1964 follow-up A Shot in the Dark.
Dudley Moore played a songwriter going through a mid-life crisis in this sexy comedy made all the more sexier by the perfect 10 referred to in the title, Bo Derek.
This Hollywood satire about a producer-director looking to spice up his big-budget musical had Edwards' real-life wife Julie Andrews do something Mary Poppins would never have dreamt of doing—flash her boobs!
The gender-bending musical starred Julie Andrews as, stay with us here, a woman who disguises herself as a man in order to play a female impersonator in 1934 Paris.
Bruce Willis' first starring vehicle found the actor portraying a guy whose night out with the lovely Kim Basinger doesn't go exactly as planned thanks to a few too many beverages.
Being female can sometimes be challenging. Especially if you're actually a womanizer who is murdered and comes back to life in the form of Ellen Barkin.