READ THIS NEXT: Aretha Franklin Feuded With This Star for Years: “We’ve Never Been Friends.” In 1966, Andrews’ film career was still very new, but she had already made what would be two of her biggest movies. She moved from theater to film in 1964 with her debut, Mary Poppins. Then, in 1965, she starred in The Sound of Music. The following year, she was in the drama Hawaii, which co-starred Richard Harris and Max von Sydow. As reported by the Mirror, Harris talked about working with Andrews with his biographer, Michael Feeney Callan, for the book Richard Harris: The Biography. Harris said that he had “rarely, if ever, experienced such hatred for a person” as he did for Andrews. The Gladiator actor continued, “She was condescending and mean. I’m sure she saw how much I was enjoying myself, and I thought that annoyed her.” He added, “She would say something, all quiet and conspiratorial, to the director, and I would shout ‘Did you say something, Jules?’ which just [expletive] her.” Harris died in 2002.ae0fcc31ae342fd3a1346ebb1f342fcb For more celebrity news delivered right to your inbox, sign up for our daily newsletter. During a 2015 interview with The Sydney Morning Herald, Andrews was asked about Harris, particularly about him reportedly saying her “steely ambition” was “ugly to behold.” The reporter said that it seemed like something a man might say about a successful woman but not a successful man. Andrews laughed and replied, “I guess you’re right about that. Indeed, you are right.” The reporter then wondered if the comment might have been fueled by jealousy, to which Andrews responded, “I think at that time he was probably knocking back the beer quite a lot. It could have just come out of that.” Harris isn’t the only actor who had an issue with Andrews early in her career. As reported by the Mirror, Rex Harrison, Andrews’ co-star in the original production of the musical My Fair Lady, threatened to quit because of her. “If that [expletive] is here on Monday, I’m quitting the show,” he said, according to the book Showstoppers!: The Surprising Backstage Stories of Broadway’s Most Remarkable Songs by Gerald Nachman. Andrews wrote about the tension between them herself in her memoir, Home. “He was tall and thin, his clothes exquisitely tailored. He was sophisticated, with a clear sense of himself, albeit somewhat egocentric. He was definitely the center of attention,” she wrote of Harrison (via Tatler). “He was, quite rightly, making a stink about this silly little English girl who couldn’t manage the role. Apparently he once said something like, ‘if you don’t get rid of that [expletive], you won’t have a show.” As we now know, Harrison and Andrews both stuck around, and the show was a big hit and later a movie, though Audrey Hepburn was given the film role over Andrews.