Sunday, December 10, 2017

A Funny, Talented, Beautiful Girl


Last December, I finally got to see Barbra Streisand perform live, after a lifetime of loving and idolizing her. La Streisand was truly divine, in full command of her voice and her talents, and transported us through a half century of her greatest hits, including a few of the famous Christmas songs she had not sung for decades. It was magical. (That concert tour, "The Music, The Mem'ries, The Magic" is now available on Netflix and iTunes.) Every Christmas season, I listen to that classic Christmas album, and also find time to watch the delightful movie Funny Girl (1968), which I first saw during a long-ago holiday season.

Barbra Streisand was launched as an international superstar in her film debut, the big-screen version of her 1964 Broadway triumph. The songstress was already a best-selling recording artist and a Broadway star, with several CBS television specials under her belt, but movies are an entirely different animal. The Jule Styne and Bob Merrill musical is a rags-to-riches tale of Tin Pan Alley-era entertainer Fanny Brice, whose trajectory from Henry Street in Brooklyn to the Ziegfeld Follies and international stardom failed to bring her personal happiness and fulfillment.


Barbra Streisand as Fanny Brice as Barbra Streisand...building a character and her own legend

The leap from stage to television to screen was helped by the fact that the Broadways musical’s songs were already hits by the time the film was released, thanks to Barbra’s rerecordings of “People” and “Don’t Rain on My Parade” on her already spectacularly successful record albums. Barbra herself had been introduced to TV audiences, first through guest shots on variety hours including a notable appearance on The Judy Garland Show, then through the series of CBS specials she headlined herself starting in 1965.

Directed by the great William Wyler (The Little Foxes, The Heiress), with musical numbers staged by Herbert Ross (The Turning Point, Steel Magnolias), Funny Girl gave Streisand an auspicious and audacious film debut. Barbra gets the full star treatment in this old-fashioned backstage musical romance, costumed by Oscar-winning designer Irene Sharaff and cast opposite Egypt-born heartthrob Omar Sharif, who had made international 1960s audiences swoon with his handsome presence in the epics Lawrence of Arabia and Dr. Zhivago.

Photographed by veteran cameraman Harry Stradling, a favorite among actresses because he always painstakingly lit each of his leading ladies to look their very best, the Stradling treatment sets Streisand’s unusual features aglow, unveiling to the world her unique beauty in widescreen splendor.

A beautiful reflection: Director of photography Harry Stradling highlighted Streisand's unusual, unique features

In a movie year that included innovative fare including the groundbreaking sci-fi alleghory Planet of the Apes and the startling study of contemporary evil Rosemary’s Baby, Funny Girl is a throwback to showbiz biopics made 10 to 20 years earlier, including Words and Music and Love Me or Leave Me. But it works because it is a vehicle for a timeless, contemporary, new breed of star, an exciting new personality who is clearly headed for a bright future; Streisand is timeless, at home in front of the camera, and also a solid actor with remarkable comic timing, real romantic chemistry with costar Sharif and a vulnerability that registered perfectly on the movie screen if not in real life. (Tales of Streisand being a  difficult diva—willful, narcissistic, exacting and perfectionistic and tough—begin right here on this picture.)

Good-looking Arab boy meets nice Jewish girl: Sharif and Streisand

The movie itself is solid and entertaining, and also contains one of Omar Sharif’s finest performances as well, as the ne’er do well Nick Arnstein (though the pairing of Jewish Barbra and the Arab Omar caused some controversy in the Middle East). Kay Medford and Walter Pidgeon lend memorable support as Mama Brice and Flo Ziegfeld, but Funny Girl is clearly, unmistakably Streisand’s picture. There’s little room for anyone or anything else. (Beautiful actress Anne Francis’s role as Fanny’s sardonic showgirl confidante was all but cut out of the film, for example, to make more room for Barbra’s singing and emoting.

Duelling divas: Streisand and Garland harmonize

And it is indeed a rich, satisfying and startling film performance. Not since Judy Garland had there been a musical star so vibrant, so versatile, so in command in front of the camera. Garland had been galvanized, inspired and challenged by the youngster’s talents during that memorable 1963 guest appearance. Judy herself had been considered an unconventional Hollywood beauty as well, feeling like an ugly duckling next to costars like Lana Turner and Hedy Lamarr at MGM.


"I'm the Greatest Star" —and she wasn't kidding
Streisand won the coveted Academy Award that year for her performance as Fanny Brice. Though she shared the award in a tie with Katharine Hepburn (Kate’s third of an eventual FOUR Best Actress statuettes), the film veteran didn’t show up at the ceremonies, leaving Barbra the spotlight on Oscar night. She accepted her Academy Award in a chic see-through miniskirt creation designed by Arnold Scaasi.

Winning an acting Oscar for your film debut is unusual; for a musical performance, even more rarified. Three years earlier, Julie Andrews had won Best Actress for her film debut in the musical Mary Poppins, and 20 years later Jennifer Hudson would win a Supporting Oscar for her first film, the movie version of Dreamgirls.

Golden-voiced singer, Academy Award-winning Best Actress

Streisand would win a second Academy Award in 1976 as composer of the Oscar-winning song “Evergreen” (this time sharing the honor with Paul Williams) from her film A Star Is Born, but the only other time she would be nominated for her acting (so far!) would be for The Way We Were in 1973.

In the inimitable Hollywood way of attempting to cash in on itself, Streisand’s next two films would also be in the old-school musical vein. Barbra was rushed into two more musicals back to back, On A Clear Day You Can See Forever and Hello, Dolly, with not-always stellar results, proving that the epic  movie musical was approaching its death throes...but Barbra’s triumphant career was only just beginning. She jumped into the 1970s with a series of fine performance in more contemporary fare including The Owl and the Pussycat and What’s Up, Doc. Years later, Streisand very reluctantly reprised her role of Fanny Brice in the inferior sequel Funny Lady to fulfill a contract obligation with Ray Stark, the producer who had paved her road to stardom with Funny Girl (and happened to be married to Fanny Brice’s daughter Fran).

Her tour de force film debut took Hollywood and the world by storm, and the indefatigable Barbra has remained an A-List superstar ever since.

6 comments:

  1. Really wonderful look at Streisand and Funny Girl, and I think you make excellent comparisons with Judy Garland. You wouldn't have thought that Streisand would have become a major star, but through talent and determination she really did make it. I have a recording of her pre-Funny Girl show "I Could Get it for You Wholesale" and she reveals on that CD that even early on she had something special. People didn't care that she may have lacked conventional beauty.

    My favorite of her films is "Yentl," which I think is the culmination of her artistry and a personal statement as well. On "Funny Girl" I've no doubt William Wyler butted heads with Barbra even as he did years earlier with Bette Davis!

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  2. Hi Bill - thank you so much as always for stopping by!
    You are right, I believe I read that Wyler and Streisand clashed a bit in the making of the film, but like with Davis, he was full of praise at her talent and her good instincts. And I also believe that Streisand credits Wyler as one of her chief inspirations to become a director, which she finally did with Yentl.
    Barbra proves that if you believe in yourself, all things are possible!
    -Chris

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  3. Chris, you are obviously a huge fan of Striesand. I hope you won't take it bad when I say I would prefer Bette Midler myself. Striesand's duet with Donna Summer is one of the few songs that she sings that I don't switch the radio station. As far as her acting, well, I must admit, I haven't watched very many of her movies... "What's Up, Doc?" and "Nuts" is pretty much it. But it's just a matter of tastes. I'll probably give Funny Girl a shot now just because you reviewed it. And I'll do my best to approach it without my preconceived opinion about Striesand.

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  4. Nice recap on Funny Girl and Streisand's overall career, Chris!
    How cool you got to see your idol in concert, too...
    I've always had mixed feelings about Streisand, like Garland, I'm not a die-hard fan.
    However, I realize each was the voice of a lifetime, and I respect that.

    And I do want to see 'Funny Girl' as I've never seen it in its entirety!
    My partner grabbed what he thought was 'Funny Girl' from the library recently...and it was 'Hello, Dolly!' NOT the same by a long shot!
    However, I recently checked out 'On a Clear Day' and there were some lovely things about it...

    My fave Streisand movie is 'The Way We Were.' Though it has flaws, thanks mainly to the director, Barbra is brilliant in it.

    Cheers, Chris, and have a happy holiday!

    Rick

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  5. Hi Rick- thanks for stopping by!
    LOL, Funny Girl is indeed NOT Hello, Dolly! I think you'll enjoy it once you see it.
    Both On a Clear Day and The Way We Were are among my favorites; hope I get around to writing about those too. The Way We Were has the wonderful contributions of Redford and Pollack, and the solid script by Arthur Laurents, and it's not about singing,it's all about the acting...
    As always, thanks so much for reading and commenting!
    -C

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  6. Hi Quiggy - Ah, so you prefer Ms. Midler, I understand! I love her too and had the pleasure of enjoying an amazing concert with the Divine Miss M a few years back. She is a dynamic entertainer!! And The Rose is among my favorite movies and I will be writing about it one of these days!

    What's Up Doc is one of my favorite Streisands...in y collection, I own Funny Girl, On a Clear Day, What's Up Doc, A Star is Born and The Way We Were. Super-fan, yes, Guilty, to quote her 1980s album with Barry Gibb...

    Thank you as always for your support, my friend!
    -C

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