âThis is the opening of a film about Sarah Bernhardt, if I could get anyone to do it,â she says, drawing her hand through the air. âYou start on a mirror, and the hand comes in the frame, and someone is trying to put on the eyeliner and itâs smudging. You have to erase it and start again. You donât even know who it is.â
Weâve been talking about makeup. For most of her careerâfrom her nightclub gigs when she was 18 right through to her major filmsâBarbra Streisand did her own. At first because there was no one else to do it, and then because no one could do it better. In her autobiography, My Name Is Barbra, out November 7, she tells the story of her film test for Funny Girl. The makeup people came to attend to her, and she thought, âGreat, theyâre the experts. Letâs see what they can do.â But she didnât love the result. âI said, âThank you very much,âââ Streisand writes, âbut then I asked, âWould it be all right if we also did a test with just me making myself up?â The studio said, âFine.âââ
The cinematographer picked Streisandâs.
Streisand is 81 now, and though her hands remain steady, she finds it harder to achieve that straight line across the eyelid. Thatâs the genesis of the Sarah Bernhardt ideaâBernhardt at an older age, still potent, still inimitable. âYou know, she played Juliet when she was 74,â she says.
I am at Streisandâs house in Malibu in July, two days before the Screen Actors Guild declares a strike, to talk to her about her book. Iâm one of only a handful of people whoâve read it at this point.
My Name Is Barbra is 992 pages of startling honesty and self-reflection, deadpan parenthetical asides (including a running bit about how much she loves going to the dentist), encyclopedic recall of onstage outfits, and rigorous analyses of her films, many of which she rewatched for the first time in decades. Thereâs the chilling story, which sheâs never told before, of the origins of her legendary stage fright. Thereâs her hilarious opening line to James Brolin, who sheâs been with for 27 years. Thereâs a page and a half correcting the record on the Streisand Effect, a term that refers to the way efforts to minimize a story can backfire, generating exponentially more press; it derives from legal action she took against a person who publicized the location of her home. (More on all this later.) Thereâs no index, so would-be browsers canât cheat. A genius moveâwas it her choice? She laughs. Absolutely. If she could plug away for 10 years writing this exhaustive, exhilarating account of her lifeâleaving blood on the page, per her editorâs requestâthen we can do her the courtesy of reading it from start to finish.
In 1984, Jackie Onassis, then an editor at Doubleday, invited Streisand to write a memoir. She turned the offer down: âFrankly, I thought at 42 I was too young, with much more work still to come.â (She wasnât wrong, but for those keeping score, she had already won an honorary Tony, two Oscars, one Emmy, and seven Grammys.) Still, she started making notes, and in 1999 began keeping a journal, longhand. âI never learned to type,â she says, an act of defiance against her mother, who wanted her to pursue a career in school administration so that sheâd have summers off. Instead, Streisand grew out her nails, precluding secretarial work, andâjust to put a point on itâbecame a supernova.
Even so, the only reason we have My Name Is Barbra, she tells me, is because she got stonewalled on two movies she wanted to make. Not the Bernhardt one, thatâs a new idea. No, one was a movie about the photographer Margaret Bourke-White, based on a script sheâd been developing since 1984. The other one was Gypsy. âI had the concept, you know? Frame by frame. How the songs should be done.â Sondheim told her she could either direct or act in it, but not both. âI said to him, You didnât like Yentl? He said no, I liked Yentl. I liked Yentl. But this is more difficult a part.â
Being with Barbra Streisand is a heightened experience. She comes prepared, carrying a folder with my name on it. She looks chic and comfortable wearing black pants and a gauzy top. We sit in her living room, the Pacific Ocean over her shoulder, and share a three-tiered tray of tea sandwiches and drink enormous cups of tea. Throughout our conversation she exhorts me to please eat, because she is eating, which she claims makes it easier to talk about herself. So we eat. At one point her three dogs come by for a visit. Two of them, Violet and Scarlet, are biological clones of Streisandâs beloved Sammie, a Coton de Tulear who died in 2017. Violet, despite allegedly being the well-mannered one, steals an egg sandwich.
Streisandâs speaking voice is a dreamâshe enunciates precisely but never sounds stagey. She is determined to answer my questions thoroughly, and she is also vocal about the fact that her train of thought occasionally takes the long route, which is how we get on the topics of copy editors gunning for proper use of the past perfect tense (those are my words; her words were âIâm from Brooklyn, Iâm not some English majorâ), Francis Bacon, waterwheels, the ideal spacing between ellipses, and her theory of cavemen, which explains why men try to keep women down.
Mind you, it was all relevant to our larger conversation about her life and work, and to My Name Is Barbra, which is at once a vital account of an American icon and a deeply personal and dishy stream of consciousness. Even when we are back in Flatbush with young Streisand, narrator Barbra doesnât hesitate to jump in, just as she would in person, ad-libbing, digressing, finessing. Itâs singularly entertaining, energetic, and, best of all, it sounds just like her.
In the chapter called âBrando,â for example, we discover not only that Marlon Brando propositioned Streisand at a party in 1966 (he said, âIâd like to fuck you,â with his wife in the adjoining room) and that she turned him down but they became lifelong friends and phone pals, but also that her favorite ice cream is McConnellâs Brazilian Coffee in Santa Barbara, which is so good that sometimes she and Jim (thatâs James Brolin to you and me) will drive up there just to get itâoh, and can you believe that after Brando saw the film of Funny Girl he called Barbra up to deliver this critique: âYou were really good, but you run funnyâ?
I observe that this is one of the wilder chapters Iâve ever encountered in literature, and she says, âWell, heâs Marlon Brando!â True. And also, sheâs Barbra Streisand.
Loss and persistence have been the twin engines of Streisandâs career. Her father died when she was 15 months old. Her mother, who had a beautiful voice but never pursued singing professionally, was impossible to please. At age 13, Barbara (she would drop the middle a five years later, to make it unique) knew she wanted to be a famous actor. Music wasnât on her radar: âNobody in high school was particularly impressed with my voice,â she writes, âand neither was I.â Nevertheless, as she held down menial jobs (stuffing envelopes, ushering at theaters) to fund her study of acting after graduation, it was singing that gave her her first big break. Specifically the song âA Sleepinâ Bee,â which she sang at a talent competition. She won, paving the way for her first professional engagement, at age 18: a two-week contract at a club on Eighth Street called the Bon Soir.
She was an immediate hit, but typically for Streisand, success didnât quite register as such. âI had never even been in a nightclub until I sang in one,â she writes. âWhat was I doing here? I was supposed to be onstage, playing Juliet.â Her vexed relationship with achievement underlies both the book and our conversation. She is supremely confident in her abilities and instincts, especially as a directorââI see everything as a movie,â she saysâbut she also tells me, without a trace of false modesty, that she believes both her good reviews and her bad ones because, as she says, âIâm not completely sure that what I do is so great.â Itâs not that the negative reviews donât sting; they do. Itâs more that ultimately, she is her own harshest critic. What she values about art is processânot perfection, believe it or not, and certainly not completion. She never listens to her albums or watches her movies because, as she says, âI always see something to change.â When I ask if she thinks she is too hard on herself, or whether thatâs what propels her forward, she says, âI wouldnât say too hard on myself.â And then: âI am very hard on myself.â
The memoir draws its power from these contradictions: Streisandâs stratospheric rise coupled with her inability to be satisfied; her countless awards set against the fact that she still couldnât get the greenlight to play Mama Rose in Gypsy, which drives her nuts. (For evidence that even the most proven talent in Hollywood requires superhuman tenacity to get projects over the line, I refer you to her chapters on making Yentl.) To the extent that Streisand values fame, itâs not about a desire to be recognized or fulfilled by an audience. âI donât think of myself as a movie star,â she says. Fame for her is a means to an end. Often, those ends are highly relatable. In the book, she recalls a moment in her third-floor walk-up on West 48th Street, at a time when she was earning $55 a week working for a press firm and eating at the Automat. She loved clean sheets and a freshly made bed but couldnât get the knack of hospital corners. âI have a vivid memory of standing in the doorway of the bedroom,â she writes, âlooking at the rumpled sheets, and thinking, I have to become famous just so I can get somebody else to make my bed.â The only time she brings up her own celebrity in our conversationâbrings it up as a source of unalloyed joy, I meanâis when I ask her how she came to have a rose named after her. âBecause Iâm famous!â she exclaims.
Indeed, she got so famous so early and has stayed famous so long that over the course of seven decades in show business, she has met, worked with, or otherwise crossed paths with virtually everyone, from Princess Margaret to Prince. Itâs probably for the best that My Name Is Barbra doesnât have an index, because it wouldnât be fair to all the other indexes. Presidents? She has sung for Democratic commanders in chief all the way back to John F. Kennedy. Prime ministers? She dated Pierre Trudeau when she was 27 and he was 50 (she describes him as âan elegant man who was still enough of a free spirit to wear sandals to Parliamentâ). Hollywood paramours? Ryan OâNeal and Don Johnson, check. Nobel laureates? Bob Dylan once wrote her a letter in which he called her his favorite star.
There are also moments that are highly Streisand-specific. For example, you may be curious to know her take on the Streisand Effect: âWhen I first heard the term, I naively thought, Is that about the effect of my music? Little did I know.â She writes that she didnât intend to try to remove the picture of her house, she just didnât want her name to be publicized with it, for security reasons.
On cloning, a topic on which precious few people can offer testimonials, she notes, âYou can clone the look of a dog but you canât clone the soul.â To clarify, she doesnât regard that as a bad thing. (I can confirm that the dogs are their own individual doggy selves and also adorable.)
That zinger I mentioned earlierâher opening gambit to Brolin? It was: âWho fucked up your hair?â He had just had it buzzed, for a part. He took no offense, they hung out all evening, and theyâve been together since. She tells me what a wonderful listener he is, that he comes to every one of her concerts and never gets bored, that heâs never placed himself in competition with her work. In the book, committed to her bit about the dentist, she cops to another reason for marrying him: âHe has great teeth.â
And as for her stage frightâs origin story: She was doing Funny Girl on Broadway opposite Sydney Chaplin (Charlieâs son), and they had what she refers to as a âflirtation,â but she felt guilty (she was married to Elliott Gould at the time) and put a stop to it. Chaplin was angry. Onstage, every night, he began cursing and jeering at her, so quietly that no one but Streisand could hear him. Her costar had become her nemesis. It made her physically sick and threw her concentration. She went through with the rest of the production and made good on her commitment to open the show in London. But she never did Broadway again.
Funny Girl, of course, came back to Broadway last year. I ask her if she followed any of the drama around the casting of Fanny Brice and whether sheâs seen Lea Micheleâs performance. She didnât, and she hasnât, but says, âIâm happy for herââshe knew Michele had dreamed of playing that part. As fate would have it, Streisandâs first show, I Can Get It for You Wholesale, is being revived this fall, six decades after she made her debut in it, opposite Gould. She was only 19 but already a force: She insisted on performing her characterâs signature song while rolling around stage in an office chair, because she thought it would be funnier. âApparently most young women, given their first part in a Broadway show, do not challenge the director. They feel lucky enough just to be there,â she writes. âThat was not me.â It took her ages to convince him, but she did, and she was right, and the picture of her in the chair sits at the top of that chapter, triumphant.
Streisand pulls out of her folder a printed document, about a dozen pages longâthe treatment for an unmade sequel she wrote to The Way We Were. The classic romance, in which she stars with Robert Redford, will be rereleased this fall, with two scenes that Streisand restored, having preserved them in a personal vault for 50 years because it mattered that much to her. She reads aloud, in narrator mode:
Streisand stops. Sheâs not happy with what comes nextââWow, I gotta revisit thisââso we talk it through instead. In the original movie, which was directed by Sydney Pollack, intellect won out over passion. In the sequel, Streisand says, passion has its victory. The upheavals of â68 create a family out of Katie, Hubbell, and the teenage daughter heâd never met.
âSydney and I were trying to make the sequel for 20 years at least. Redford never wanted to make the sequel,â she says. Arthur Laurents and David Rayfiel, who were writers on The Way We Were, both took a stab at it. So did someone else whose name she canât remember. âNone of them were good,â she tells me. So she did it herself. But now, she fears, itâs too late. She couldnât bear anyone else playing those characters. It had to be her and Bob.
I venture, cautiouslyâaware I might be committing blasphemyâthat these days the way to get this sequel made with Redford would be to de-age him. Streisand lights up. âOh! Thatâs funny,â she says. âItâs actually a good idea.â It occurs to me that a director who cloned her dog would not hesitate to embrace all available technologies. Plus, sheâd seen the first 10 minutes of the new Indiana Jones movie and thought they did a great job with Harrison Ford. We move on to other topics, and I even get to see the Barbra Streisand rose in the garden, but as we say our goodbyes, she circles back to the subject of the sequel. Sheâs going to call Redford and see what he thinks.
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