Yorkshire Post - YP Magazine

A nose for stardom and a battle to succeed

- My Name is Barbra by Barbra Streisand Century, £35 Review by Shaun Curran

When Barbra Streisand was a young girl – she had yet to drop the “a” from her first name in a quest to become “different and unique” – she stood in the hallway of her tiny third floor apartment one day and thought to herself: “I have to become famous just so I can get somebody else to make my bed.”

She probably didn’t count on becoming so famous that, at 81 and after six decades at the top of the entertainm­ent world – Streisand has sold more than 150 million albums and has won five Emmys, 10 Golden Globes, two Oscars and one Tony award (the coveted clean sweep EGOT) – she’d release a whopping, much-anticipate­d 992-page memoir around 25 years in the making. It is probably far too long for the casually interested, but the book’s friendly, warm tone makes for an entertaini­ng if painstakin­gly recounted record-setting tome.

Much of Streisand’s story will be familiar: how she grew up impoverish­ed amid the fallout from the death of her father when she was 15 months old, and how her relationsh­ip with her unreliable, cold, unforgivin­g, uncaring, jealous mother, was a constant bane of her life.

So too the glory: her big break at Bon Soir, the Greenwich Village nightclub; how her star turn in Funny Girl on Broadway at 21 led to an Oscar-winning adaptation and Hollywood career; how her music career began with her 1963 Grammy-winning debut album; her groundbrea­king directoria­l success with 1983’s awardwinni­ng Yentl.

But there are plenty of disclosure­s that will satisfy fans. As comes with the sort of stratosphe­ric fame Streisand enjoys there is highlevel celebrity tittle-tattle: back massages for Robert De Niro; bonhomie with the Clintons; a funny meeting with President John F Kennedy and a rather flirty relationsh­ip with King Charles. And then there are revelation­s about the men in her life, the would-be suitors – love letters from a smitten Omar Sharif; the many advances of her friend Marlon Brando, all of which she turned down – as well as her significan­t relationsh­ips.

She wasn’t attracted to first husband Elliott Gould until she saw the back of his neck; on the 23-year age gap between her and former Canadian Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau, she writes “my brain was in love, but not my body.” But elsewhere male attention is more problemati­c. Strength in the face of patriarchy is a constant theme: on Broadway, in Hollywood, from the press. She wasn’t demanding, unreasonab­le or diva-ish: she just had high standards and clear artistic visions that were only a problem because she was a woman daring to challenge male-dominated arenas.

On the set of Hello, Dolly!, Walter Matthau screamed at her, “I have more talent in my farts than you have in your whole body!’”; Mandy Patinkin cried and was difficult when she refused to have an affair during the making of Yentl ;on 60 Minutes, interviewe­r Mike Wallace was so sexist he made her cry; worst of all was her treatment from Sydney Chaplin, son of Charlie, who undermined and threatened her on stage during her star-making Broadway run in Funny Girl. “Sydney made me physically ill. But I refused to let him destroy me.”

It is all part of the narrative of a fight for control in the face of those trying to tell her what to do and how to do it: the book is lightly peppered with passages about her distinctiv­e nose; the cruel barbs, and how she resisted all advice to do something about it. It feels like a metaphor for her entire career. “I thought, isn’t my talent enough?” she wondered. It was.

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