San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

A beloved film its makers didn’t like

- By Jacqueline Cutler Jacqueline Cutler is a staff writer at the New York Daily News, where this review first appeared.

It was a movie nobody liked making.

The producer worried it cost too much, yet the director felt he was spending too little. The leading man called the script “a piece of junk,” and the leading lady complained her best scenes were cut.

Even the screenwrit­er pronounced it a disaster. Yet the millions who saw “The Way We Were” disagreed.

Now, 50 years later — the official anniversar­y is in October — it’s an acknowledg­ed classic romance film. How the movie was made, as Robert Hofler’s “The Way They Were: How Epic Battles and Bruised Egos Brought a Classic Hollywood Love Story to the Screen” details the struggle.

Its success shocked everybody.

The story starts with playwright and director Arthur Laurents, who met a radical Jewish coed at Cornell University in the ’30s. Later, in the ’40s, he had an affair with actor Farley Granger and then with a blond salesclerk, Tom Hatcher, who became Laurents’ lifelong partner. Over the years, those stories commingled in Laurents’ mind.

In 1970, Laurents began writing what would become “The Way We Were.” On the surface, it was a Hollywood romance about two people split by politics. Underneath, though, it was really about Laurents, a Flatbush, N.Y., boy born Arthur Levine, who kept falling for gorgeous gentiles. Laurents identified with the heroine, Katie. He decided Barbra Streisand was the only one who could play her. Streisand agreed.

“I want this to be my next movie,” she informed producer Ray Stark. Stark read the story on a plane. When he landed,

he called Laurents and bought it.

He brought on director Sydney Pollack, who loved that much of the story occurred during Hollywood’s communist witch hunt.

“This is dynamite,” he told Laurents. “This will be the first-ever blacklist movie.”

But Pollack said he would only do the film if his friend Robert Redford co-starred. The only problem was, Redford hated the part, calling hero Hubbell Gardiner “a Ken doll.” And he wasn’t that crazy about Streisand. “She’s not going to sing, is she?” Redford asked. “I don’t want her to sing in the middle of the movie.”

It was a casting coup, a firsttime teaming of two of the era’s biggest box-office stars. But it also brought new problems.

Signing a star the size of Redford — his agent negotiated $1.2 million, $200,000 more than Streisand — meant the budget had to increase. That meant the romantic element had to grow too.

A big movie about the McCarthy era was risky. However, a film about whether the nice Jewish woman and the gorgeous blond man will connect was a safer bet. And so the political themes were trimmed (and with those cuts went an angry Laurents, who, as the writer, couldn’t protect his screenplay from other people’s rewrites). As Redford’s part was pumped up, so was his ego. A line of dialogue where his character apologizes for being a bad lover was deleted.

Additional cuts came after filming. Still, the shoot went well. Onscreen, the chemistry between the stars was obvious. And, later, Laurents suggested why.

“She was simply mesmerized by him,” he said. “She found him so beautiful. She was infatuated with Robert Redford, who handled it well.”

Redford — happily married to his first wife, and raising four kids — was particular­ly careful. When he met Streisand before the shoot for a get-to-know-you dinner at her home, he brought Pollack for protection. He was even more careful when it came time to shoot the big love scene. Before he climbed into bed with Streisand, he put on two jockstraps.

As besotted as she was with her co-star, Streisand soon felt differentl­y about the movie. After the picture was finished, Stark ordered the film be kept to a tight two hours. First on the cutting-room floor was anything that slowed the pace, which meant even more political material was excised, which included two of Streisand’s biggest scenes.

But Pollack stood firm. The scenes remained cut.

In the end, the movie wasn’t what those making it had hoped it would be. Pollack felt he had to compromise a lot. Laurents complained this wasn’t the story he wanted to tell. Streisand wondered if the final edits might have cost her an Oscar.

Redford? He drove himself to the Times Square premiere — and didn’t stop. “I just drove right past it and kept going, and it felt so great,” he said. It was just another job, and it was over.

It may be hard to imagine a time when movie audiences flocked to a period piece boasting nothing but two stars and a couple of kisses. It was a grown-up story with no superheroe­s. But back then, that was the way we were.

THE WAY THEY WERE: HOW EPIC BATTLES AND BRUISED EGOS BROUGHT A CLASSIC HOLLYWOOD LOVE STORY TO THE SCREEN

By Robert Hofler (Citadel; 304 pages; $28)

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 ?? Provided by Robert Hofler ?? Robert Hofler’s new book details the struggle of making the film “The Way We Were.”
Provided by Robert Hofler Robert Hofler’s new book details the struggle of making the film “The Way We Were.”

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