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- <text id=94TT0633>
- <title>
- May 16, 1994: Show Business:The Way She Is
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- May 16, 1994 "There are no devils...":Rwanda
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ARTS & MEDIA/SHOW BUSINESS, Page 76
- The Way She Is
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Embarking on her long-awaited tour, Barbra Streisand looks inward--and lets fly at the press
- </p>
- <p>By Richard Zoglin--Reported by Martha Smilgis/Los Angeles and William Tynan/New
- York
- </p>
- <p> Barbra Streisand is not happy. Here she is, a pop superstar
- revered by millions, newly embarked on her first paid concert
- tour in 28 years. Yet all she hears is complaints.
- </p>
- <p> Take those ticket prices. With a top fee of $350 a seat, the
- Streisand show (which begins its five-city U.S. swing this week
- in Washington) far surpasses even the priciest predecessors
- in the can-you-top-this field of concert extravaganzas. But
- Streisand doesn't see a problem. "I think this price is fair,"
- she says. "If you amortize the money over 28 years, it's $12.50
- a year. So is it worth $12.50 a year to see me sing? To hear
- me sing live? I'm not going to do it again."
- </p>
- <p> Then there is the TelePrompTer matter. During her show, a video
- screen hangs high above the audience, displaying not only the
- lyrics to her songs but most of the patter in between them.
- Critics who caught her first concerts in London were derisive.
- Streisand claims that she hardly ever looks at the prompter
- but needs it to relieve the stage fright that kept her away
- from live performing since a 1967 free concert in New York City,
- when she forgot some song lyrics. "I couldn't be doing this
- ((touring))," she says, "if I didn't have it as my security
- blanket. Some people have worry beads; I have TelePrompTers."
- </p>
- <p> Yet her biggest peeve of all is the nosy, mean-spirited press.
- Usually Streisand tries to avoid reporters. But in a rare interview
- with TIME last week, she had all the recent slights at her fingertips:
- a British tabloid that claimed she arrived in London toting
- her own trash can (it was actually a hatbox); a New York Times
- op-ed piece criticized the dress she wore at the Inaugural gala;
- a story in TIME listed some of her alleged tantrums. And when,
- at a dinner honoring Hillary Clinton, she gave a speech about
- our society's view of women, nobody covered it.
- </p>
- <p> "What I don't understand about the press in general is a kind
- of contempt for the facts," she says. "To propagate the myth
- of the diva is so simplistic. It's a very simplistic way to
- look at people. The power of the printed word is black and white,
- but people are many shades of gray. They can't quite understand
- how I could be a so-called powerful woman and yet be frightened,
- let's say. It's like they don't go together. It's too complex."
- </p>
- <p> Powerful, complex, frightened--all might fairly be applied
- to Streisand. She is the most popular and enduring pop singer
- of her generation; a filmmaker widely acknowledged to have more
- clout than any other woman in Hollywood; a political activist
- with the money to back her beliefs. Yet stories of her rampaging
- ego, of fights with co-stars and directors, of her obsessive
- perfectionism, are legion. More recently she has been knocked
- for being first among Hollywood's Clinton groupies. "On a clear
- day in Washington," a catty New York Times story put it, "you
- can see Barbra Streisand forever."
- </p>
- <p> Responding to the criticism, she can be both feisty and ingenuous.
- Is she not uncomfortable with all the extravagant merchandising
- that surrounds her tour? Along with the usual T shirts and overpriced
- programs, Sony, her record company, is setting up Barbra Boutiques
- in each of the cities where she will appear. There will be Streisand
- shirts, Streisand pens, Streisand watches, ties, scarves and
- a $400 wool jacket. Yet Streisand says she had a ball helping
- design the clothes. "I almost didn't want them to do any merchandising.
- I said, `Who would ever buy my stuff?' When they told me that
- people at the Super Bowl spend $20 per person, but in Las Vegas
- my merchandise sold $40 per person, I was thrilled but absolutely
- amazed."
- </p>
- <p> She is rightly puzzled over the controversy surrounding her
- plan to use the concert tour to help some favorite charities.
- Streisand has turned over blocks of tickets for each concert
- to such groups as the Gay Men's Health Crisis and the Environmental
- Defense Fund, which in turn must sell the $350 tickets for $1,000
- apiece in order to realize a $650 profit. Some charities have
- been left with many seats unsold, and there has been criticism
- that Streisand should have simply given away the tickets. Yet
- since she has promised to take back any unsold tickets, most
- charity heads agree that it is a no-lose proposition.
- </p>
- <p> After all the posturing and behind-the-scenes brouhahas, it
- is a relief to encounter Streisand where she belongs--onstage.
- Her show, previewed in Las Vegas last New Year's and launched
- in London last month, is a sleek and impressive showcase. Appearing
- on a lavishly appointed living-room set (Greek columns, flowing
- sheer drapery), Streisand glides through most of her big hits
- (People, Evergreen), the standards she has made her own (My
- Man, Happy Days Are Here Again) and a few recent additions to
- the Streisand canon (As If We Never Said Goodbye, from Sunset
- Boulevard). The voice is still strong and supple: too polished
- and self-conscious to convey much real emotion anymore, but
- for sheer musicality, as thrilling as ever.
- </p>
- <p> Between numbers, Streisand introduces some film clips, reminisces
- about her childhood, pokes fun at her obsession with psychotherapy.
- Some material is tailored to individual cities; in London she
- joked about Prince Charles and wondered what it would have been
- like to be "the first real Jewish princess." The only thing
- missing (and the TelePrompTer is at least partly to blame) is
- any sense of spontaneity or free-flowing interaction with the
- crowd. It is not so much a concert as a well-oiled Broadway
- tribute--or maybe an American Masters TV special, presented
- by the Master herself.
- </p>
- <p> For Streisand, 52, the concert is both a career capstone and
- a personal milestone. "I enjoy the privacy of the creative process
- when I make films and when I record," she says. "There's a certain
- kind of perfection that you attain when you're doing it privately.
- ((But)) being on the stage now is the acceptance of all imperfections.
- I'm singing about 30 songs, and my voice goes hoarse at times,
- and that's part of the growing-up process--in which you accept
- the flaws and that it's not perfect. And to allow people to
- see me that way is my growth process.
- </p>
- <p> "Before we opened Funny Girl ((on Broadway in 1964))," she says,
- "we had 41 last scenes. Every night was a change, and I loved
- every minute of it. We froze it opening night, and I was in
- prison. I used to give notes after every show--like the orchestra's
- off--because I could never let it become old. It had to be
- fresh and real every time, every moment."
- </p>
- <p> Streisand recalls the times with girlish enthusiasm. "I was
- usually late to the theater every night. I used to try to get
- a cab on Central Park West, and half the time I couldn't get
- the cab. I would hail police cars, trucks, anything, with tears
- streaming down my cheeks, to try to get me to the theater. I
- was always late--have to get in there, put on the clothes,
- get on the stage. And when ((method-acting guru)) Lee Strasberg
- came to see me, I said, `I feel so bad I can't use your method
- in terms of ((Stanislavsky's book)) An Actor Prepares.' And
- he said, `Your preparation is not to prepare.'"
- </p>
- <p> It is hard to imagine a piece of advice less likely to influence
- Streisand. Even those who find her a maddening perfectionist
- admit that few performers work harder. A musician who played
- in her Las Vegas show logged in 60 hours of orchestra rehearsal
- time, and says Streisand, unlike most singers, was present for
- almost every minute. Lyricist Marilyn Bergman, who with her
- partner and husband Alan helped write the script for Streisand's
- stage show, scoffs at her reputation as a difficult diva. "Barbra
- never says, `That's good enough.' People who don't understand
- or appreciate this process might find it threatening or tiresome.
- But she is indefatigable."
- </p>
- <p> Streisand's friends also claim she has gotten a bum rap for
- her political activities. "I think she's a very, very serious
- person," says Larry Kramer, the AIDS activist who is working
- with Streisand on a screen version of his play The Normal Heart,
- which she will direct, produce and act in. "She's very interested
- in politics, she's very interested in the daily newspapers and
- journalism, and she's very interested in learning." Streisand
- fervently defends her attachment to the Clinton Administration
- during the Inaugural and after. "I think the press was jealous
- of the people who had some access to Clinton," she says.
- </p>
- <p> To be sure, few Hollywood stars have more effectively spent
- their money in pursuit of political passion. Her foundation
- has distributed $7.7 million to support a variety of liberal
- causes. Along with The Normal Heart (subject: AIDS), Streisand
- is also producing a TV movie about Colonel Margarethe Cammermeyer,
- who was booted out of the military for being a lesbian (Glenn
- Close will star). She donated her Malibu ranch to an environmental
- conservancy and put up for auction millions of dollars' worth
- of art and furnishings that she had collected since the '60s.
- "I don't want to spend so much time being preoccupied with objects,"
- she wrote in the Christie's catalog that offered the items,
- "and I don't want so many things anymore."
- </p>
- <p> For those watching her show from $350 (or $1,000) seats in 14,000-seat
- arenas over the next few weeks, she may not look like a stripped-down
- superstar. But Streisand is approaching her tour in a mellow,
- almost wistful new mood. "I felt it was time to give back something
- to the people who have wanted me to sing live for all these
- years," she says. "I've been around 33 years. When I hear my
- own overture play, I say, `My God! You mean I sang all those
- songs?' People talk to me, and they say, `I remember, the birth
- of my child was when you sang that song.' And `I remember getting
- over a love affair when you sang this song.' I used to never
- let that stuff in. Now it's kind of a wonderful thing, to appreciate
- my own career."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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