Barbra Streisand on Judy Garland
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Barbra Streisand on Judy Garland
Barbra Streisand in The Owl and the Pussy Cat, 1970.
Every minor inconvenience has me wanting to watch The Way We Were and cry.
🎵 Dolly’ll never go away again! 🎵
Barbra Streisand and Elliot Gould
what is silence?
Some say the absence of sound
but we hear silence the same way
that we hear our heart beating
that we hear our pulse racing
that we hear shuddering breath
silence is integral to human function.
It's where we house our worst fears
too scary to be given sound waves
too tiny to be given voice to
It's where we keep our brains attuned
Like a radio stations frequency
We hear in silences and absences
And lack thereofs, and muted melodies
Silence is where we dance with our fears
And kiss their hands and kill their darlings.
Silence is where the absences sing -
A sort of intuitive, instinctual thing
Silence is our greeting and our goodbye
Without a hint of noise nor sigh.
Movie: Funny Girl (1968)
Legendary Ziegfeld Follies star Fanny Brice (Barbra Streisand) surprises her boyfriend at dinner by proposing marriage to him while on a trip around Europe. To reflect the time period of the movie, she wears costume designer Irene Sharaff chooses an Art Deco long sleeved evening dress with a low cut bodice and empire style waist and an overlay of chiffon netting encrusted with sequins and rhinestones. She has a matching headband, clutch, and a turn-of-the-century lavalier necklace with old euro cut diamonds and rubies.
Barbra is renowned for buying her own pieces and is a fan of antique and vintage jewelry. For her roles in Funny Girl (1968) and Funny Lady (1975), the chosen jewelry revealed the changes in her character from one film to the next. In Funny Girl, Brice is striving to be a star, Barbra wears jewelry that is simple and streamlined, but in Funny Lady, she has “arrived” and can pull out the stops with her pieces.
For quite a number of her personal jewels used in the movies, it was reported that she shopped at the legendary Fred Leighton store in New York.
“My grandmother used to call me farbrent, which means on fire.”
Barbra Streisand for Vanity Fair, 1991