FILMOGRAPHY
Funny Girl (1968, Columbia Pictures)
"I'm a bagel on a plate full of onion rolls!"
Directed by William Wyler; produced by Ray Stark, screenplay by Isobel Lennart; musical numbers directed by Herber Ross; original music by Jule Styne; lyrics by Bob Merrill; photographed by Harry Stradling. Starring Barbra as Fanny Brice, Omar Sharif as Nick Arnstein, Kay Medford as Rose Brice, Anne Francis as Georgia James, Lee Allen as Eddie Ryan, Walter Pidgeon as Florenz Ziegfeld.
Hello, Dolly! (1969, Twentieth Century-Fox)
"You go your way and I'll go mine."
Directed by Gene Kelly; written for the screen and produced by Ernest Lehman; associate
producer Roger Edens; music and lyrics by Jerry Herman; photographed by Harry Stradling.
Starring Barbra as Dolly Levi, Walter Matthau as Horace Vandergelder, Michael Crawfod as
Cornelius Hackl, Marianne McAndrew as Irene Mollloy, E.J. Peaker as Minnie Fay, Danny
Lockin as Barnaby Tucker and Louis Armstrong as himself.
On a Clear Day You Can See Forever (1970, Paramount Pictures)
"After all, what is time? If you miss me in this life, you can catch me in the next!"
Directed by Vincente Minnelli; produced by Howard W. Koch; screenplay and lyrics by
Alan Jay Lerner; music by Burton Lane; photographed by Harry Stradling. Starring Barbra as
Daisy Gamble/ Melinda Tentrees, Yves Montand as Dr Marc Chabot, Jack Nicholson as Tad
Pringle, Larry Blyden as Warren Pratt, Bob Newhart as Dr Mason Hume, John Richardson as
Robert Tentrees.
The Owl and the Pussycat (1970, Columbia Pictures)
"I am a model and an actress!"
Directed by Herbert Ross; produced by Ray Stark; screenplay by Buck Henry based on the play by Bill Manhoff; music by Richard Halligan performed by Blood, Sweat & Tears; phototgraphed by Harry Stradling and Andrew Laszlo. Starring Barbra as Doris Wilgus, George Segal as Felix Sherman, Robert Klein as Barney, Roz Kelly as Eleanor, Allen Garfield as Dress Shop Proprietor.
What's Up, Doc? (1972, Warner Brothers)
"Don't you know the meaning of propriety?"
Directed and produced by Peter Bogdanovich; screenplay by Buck Henry and David Newman
& Robert Benton from a story by Peter Bogdanovich; photographed by Laszlo Kovacs.
Starring Barbra as Judy Maxwell, Ryan O'Neal as Howard Bannister, Madeline Kahn as Eunice
Burns, Austin Pendleton as Frederick Larrabee, Kenneth Mars as Hugh Simon, Mabel Albertson
as Mrs Van Hoskins.
Up the Sandbox (1972, First Artists)
Directed by Irvin Kershner; produced by Irwin Winkler and Robert Chartoff; screenplay by Paul Zindel based on the novel by Anne Richardson Roiphe; phototgraphed by Gordon Willis. Starring Barbra as Margaret Reynolds, David Selby as Paul Reynolds, Ariane Heller as Elizabeth, Terry and Garry Smith as Peter, Paul Benedict as Dr Beineke, Jane Hoffman as Mrs Yussim.
The Way We Were (1973, Columbia Pictures)
"Hubbell, People are their principles."
Directed by Sydney Pollack; produced by Ray Stark; screenplay by Arthur Laurents based on his novel; music by Marvin Hamlisch; photographed by Harry Stradling Jr. Starring Barbra as Katie Morosky, Robert Redford as Hubbell Gardiner, Bradford Dillman as J.J. Jones, Patrick O'Neal as George Bissinger, Lois Chiles as Carol Ann, Viveca Lindfors as Paula Reisner.
For Pete's Sake (1974, Columbia Pictures)
Just two words, "Pork Bellies"
Directed by Peter Yates; produced by Martin Erlichman and Stanley Shapiro; screenplay by Stanly Shapiro and Maurice Richlin; photographed by Laszlo Kovacs. Starring Barbra as Henrietta Robbins, Michael Sarrazin as Pete Robbins, Estelle Parsons as Helen Robbins, William Redfield as Fred Robbins, Molly Picon as Mrs Cherry, Vivian Bonnell as Loretta.
Funny Lady (1975, Columbia Pictures)
"More Than You Know, Man of my heart, I love you so"
Directed by Herbert Ross; produced by Ray Stark; screenplay by Jay Presson Allen and
Arnold Schulman; original music by John Kander and Fred Ebb; photographed by James Wong
Howe. Starring Barbra as Fanny Brice, James Caan as Billy Rose, Omar Sharif as Nick
Arnstein, Roddy McDowell as Bobby; Ben Vereen as Bert Robbins.
A Star Is Born (1976, Warner Brothers)
"Are You Watching Me Now? Watch Closely Now!"
Directed by Frank Pierson; produced by Jon Peters; screenplay by John Gregory Dunne
& Joan Didion and Frank Pierson; based on a story by William Wellman and Robert
Carson; music supervision by Paul Williams; photographed by Robert Surtees. Starring
Barbra as Esther Hoffman, Kris Kristofferson as John Norman Howard, Paul Mazursky as Brian
Wexler, Gary Busey as Bobbie Ritchie, Joanne Linville as Freddie Lowenstein, M.G. Kelly as
Bebe Jesus.
The Main Event (1979, Warner Brothers)
"I think there's an orgy going on in my nose"
Directed by Howard Zieff; produced by Jon Peters and Barbra Streisand; screenplay
by Gail Parent and Andrew Smith; photographed by Mario Tosi. Starring Barbra as Hillary
Kramer, Ryan O'Neal as Eddie "Kid Natural" Scanlon, Paul Sand as David, Whitman
Mayo as Percy, Patti D'Arbanville as Donna Rochester, James Gregory as Leo Gough.
All Night Long (1981, Universal Pictures)
Directed by Jean-Claude Tramont; produced by Leonard Goldberg and Jerry Weintraub; screenplay by W.D. Richter; photographed by Phillip Lathrop. Starring Gene Hackman as George Dupler, Barbra as Cheryl Gibbons, Dennis Quaid as Freddie, Kevin Dobson as Bobby Gibbons, Diane Ladd as Helen Dupler.
Yentl (1983, MGM/UA)
"Nothing's impossible!"
Directed and produced by Barbra Streisand; screenplay by Jack Rosenthal and Barbra Streisand based on the short story by Isaac Bashevis Singer; music by Michel Legrand; lyrics by Alan and Marilyn Bergman; photographed by David Watkin. Starring Barbra as Yentl/Anshel, Mandy Patinkin as Avigdor, Amy Irving as Hadass, Nehemiah Persoff as Papa, Steven Hill as Reb Alter Vishkower, Alan Corduner as Shimmele.
Nuts (1987, Warner Brothers)
"Are you crazy?"
Directed by Martin Ritt; produced by Barbra Streisand; screenplay by Tom Topor and Darryl Ponicsan and Alvin Sargent based on the play by Tom Topor; music by Barbra Streisand; photographed by Andrzej Bartkowiak. Starring Barbra as Claudia Draper, Richard Dreyfuss as Aaron Levinsky, Karl Malden as Arthur Kirk, Maureen Stapleton as Rose Kirk, James Whitmore as Judge Stanly Murdoch, Eli Wallach as Dr Herbert Morrison.
The Prince of Tides (1991, Columbia Pictures)
"Can you tell me anything good about your parents?"
Directed by Barbra Streisand; produced by Barbra Streisand and Andrew Karsch;
screenplay by Pat Conroy and Becky Johnston based on the novel by Pat Conroy; music by
James Newton Howard; photographed by Stephen Goldblatt. Starring Nick Nolte as Tom Wingo,
Barbra as Dr Susan Lowenstein, Kate Nelligan as Lila Wingo Newbury, Blythe Danner as
Sallie Wingo, Jason Gould as Bernard Woodruff, Jeroen Krabbe` as Herbert Woodruff, Melinda
Dillon as Savannah Wingo, George Carlin as Eddie Detreville.
The Mirror Has Two Faces (1996, Columbia Pictures)
"I want passion and heat and sweat. I want it all!"
Directed by Barbra Streisand; produced by Barbra Streisand and Arnon Milchan; screenstory and screenplay by Richard LaGravenese; music by Marvin Hamlisch; love theme composed by Barbra Streisand; photographed by Dante Spinotti and Andrzej Bartkowiak. Starring Barbra as Prof. Rose Morgan, Jeff Bridges as Prof. Gregory Larkin, Pierce Brosnan as Alex, George Segal as Henry Fine, Mimi Rogers as Claire Morgan, Lauren Bacall as Hanna Morgan, Brenda Vaccaro as Rose's friend.
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