Funny Girl
- 1968
- Tous publics
- 2h 31min
Vie de Fanny Brice, célèbre comédienne et comique du début du 20e siècle. On assiste à son ascension vers la gloire grâce aux Ziegfeld Follies, la carrière qu'elle eut ensuite et sa vie pers... Tout lireVie de Fanny Brice, célèbre comédienne et comique du début du 20e siècle. On assiste à son ascension vers la gloire grâce aux Ziegfeld Follies, la carrière qu'elle eut ensuite et sa vie personnelle, particulièrement sa relation avec Nick Arnstein.Vie de Fanny Brice, célèbre comédienne et comique du début du 20e siècle. On assiste à son ascension vers la gloire grâce aux Ziegfeld Follies, la carrière qu'elle eut ensuite et sa vie personnelle, particulièrement sa relation avec Nick Arnstein.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Récompensé par 1 Oscar
- 8 victoires et 16 nominations au total
- Ziegfeld Girl
- (as Karen Lee)
Avis à la une
Others in the cast include Gertrude Flynn and Penny Santon as the card players, Tommy Rall as the prince in the ballet sequence, Mittie Lawrence as the maid, Gerald Mohr as the gangster, Inga Neilsen and Bettina Brenna as show girls, and Elaine Joyce in the roller skating number.
Not that what they created was bad, how could it be for giving Barbra Streisand the role that made her a star on both stage and screen. Fanny Brice didn't do too bad out of it either, unlike a lot of her contemporaries she lives on through the artistry and interpretation of an icon in a future age.
But was Fanny's story ever given the literary dry process cleaning. Eliminated was her brief marriage to a first husband. Changed is the fact that she knew exactly who at what Arnstein was before she married him. Arnstein was a big time con artist who had no shame whatsoever in using his famous wife's name as a come on. Fanny herself though was never involved in any of his schemes. Arnstein did in fact take the fall and never squealed on any of the ones behind him who certainly were more than capable of reprisals against him and possibly against Fanny Brice.
Jule Styne and Bob Merrill wrote the original songs for the Broadway score and added one song, Funny Girl, for the film. But still the two standouts are Barbra Streisand's classic People and Don't Rain On My Parade, a couple of standards she's made almost exclusively her own. I don't think anyone else would attempt to sing them.
Added to the film are a couple of contemporary songs that Fanny Brice made famous that Barbra reinterpreted, the classic My Man, a song she sang before Nicky Arnstein went to the joint, but still is identified as her lament for her husband in stir. She also sang Second Hand Rose, a really great comedy song, emphasizing Brice's Jewish heritage. I wish a couple of others had gotten in there. I've got Brice recordings of Cooking Breakfast For The One I Love and I'm An Indian. That last one is especially hysterical, Brice did it one of the Ziegfeld Follies dressed as an indigenous person to this continent with the last line being "I'm a Yiddishe Squaw". It's great to hear and must have been fabulous to see.
Funny Girl got seven nominations which included Best Picture, Best Sound, Best Song, Best Musical Scoring, Best Editing, Best Cinematography and a Best Supporting Actress nomination for Kay Medford, the only other player from Broadway besides Streisand to be in the film. But the only Oscar it got was a shared one when Barbra Streisand tied for Best Actress with Katharine Hepburn. One of the very few times someone got an Oscar for their very first big screen effort.
Of course two things helped Barbra greatly. One was a role she had made her own and the second was direction by William Wyler who has won Best Director three times in his career and directed more players to Academy Awards than any other. Barbra was his last. Oddly enough he wasn't nominated for Best Director.
Those who are interested in seeing Fanny Brice as she really was can see her in The Great Ziegfeld, The Ziegfeld Follies, and Everybody Sing all of which are out on DVD and/or VHS. I think Barbra channeled more of Fanny into Funny Girl than the sequel Funny Lady, but I'll let you the viewer be the judge of that.
You can't go wrong seeing and hearing Barbra Streisand do some of the best material ever written for her in both films.
Omar Sharif certainly is suave as her leading man (And you know exactly how he feels, because you love her, too!), and Kay Medford is also good as her mother. William Wyler's direction is right on the money. And those costumes and sets! But, of course, the film belongs to Barbra. It may drag quite a bit near the end, but she pulls it through. This was her first film, before the egomania, (evident in only her second film, Hello, Dolly!), before the sappy stuff. This was made when she was a fresh young talent who had "so much to offer." And boy, did she deliver the goods in this one! If you see this, you can certainly consider yourself one of the luckiest people in the world.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesWilliam Wyler was asked by a friend whether Barbra Streisand had been hard to work with. He replied, "No, not too hard, considering it was the first movie she ever directed."
- GaffesAfter Nick's release from prison in 1927, he and Fanny did not sadly but amicably part. Instead, Nick rewarded Fanny's years of support by almost immediately starting a series of affairs. Fanny demanded he give her grounds for divorce and even had their children's last name legally changed to Brice. Although he and Fanny would meet again several years later, he never attempted to see his children again.
- Citations
Fannie Brice: I'm a bagel on a plate full of onion rolls!
- Versions alternativesThe original theatrical version included an additional overture before the opening credits, an intermission after "Don't Rain On My Parade," and exit music after the end credits. These additional music pieces have been restored for the DVD release.
- ConnexionsFeatured in This Is Streisand (1968)
Meilleurs choix
- How long is Funny Girl?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Funny Girl: Chica rara
- Lieux de tournage
- Jersey Central Railway Station, Jersey City, New Jersey, États-Unis('Don't Rain On My Parade' sequence)
- Sociétés de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Budget
- 14 100 000 $US (estimé)
- Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 52 223 306 $US
- Week-end de sortie aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 65 560 $US
- 3 sept. 2001
- Montant brut mondial
- 52 225 786 $US
- Durée2 heures 31 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 2.35 : 1