Thank you. You saved me having to go through Fanny's biography. Evidently, Fanny's major problem was her falling in love with a loser. The film basically was correct in the way she was portrayed. Many details were altered in showing her life.Nick is the one who was the rat. Luckily, Fanny did not turn to the bottle or to drugs to resolve her problems with this sleazy guy. I wonder if Fanny had any affairs on the side. In the film, she was the perfect wife and she didn't even smoke. Was she really obsessed that she was not a natural-born beauty? Did she ever try to have plastic surgery or even a nose job? I wonder.This background does not impact on her but on him. Than you for taking time.
I'm not sure how bad Fanny Brice's body image issues were. She was not a great beauty and her most famous roles (such as Baby Snooks) were not at all glamorous. But I think it's a moot case for this film, as the self-hatred on display is really more Barbara Streisand's. (Brice was a great comedian, by the way, and as unapologetic a scene stealer as Gracie Burns; you should check out her film and radio work if you get a chance.)
It's easy to look back now and wonder what Streisand's problem was, why she has harped on the looks issue in so many roles. But it's important to remember that not so long ago, Hollywood beauty standards were, in some ways, far more restrictive than they are now, not least because they were so WASP-oriented. Irish, Scottish and Spanish women were "fiery." Black women and Asian women got supporting roles, period. Jewish women got to be comedy sidekicks, not leading ladies. "Ethnic" was toned down or outright disapproved. Look at how drastically they changed Rita Hayworth's natural look when they gave her electrolysis and dyed her hair. And Golden Age Hollywood actually liked Hispanics--but only in very specific kinds of roles.
Streisand was certainly not the first Jewish actress ever to make it in Hollywood. She was, however, one of the first Jewish lead actresses and possibly the first who made her image that of a beautiful leading lady without actually changing how she looked with plastic surgery. She got lucky in that she found some people early on who were able to make her look glamorous in *her* way. Now we see that as normal, but that's thanks to Streisand's success and it shouldn't be a surprise that she has never been able to rise completely above those self image issues, herself. Poor self image tends to be deeply ingrained, no matter how glamorous you may become later on.
"His Love Makes Me Beautiful" really shows this. Personally, I find the first part a cheesy hoot, but it wouldn't work sans Babs' hysterical takedown of it halfway through. It would be too sexist and too whitebread. Those women are heavily made up to look alike, with only minor variations such as hair color or costume. Hence, she stands out. That's deliberate, of course, but it also highlights something that stood in the way of her becoming successful early on.
Innsmouth Free Press
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