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Barbra Streisand Media, Interviews, Stories Regarding Her Upcoming Tour

 


Rosie O'Donnell & Barbra & Samantha in New York (+ James Brolin w/dark hair in background)

 

Billboard (11/27/06)

http://billboard.com/bbcom/news/article_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=1003438808

Streisand Tour Breaks 14 Venue Records
by Ray Waddell, Nashville

Despite talk in the early going of slow ticket sales, Barbra Streisand's first live performances in six years put up record-setting box office numbers. The 20 concerts grossed $92,457,062 and set house gross records in 14 of the 16 arenas played on the tour.

In the other two arenas, Madison Square Garden in New York and the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas, she already holds the building record, according to tour producer CPI. Streisand now has the top three grosses in the Garden and the top two at the MGM.

Tour producer Michael Cohl had predicted as much earlier, scoffing at industry scuttlebutt that the tour was not performing up to par at the box office. Now that the trek is done, Cohl is happy. "I say 'nay' to the naysayers," he tells Billboard.com. "That was probably one of the most satisfying parts of the whole thing. But the most satisfying part for me was how amazing the show was. I watched every night and I loved it. I'd never seen her in concert and she was sensational."

 

Cohl does not rule out more dates by Streisand in 2007. "We're talking about it," he says. "From the stage in Los Angeles she said that she's thinking of going to Europe and the Far East, so here's hoping it happens."

2006 has been a huge year for Cohl and his CPI team. CPI also helmed the Rolling Stones' A Bigger Bang tour, which broke the all-time tour record this year at about $437 million, and the $28 million tour by the Who. "It was the most amazing year of my life, let's face it," he says. "It was a busy a year. But I had sat around and done very little hanging out in Florida for over a year, trying to figure out what to do and whether or not to do it. And as soon as the Stones decided they were going to work, then I was going to go back to work, so you may as well go at it whole hog. So I did."

Entertainment Weekly (11/17/06)

http://www.ew.com/ew/report/0,6115,1560920_4_0_,00.html

 

Chicago Tribune Story

http://metromix.chicagotribune.com/news/celebrity/mmx-0611040280nov05,0,1263424.story?coll=mmx-celebrity_heds

BARBRA TODAY

Adored by millions, jeered by hecklers and lambasted by those who tire of her political soliloquies, Barbra Streisand takes time out from a rare tour to give an even rarer interview to the Tribune

By Howard Reich
Tribune arts critic

November 5 2006

Barbra Streisand still can't believe it.

Not only did someone toss a drink at her while she was onstage, but she had paid for his ticket!

"That guy in Florida was a friend of guests that I had," says Streisand, phoning from a jet, as it whisked her away from Monday night's red-state confrontation in Ft. Lauderdale.

When she invited the crew of a friend's yacht to the concert, she explains, she thought she was being friendly. But one of the crew members got sick and gave the ticket to someone else, who decided to test his pitching arm after Streisand finished a skit satirizing President Bush (the heckler missed).

"No good deed goes unpunished," adds Streisand, with a laugh, insisting that the fellow wasn't taking a political potshot but, instead, had imbibed too much and was having a fight with his girlfriend.

Whatever the reason, the moment crystallized the passions that Streisand -- at 64 -- still ignites, in the midst of a rare concert tour that brings her to Chicago for performances Tuesday and Thursday nights at the United Center.

Yet Streisand -- whose remarkable resume includes two Oscars, 10 Grammys, six Emmys and approximately 70 million records sold -- seems to prefer it that way. Why else would she include in her current show a Bush impersonator who suggests erasing the national debt by "putting a proposal before Congress to sell Canada"?

The vignette has drawn fire from newspapers large and small: A "tepid segment" said The New York Times; "Please just sing, Barbra," begged the Omaha World-Herald.

But Streisand clings to her conviction that she has a duty to speak out.

"As Andre Gide said," quotes Streisand, referencing the French author and Nobel Prize laureate, "the artist's role is to disturb."

To the point, in show business and politics, timing is everything, which is why Streisand launched her first major tour in 12 years last month.

"This is an election year, as you know -- that's why I chose to do what I'm doing," says Streisand, who has been offering political volleys of her own on her blog as the tour unfolds.

The politics do not appear to have hurt the box office. Though "good seats" are available, according to a spokesperson, for the second night of her Chicago engagement (ranging from $100 to $750), the first evening is virtually sold out. In addition, the tour has broken box-office records in Philadelphia ($5,265,000 from 16,510 paid attendance, according to billboard.com) and Washington (highest grossing event at the Verizon Center, according to The Washington Post). Hard-core, high-bracket Streisand devotees are paying $50,000 -- yes, $50,000 -- to shake her hand backstage.

Much of the cash will pour into Streisand's foundation, which will distribute it to her pet causes.

Yet a funny thing happened on the way to Ft. Knox. Streisand, so afraid of performing live that she quit touring for 27 years after suffering a memory lapse in 1967, decided the concert hall wasn't such a bad place after all.

"After the first night she performed in Philadelphia, she came off-stage, and she just went, `Wow, I really had a good time,'" says Jay Landers, her artist-and-repertory adviser for the past two decades.

Since that Oct. 4 opener of her tour -- which is not being publicized as a farewell, unlike a brief spurt of shows in 2000 -- Streisand has been basking in applause (mostly) and taking on hecklers (thrice).

"It actually has never felt better," says Streisand, preparing to savor a lunch of stone crabs at about 30,000 feet.

"I'm enjoying the audiences," she adds. "I'm enjoying the love that I feel, and the support that I feel.

"It's just kind of -- I'm less frightened than I used to be. You know, less stage fright.

"So it's a fun experience -- not fun, I wouldn't say. Work is never fun.

"It has joy in it -- yeah."

And Streisand thinks she knows why.

 

Perspective comes with age

As she looks back on the arc of her career nearly half a century later, Streisand believes she better understands what happened. Her transformation from poor child to movie star-director-icon took her through a complex range of emotions, some not so pleasant.

"When I was young, there was a bit of self-hatred around," says Streisand, in describing the darker moments of her early success.

"And then you kind of don't like people who like you, you know?

"When you get older, and you appreciate yourself, you appreciate the people that feel that way about you.

"So that's a very good thing about getting older."

Streisand, in other words, may be getting a tad more comfortable in her own skin and, therefore, a bit more at ease onstage -- a considerable feat, considering the stratospheric journey she has taken.

Born so poor in Brooklyn that she had to use a hot-water bottle as a self-made doll, she suffered the loss of her father when she was 15 months old and the emotional distance of her mother thereafter.

The arrival of an often hostile stepfather when Streisand was 7 did not help, so the diva-to-be lost herself in movies, books and, of course, music. She devoured recordings of Billie Holiday, Ma Rainey and Lee Wiley, she says, citing visionary song interpreters who produced some of the most distinctive vocal colors in American music.

No one can say precisely how much of Streisand's artistic development owed to her self-styled studies, her native gifts or her unfortunate family circumstances (she has said that she sang love songs so well as a teenager because she yearned so badly for the real thing).

Regardless, by age 13 she was singing at a high professional level, as is obvious from a homemade recording made in 1955 and included on her four-CD boxed set "Barbra Streisand: Just for the Record" (Columbia). Already, The Voice sounded big, brassy and nearly sensuous on Harry Warren and Mack Gordon's "You'll Never Know."

Just 5 1/2 years later, in 1961, the up-and-coming nightclub singer made her television debut on "The Jack Paar Show," performing Harold Arlen and Truman Capote's "A Sleepin' Bee" with the dramatic sweep and thrilling low-note to high-note swoops that would become her trademark.

With an instrument clearly built for the gigantic proportions of the Broadway stage, Streisand at 19 won a spot in the musical "I Can Get It for You Wholesale" -- even though "there was no part for her," remembers Arthur Laurents, who directed the show.

During the audition, "She just sang, and I kept her singing just for the sheer pleasure of hearing her sing," Laurents recalls.

"So the only part [available] was that of a 50-year-old spinster," and that's how Streisand made her unlikely Broadway bow.

But it wasn't just her voice that caught Laurents off guard.

"She had total confidence that she was going to be a star, and not a stage star -- she meant a movie star," he says, still somewhat bewildered by that belief of hers.

"And she was hardly -- particularly at that time -- what everybody thought a movie star would look like.

"But it didn't matter. She decided she would be beautiful, and so she made millions of people think she was beautiful."

It didn't take long for her to woo the masses. "The Barbra Streisand Album" of 1963, her solo debut, won two Grammys, and her spectacular success in "Funny Girl" on Broadway earned her 23 curtain calls opening night in 1964. An Oscar followed, for her film debut in "Funny Girl" in 1968, with a string of top-selling albums rolling out in the '60s and '70s.

If her starring roles in movies such as "The Owl and the Pussycat" (1970), "The Way We Were" (1973) and "A Star Is Born" (1976) made her an international figure, her direction of "Yentl" (1983), "The Prince of Tides" (1991) and "The Mirror Has Two Faces" (1996) affirmed her status as a party-crasher in the mostly male world of big-time film directing.

"I'm very proud if I did break any kind of crack in the glass ceiling," she says.

She points particularly to "Yentl," which she directed, produced and co-wrote. Based on an Isaac Bashevis Singer story and set in Eastern Europe about a century ago, the tale features Streisand -- opposite Mandy Patinkin -- as a woman who must disguise herself as a man to get an education.

The message of the film, she says, was that "the woman could not only have a brain equal to a man, but she could also carry life around inside her body, and give birth to it."

In a way, "Yentl" may be her most saliently autobiographical statement, in that it encapsulates so much of the Streisand persona: feminism, Judaism and, of course, soaring, operatically scaled music.

Along the way she was married twice: to Elliot Gould from 1963 to '71 and to her current husband, James Brolin, in 1998.

 

Too much of a good thing?

Part of the trouble with attaining the kind of success Streisand achieved so early, however, is overexposure. The vocal feats that sounded so thrilling to audiences in the 1960s seemed overwrought and exaggerated to some later observers.

"For better or for worse, she is pure schmaltz -- the show tunes, the big voice, the roses, the notoriously manicured hands and the whiff of perfectionism they give off," wrote Libby Copeland in her Washington Post review of last month's Streisand show in the capital.

But to those who admire Streisand's work -- and particularly her distinctive, love-it-or-avoid-it singing -- she's well worth embracing, artistic indulgences and all.

"Pound for pound, note for note, singing her type of music -- nobody has come close," says Linda Eder, arguably the next great singer in a tradition that dates back to Ethel Merman and includes Judy Garland, Liza Minnelli and, of course, Streisand.

"She's the reason I went away from classical music, which I always loved to do as a kid," Eder adds. "I discovered, from her, that you could hear a beautiful sounding voice in something other than opera."

For Streisand, after all the music she has sung and recorded (60-plus albums and a double-CD set of the current tour to be released in December), one composer looms largest: Harold Arlen. The son of a cantor, Arlen penned such blues-drenched songs as "Come Rain or Come Shine" and "Stormy Weather," along the way helping to define the songwriting traditions of Tin Pan Alley and, later, Hollywood.

"Ever since I was 18, when I discovered Harold Arlen, it's like he's my guy," Streisand says.

"Stephen Sondheim -- who I think is so brilliant -- when he came to see me in New York, he said to me, `God, what is it about you and Harold Arlen that just fit together like a glove?'"

So what is it?

"Maybe our roots," Streisand answers. "Jewish, [and] identifying with the black soul, you know?"

But, of course, it takes something more than that to make as deep an impression as have Arlen and Streisand (who won her second Oscar co-writing the song "Evergreen" with Paul Williams for "A Star Is Born").

Like many of the world's most successful entertainers, she seems always to have envisioned a grander future for herself than others discerned.

"Arthur Laurents just came to see me in New York -- it's funny, because he told me I'd never make it," says Streisand, who suddenly begins cursing when her plane hits turbulence.

"We just had some bumps -- I don't like planes," laments Streisand. "I'm a Taurus -- we like our feet on the ground."

About Laurents?

"He told me I'd never make it, because I was so undisciplined, and I was always -- my performances were different, and my line readings were different" from one show to the next, she says.

Even so, "I said then I wanted to do all those things [in show business]. And I think perception becomes reality," Streisand adds.

"It's like you have to dream, and then you can fulfill it, but you've got to have the dream."

Streisand sounds as if she could go on for hours, but then she interrupts herself.

"I gotta hang up now," she says, "because I think we're landing."

 

11/2/06 Barbra Issues TRUTH ALERT ...

Her spokesman tells The Barbra Archives, "the original Associated Press story had inferred someone politically opposed to her committed a rude act of throwing a drink (actually, a paper cup with some liquid in it) on the stage.  Barbra's desire to set this matter straight is one step towards civility in politics.  And, as the proverb says, the longest journey begins with but a single step.":

[Original Text is on Streisand's Official Site >>]

In view of press speculation that there was a political aspect to an incident at one of the recent Ft. Lauderdale performances of the current Barbra Streisand national tour, the star wishes it known that she discovered later that the outburst was in no way political.   The man who threw a paper cup with liquid in it onto the stage was actually the guest of someone to whom Streisand had given tickets, a guest who had had one or more too many beers but no political convictions.
 
After a recent stay on a friend's boat near Miami, Ms. Streisand had given each of the crew members tickets (these happened to be front row) for the sold-out concert.  When one seaman became ill, an Australian friend was invited, a rowdy friend as it turned out.
 
There have been three occasions during the tour, which has now completed 12 or its twenty concerts, in which a heckler protested a skit in which the George W. Bush impersonator Steve Bridges interacts with Streisand.  The management of the tour points out that Bridges is a Republican and has performed his impersonation with President Bush at the White House Correspondents Ball and for him on several occasions including one at the White House, and that Bridges' writers had created the skit used in the concerts.  Martin Erlichman, Ms. Streisand's manager and a producer of the tour, noted that if Bridges feels the material is in good fun and conforms with the President's self-deprecating sense of humor, that was good enough for Ms. Streisand.
 
Three of the nearly 180.000 people who have seen the concerts so far have chosen to make vocal protest of the skit during its performance, but singer feels it should be made clear that the person who threw the drink had no political motive or message.

 

 
10/16/06 Streisand Continues To Break House Records [External Link] >> Florida Concertgoer Throws Drink At Barbra Streisand

POSTED: 6:13 pm EST October 31, 2006

SUNRISE, Fla. -- The funny girl wasn't laughing.
 
Super diva Barbra Streisand had a drink lobbed at her Monday after a skit with a George W. Bush impersonator that poked fun at the president.

Streisand's publicist, Dick Guttman, said a paper cup filled with some sort of liquid was thrown on stage but apparently did not hit Streisand during her second performance in the Fort Lauderdale suburb of Sunrise.

Streisand's manager, Martin Erlichman, said she shrugged off the incident and responded to the angry audience member by saying: "It's a free country and they're entitled to express their opinion."
 

It's at least the third time the Bush skit has angered Streisand's audience. A heckler targeted her at the Philadelphia opening of her 20-city comeback tour, Guttman said, and Streisand made headlines with her response to a jeerer at Madison Square Garden last month.

Erlichman said Streisand believed the skit was in good fun and noted impersonator Steve Bridges, who wrote it, is a Republican.

"This skit has been so massively covered by media, it's impossible that it still could come as a surprise to any of the Bush admirers who bought tickets," Erlichman said.

Despite the controversy, Erlichman said the skit would remain a part of the tour.

"It stays in the show except for the few performances where Steve has a conflicting commitment," Erlichman said.

Streisand, an outspoken liberal, is touring the country after a 12-year absence from the stage, offering fans a repertoire of her four decades of hits.

 

<< Rosie O'Donnell on The View

Rosie, a longtime Streisand fan, has been talking about attending the concerts on ABC's The View. Host Barbara Walters and the ladies even discussed "the F-bomb".

Rosie showed a photo of her and Barbra backstage after the concert on the 10/12 show.

Rosie's website features some video shorts of the comedienne on her way to the Streisand concerts.

About the concert, Rosie wrote:

barbra beyond beautiful

i watched from 10 feet away
as i dreamed since 1972
the front row - opening night
magical

 

 
Reuters Electronic Press Clip of Tour >> 10/9/06 Streisand Concert Tour Off to Record Start [External Link] >>
 
Reuters | Oct. 4 | "Barbra is Back!" [External Link >>]   Playbill Article on Streisand's Tour Director, Richard Jay-Alexander [External Link >>]
   
Oprah Magazine | October 2006 USA TODAY | October 2, 2006
Barbra is interviewed in O Magazine with new photos by Firooz Zahedi. Streisand goes first on her own tour
Diva teams with Il Divo

By Elysa Gardner
USA TODAY 

Planning to catch Barbra Streisand on her tour with the “popera” quartet Il Divo? Better arrive on time.

“I open the show,” Streisand, 64, quips. “After all these years, I'm still the opening act.”

That's not to say that the diva — whose first national tour in more than a decade starts Wednesday in Philadelphia — will be a supporting player. Streisand will be the star the moment she appears on stage, mixing classics with songs she has never performed in public.

Il Divo, whose operatic approach to pop ballads has fueled a pair of chart-topping CDs, will join Streisand for several numbers. “It's like having ‘The Four Tenors' — but the four young, hot tenors. They're cute and they have beautiful voices. What more could you ask for?”

Additional surprises will include a special guest joining Streisand on Happy Days Are Here Again, “and some comedy, some fun stuff. Everybody will know after Philadelphia.”

Streisand describes her new production as “more intimate, not as elaborate as I've done before. I have 58 musicians. But it's really about the singing. In listening to certain things from my past, I thought I could revisit them.”

Another goal is to help raise money for Streisand's charitable foundation, which focuses on health, education and the environment. She has committed $1 million to Bill Clinton's Climate Initiative.

“To do good things you need lots of money,” Streisand says. “Of course, my foundation has done great things with small amounts, too. We stopped a nuclear power plant from turning waste-grade plutonium into weapons-grade plutonium.”

Fans can learn about other projects and goals in Streisand's concert program. “There are things in terms of peace organizations between Arabs and Israelis, and blacks and Jews. A lot of it is non-partisan. People will be able to see where a lot of the money they're spending is going. I want to do some good things in my lifetime — and pay for my house, which is double the budget already.”

Indeed, Streisand jokes that part of the reason she's hitting the road again is “to escape the horror” of constructing a new home in Malibu. “But I end up dealing with it anyway, by phone and fax and e-mail. It's harder than doing the concert.”

“My tours are very limited,” Streisand says. “I speak to my friends, to people like Diana Krall, who said she toured 300 out of 365 days. People like Madonna do 60 cities, where I'm only doing 20. It's rare for me to go out. But at this time in my life, this feels right.”

Make sure you go to Oprah's site to hear AUDIO of Oprah interviewing Barbra! (You can hear manager Marty Erlichman in the background!)

Click here to hear it (You must have FLASH installed on your web browser) >>

<< View large size of this new photo here

 

 

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