Shavua Tov

Letter from Hollywood by Barbra Paskin

June 27, 2023

Revisiting one of Barbra Paskin's earlier Letters

LETTER FROM HOLLYWOOD for Nick Beck

by Barbra Paskin-Shavua Tov, 22 Apr ‘22

HOLLYWOOD, California--- That beloved musical Singin’ In The Rain celebrates its 70th 

anniversary this month. Gene Kelly died in 1996 but his films have continued to entertain

audiences around the world. An artist ahead of his time, he revolutionised the world of dance

on screen with his stunning choreography and created some of the most iconic dance numbers

in American cinema, from Singin In The Rain to An American In Paris.

Gene Kelly (c) Barbra Paskin

And that leads me into a remarkable trip down Memory Lane from the mid-70s before

my move to Los Angeles.

It was a late wintry morning and Gene Kelly and I were ambling along Pimlico Road.

Gene was on the loose at the time. En route to see his daughter in Ireland, he’d been grounded

in London for a few days by an Aer Lingus strike. We’d met a few months earlier in Hollywood

when I’d interviewed him for a book I was writing about actors and now he’d rung me and

suggested lunch, an offer that was warmly welcomed. It was early days in my career and the

charm of the bedsit had given way to the usual pangs of hunger that typically struck by week’s

end.

So there we were, strolling down the road towards a little trattoria I knew at the end of

the street. As we started to cross over to the other side it began spitting with rain, which fast

gave way to a downpour that whipped my umbrella inside out. Barely out of my teens and

normally rather inhibited and well-behaved, something irrepressible suddenly washed over me.

On a whim I grabbed Gene’s hand and began humming, singing and skipping across the road in

front of a London bus that screeched to a crunching halt. I can’t imagine what the passengers

thought, watching the two of us as we splashed about in the deluge, our melodic voices

drowned by the sound of heavy rain.

But I’ll never forget that day when I achieved the rare status of having gone singing in

the rain with Gene Kelly.

UNSPECIFIED - JANUARY 01: (AUSTRALIA OUT) Photo of Barbra STREISAND (Photo by GAB Archive/Redferns)

There’s another landmark birthday to celebrate when the incomparable Barbra Streisand

turns 80 on Sunday.

The quintessential Jewish actress of our time, she has created some unforgettable

Jewish characters on the screen – from Fanny Brice in Funny Girl and Funny Lady, and Dolly

Levy in Hello Dolly to the Jewish psychiatrist in The Prince of Tides and the girl who disguises

herself as a yeshiva boy in order to study the Talmud in Yentl. She also directed those last two

films, as well as A Star Is Born for which she made the lead role Jewish.

Barbra supports numerous Jewish causes in America and Israel, many in honour of her

father, a scholar and teacher who died when she was just 15 months old. It was a loss she has

always mourned. A longtime friend of Israel, she established the Emanuel Streisand School of

Jewish Studies, named after her father, at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem. And she’s been

awarded Israel’s Freedom Medal in recognition of her exceptional service.

When I was writing Dudley Moore’s biography, Barbra broke her rule of keeping a closed

set (especially to the press) and graciously allowed me to accompany him during filming of The

Mirror Has Two Faces which she was directing in New York. And although often described as a

diva, I found her to be kind and inordinately patient with Dudley who had difficulty

remembering his lines. (Though we didn’t know it then, he had begun suffering from a terminal

brain disease and after a few days he had to withdraw from the film.)

Streisand’s next milestone may be the publication of her autobiography, which she’s

been working on for several years, with occasional input from first husband Elliott Gould who

has a photographic memory. One thing’s guaranteed – it’ll be an instant bestseller and make

riveting reading as she reflects back over six decades as an actress, director and musical

performer.

Hope you’ve been having a wonderful summer, and until next time, Shavua tov.

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