Barbra Streisand

Barbra Streisand Headshot

Singer • Songwriter • Actress

Birth Name: Barbara Joan Streisand

Birth Date: April 24, 1942

Age: 82 years old

Birth Place: Brooklyn, New York

Spouses: Elliott Gould, James Brolin

An iconic entertainer with over 70 million albums sold and Grammy, Oscar, Tony, Emmy and Golden Globe awards for acting and directing, Barbra Streisand's popularity and creative output spanned over four decades. The New York cabaret singer first hit big as a pop singer and Broadway star in the 1960s. By the 1970s, she was the No. 1 female box office draw with a succession of gold albums that symbolized a new potential success for women in the feminism era. On film, Streisand won over audiences as fast-talking, quick-witted dames in "Funny Girl" (1968) and "What's Up Doc?" (1974), prior to maturing into an acclaimed film producer and director of "The Prince of Tides" (1991) and other stories of personal growth, like "Yentl" (1983). Streisand's musical output evolved from its theater roots to contemporary songwriters and she charted No. 1 albums in every decade, from The Way We Were in 1973 to Love is the Answer in 2009. Due to a crippling phobia of signing live, she virtually disappeared from stage performing for 25 years, but remained in the public eye with her film career and status as an active philanthropist in liberal political and social causes, even as unflattering tales of megalomaniac tendencies persisted in show business circles. Streisand shrugged off detractors by noting that healthy ambition in men was often perceived as an unattractive pushiness in women, and ultimately, Streisand reigned supreme for her artistic legacy and overall cultural impact in the latter twentieth century.

Born Barbara Streisand on April 24, 1942, Streisand was raised in Brooklyn, NY. Her mother, Diana Rosen, was left to raise Streisand and her younger brother Sheldon when father Emanuel Streisand, an educator and scholar, died when his daughter was just three months old. With the exception of a brief and rocky remarriage that brought Streisand a half sister Rosyln, Streisand was raised largely by her single mother who worked for the New York school system. Streisand herself was an honor student at Erasmus Hall High School, where she had a bit of an oddball reputation and harbored ambitions for an acting career. While still a teenager, Streisand won a singing contest at a nightclub and began landing paid singing gigs around Greenwich Village. She found an acting coach, landed an agent and was still a teenager when she secured jobs in Chicago and San Francisco, though a two-week engagement in Canada was cut short when the audience did not understand Streisand's bohemian personal style and choice of rather obscure older songs. The club's owner famously advised the young singer that she would never make it in show business. Few shared his sentiment, though, and Streisand quickly gained widespread exposure with television appearances, including "The Tonight Show" (NBC, 1954- ) in 1961. Further nudging her to stardom was her 1962 Broadway debut in the musical comedy "I Can Get It for You Wholesale," which confirmed Streisand's promise as a song "belter" and earned the newcomer a Tony nomination.

Smelling a pop music goldmine, executives at Columbia Records signed the 20-year-old, who insisted on a clause giving her the right to choose her own material. In quick succession, Columbia released a pair of albums featuring Streisand's interpretations of theater tunes and cabaret standards, with The Barbra Streisand Album taking home two Grammy Awards, including Album of the Year. In addition to her nearly overnight stardom, Streisand's off-stage life blossomed with her marriage to actor Elliot Gould (who had yet to even make his screen debut) in 1963. She was nominated for a second Tony Award in 1964 for her portrayal of early Broadway star Fanny Brice in "Funny Girl," which established her early persona as a sassy, take-no-guff dame. No mere stage gimmick, Streisand's many late night talk show appearances showcased a confident, fearless young woman unlike any wilting-flower chanteuse that had come before, and her off-the-cuff banter with hosts like Mike Wallace and David Susskind bordered on the sort of confrontational generation gaps one would expect from Bob Dylan. Streisand's youthful appeal led to her first No. 1 Billboard album, People, and a deal with CBS. In 1965, Streisand brought her songbook to American television audiences in an Emmy Award-winning music special, "My Name Is Barbra" (CBS, 1965). The accompanying album earned Streisand another Grammy Award the following year; the same year she gave birth to her only child, Jason Gould.

After a well-received run on the London stage in "Funny Girl," Streisand took the role to the big screen in a 1968 adaptation directed by Golden Age great, William Wyler. Audiences were charmed by Streisand's wit and high-energy live performances, leading to an Academy Award for Best Actress for her film debut; an award she accepted wearing infamous see-through "pajamas." Two more stage musical adaptations followed, with Streisand starring as a Victorian-era matchmaker in the classic "Hello, Dolly!" (1969), an enormous box office hit directed by Gene Kelly, but she fared less well in Vincente Minnelli's fantastical "On A Clear Day You Can See Forever" (1970). Streisand put singing aside and took a stab at straight-up comedy in "The Owl and the Pussycat" (1970), co-starring as mismatched roommates with an aspiring writer (George Segal). Her off-screen pairing with Gould also proved a mismatch and the pair filed for divorce in 1971. The following year, the undisputed queen of the 1970s screwball comedy revival was born in earnest with "What's Up, Doc?" (1972). The Peter Bogdanovich-helmed classic concerning mistaken luggage identity and jewel thieves paired Streisand for the first time with Ryan O'Neal, and their chemistry contributed to what became a wildly popular and well-regarded comic success. Meanwhile Streisand's 13th album release, Stoney End, marked a shift in her musical career, with a focus on new material from contemporary songwriters ranging from Randy Newman to Joni Mitchell. The change in direction proved successful, and the album hit No. 10 and sold well over a million copies.

Streisand returned to No. 1 on the charts for the soundtrack to the film "The Way We Were," her first challenge as a dramatic actress. Sydney Pollack helmed the nostalgic romance with political overtones, pairing Streisand and Robert Redford as star-crossed lovers to great success. The tearjerker brought another Oscar nomination for Streisand. The versatile actress followed with a comic performance in "For Pete's Sake" (1974), a farcical misadventure about a Brooklyn housewife whose attempt to invest in the stock market goes sour. After reluctantly reprising her beloved Fanny Brice characterization in the sequel "Funny Lady" (1975), Streisand teamed with fellow musician and actor Kris Kristofferson in an updated version of the film, "A Star is Born" (1976). Streisand gave another standout performance as a rising cabaret singer taken under the wing (and into the bed) of a stadium rock star who is rapidly deteriorating from the excesses of fame. In addition to taking home a Golden Globe Award for Best Actress, Streisand won an Oscar and a Grammy for Song of the Year for the film's mega-hit theme song, "Evergreen." In 1977, Streisand enjoyed a significant musical accomplishment with the album Streisand Superman, returning to No. 1 on the charts in 1979 with the disco duet "No More Tears" ("Enough is Enough)" performed fellow diva, Donna Summer. She re-teamed with Ryan O'Neal in the wildly successful - though critically panned - romantic comedy, "The Main Event" (1979), which also spawned a gold-selling soundtrack, though nothing could compare to the 1980 album Guilty, a collaboration with Barry Gibb of the songwriting brothers The Bee Gees.

Guilty topped Streisand's career record sales, reaching No. 1 on the charts in over a dozen countries and earning she and Gibb a Grammy Award for Best Pop Performance by a Duo or Group for the title track. Meanwhile, the box office flop "All Night Long" (1981), starring Streisand as an untalented singer-songwriter married to a firefighter, broke her decade-long box office spell. Preferring to take more time between films and exercise more creative control, it was two years before she appeared on screen again in "Yentl" (1983), the story of a Jewish girl who disguises herself as a boy in order to pursue an education. "Yentl" was actually 15 years in the making, and upped Streisand's status to that of the first woman to produce, direct, write and star in a major Hollywood motion picture. Her labor of love adaptation of the Isaac Bashevis Singer short story was a box office success and Streisand was honored with a Golden Globe for Best Director. In short order, she scored a No. 1 album with The Broadway Album, a collection of well-loved theatrical compositions that sold nearly six million copies and garnered Streisand another Grammy Award for Best Vocal Performance. The formation of the Streisand Foundation in 1986 added a new dimension to the powerful showbiz player's career and through her tens of millions of dollars in future grants, she voiced strong support for issues related to the environment, women's rights, voter education, and nuclear disarmament.

Streisand returned to theaters in 1987 as the producer and star of "Nuts," for which she earned a Golden Globe nomination for starring as a woman who commits a self-defense murder and lands in a courtroom trying to prove her sanity. Two back-to-back album releases followed; the Top 10 Till I Loved You and One Voice, a career retrospective concert which was also released on DVD and raised millions for the Streisand Foundation. She returned to the film director's chair to helm the 1991 film "The Prince of Tides" (1991), based on Pat Conroy's best-selling novel. Again attracted by stories of personal growth and overcoming odds, Streisand's three-hankie tearjerker dealt with overcoming childhood trauma and difficult family relationships, with Streisand as a sympathetic psychiatrist opposite romantic interest, Nick Nolte. Both critical and popular response to Streisand's sensitive directorial work was notably improved; dismay being largely reserved for Streisand's glamorized appearance and saintly self-casting. The film received seven Oscar nominations, including Best Picture, and Streisand was also nominated for a Best Director Golden Globe. After 27 years away from the concert stage, Streisand began touring in 1994, amassing the top ticket sales of the year and exposing the staggering depths of her fan base. She was honored with a Lifetime Achievement Award from the Grammys, and performed some her best-loved material for the camera in "Barbra Streisand: The Concert" (HBO, 1995), which unsurprisingly earned multiple Emmy Awards, reunited her with Barry Gibb, and brought in top ratings for the cable network.

The 53-year-old's energy level seemingly unaffected from seven months of touring, Streisand went on to produce, direct and star in "The Mirror Has Two Faces" (1996), a remake of a 1958 French film of the same name starring Streisand as a plain woman whose marriage to Jeff Bridges is rocked when she undergoes a personal transformation. While a popular box office draw, the film suffered at the hands of critics who were turned off by Streisand's self-indulgent, soft-focus portrayal and broad, precious acting. Regardless, she was nominated for Golden Globe Awards for Best Actress and Best Original song for the theme, "I Finally Found Someone." Public favor still staunchly in her favor, Streisand visited the top spot in the album charts in 1997 with the album, Higher Ground, which launched a top-selling duet with Celine Dion, "Tell Him." Also during the 1990s, Streisand's Barwood Productions earned positive notice for a number of television specials examining important social and cultural issues including "Serving In Silence: The Margarethe Cammermeyer Story" (NBC, 1995), which exposed harassment of gays serving in the military, and "Rescuers: Stories of Courage," (Showtime, 1997-98), which profiled courageous people who helped save the lives of Jews during the Holocaust. In a personal development, Streisand met actor and director James Brolin in 1996 through mutual friends and the couple was happily married in 1998. Streisand spent the next several years working behind-the-scenes as the executive producer of the special "Reel Models: The First Women of Film" (AMC, 2000), the PBS series "The Living Century" (PBS, 2000), and the Lifetime original film, "What Makes a Family?" (Lifetime, 2001).

Following a five-city tour in 2000, Streisand returned to screens in 2001 in a filmed concert special, "Barbra Streisand: Timeless" (Fox, 2001), which brought in strong ratings and multiple Emmy wins. In a return to her long lamented career as a top notch comedienne, Streisand set aside her usual auteur role and took a role in the comedy sequel, "Meet the Fockers" (2004), playing the often embarrassing therapist mother of "Meet the Parents" (2000) main character Greg Focker (Ben Stiller). Teamed sublimely with Dustin Hoffman as her husband and sharing scenes with Robert De Niro, Streisand nearly walked away with the blockbuster, proving that her comedic skills were as sharp as ever. Her nostalgic return to comedy may have made Streisand nostalgic for her early music career, as she promptly re-teamed with Barry Gibb to record the gold-selling album, Guilty Pleasures, and hit the road on "Streisand: The Tour," which took her across North America, Canada and Europe. Naturally an accompanying album was released - Streisand - Live In Concert 2006, which debuted at No. 7 on the Billboard Top 200, and whose sales contributed to Streisand's status in Forbes magazine as the No. 2 highest earning female musician for the previous year; topped only by Madonna. The over-65 songstress beat that stat in 2009 when Love is the Answer, a collection of best-loved jazz standards, hit No. 1 on the album charts. The following year she reprised her role of Roz Focker in the sequel, "Little Fockers" (2010).

Credits

The 30th Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards

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2024

The Best of The Ed Sullivan Show

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2023

SidneyStream

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2022
90%

Barbra Streisand at the BBC

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2021

CBS Mornings

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2021

Barbra Streisand: Be Aware

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2021

Live at Mister Kelly'sStream

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2021
100%

One Night Only: The Best of Broadway

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2020

David Foster: Off the Record

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2019

A Very Merry Hanukkah

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2019

David Foster: Off the Record

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2019

Bergman - ett liv i fyra akter

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2018

Play Hits - Love Songs 1

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2018

Barbra Streisand: Don't Lie to Me

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2018

Barbra: The Music, the Mem'ries, the Magic!

Director
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2017

Barbra: The Music, the Mem'ries, the Magic!

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2017

Barbra: The Music, the Mem'ries, the Magic!

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2017

Barbra: The Music, the Mem'ries, the Magic!

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2017

Hand in Hand: A Benefit for Hurricane Relief

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2017

The Sunday Project

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2017

ENCORE: Behind the Scenes With Barbra Streisand

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2016

Barbra Streisand: Memory

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2016

Barbra Streisand: Woman in Love

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2015

The Late Show With Stephen ColbertStream

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2015

Barbra Streisand & Bryan Adams: I Finally Found Someone

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2015

Michael Bublé's Christmas in New York

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2014

The Meredith Vieira Show

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2014

Barbra Streisand: It Had to Be You

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2014

Good Morning Britain

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2014

The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon

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2014

The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy FallonStream

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2014

The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy FallonStream

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2014

Barbra Streisand Feat. Elvis Presley: Love Me Tender

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2014

Barbra Streisand & Barry Manilow: I Won't Be the One to Let Go

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2014

Barbra Streisand: Back to BrooklynStream

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2013

Barbra Streisand: Back to BrooklynStream

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2013

Happy Holidays America 2013

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2013

The Guilt Trip: Extras

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2013

The Oscars

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2013

Barbra Streisand: How Deep Is the Ocean

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2013

Barbra Streisand: You're the Top (Live From Back To Brooklyn)

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2013

David Sheehan's Holiday Movie Magic

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2012

Katie

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2012

The Guilt Trip

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Joyce Brewster
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2012

The Guilt Trip

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2012

Q With Jian Ghomeshi

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2011

The 53rd Annual Grammy Awards

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2011

Piers Morgan Tonight

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2011

Lorraine

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2010

Little FockersStream

Actor
Roz Focker
Movie
2010
9%

Modern FamilyStream

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Barbra Streisand
Series
2009
85%

ES.TV

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2009

The Dr. Oz Show

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2009

31st Annual Kennedy Center Honors

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2008

The Doctors

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2008

Made in Hollywood

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2005

Meet the FockersStream

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Mrs. Focker
Movie
2004
38%

The Ellen DeGeneres Show

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2003

Real Time With Bill MaherStream

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2003

Dr. PhilStream

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2002

Barbra Streisand: Timeless

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2001

What Makes a Family

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2001

Varian's War

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2001

Frankie and Hazel

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2000

The Early Show

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1999

Kickin' It: With Byron Allen

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1998

The Long Island Incident

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1998

Rescuers: Stories of Courage -- Two Couples

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1998

Rescuers: Stories of Courage -- Two Families

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1998

City at Peace

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1998

Barbra Streisand & Céline Dion: Tell Him

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1997

Opowieść o odwadze: dwie kobiety

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1997

Rescuers: Stories of Courage -- Two Women

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1997

Access Hollywood

Guest
News
1996

The Mirror Has Two FacesStream

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Rose Morgan
Movie
1996
54%

The Mirror Has Two FacesStream

Director
Movie
1996
54%

The Mirror Has Two FacesStream

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Movie
1996
54%

Serving in Silence: The Margarethe Cammermeyer Story

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1995

Extra

Guest
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1994

Barbra Streisand: The Concert

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1994

Barbra Streisand: The Music of the Night

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1993

Barbra Streisand: As If We Never Said Goodbye

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1993

The Prince of TidesStream

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Susan Lowenstein
Movie
1991
68%

The Prince of TidesStream

Director
Movie
1991
68%

The Prince of TidesStream

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Movie
1991
68%

NutsStream

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Claudia Draper
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1987
41%

NutsStream

Original Music
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1987
41%

NutsStream

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1987
41%

The Oprah Winfrey ShowStream

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Talk
1986

The Oprah Winfrey ShowStream

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1986

Barbra Streisand: Somewhere

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1985

YentlStream

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Yentl/Anshel
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1983
68%

YentlStream

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1983
68%

YentlStream

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1983
68%

YentlStream

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1983
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Champs-Élysées

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1982

All Night Long

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Cheryl Gibbons
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1981

I Remember Barbra

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1981

CBS News Sunday Morning

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News
1979

The Main EventStream

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Hillary Kramer
Movie
1979
40%

Barbra Streisand: New York State Of Mind

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1977

Barbra Streisand: Evergreen

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1976

A Star is BornStream

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Esther Hoffman
Movie
1976
38%

A Star is BornStream

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Movie
1976
38%

Good Morning America

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News
1975

Barbra Streisand: The Way We Were

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Show
1975

Funny LadyStream

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Fanny Brice
Movie
1975
30%

For Pete's Sake

Actor
Henrietta "Henry" Robbins
Movie
1974

Fred Astaire Salutes the Fox Musicals

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1974

Barbra Streisand...and Other Musical Instruments

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1973

The Way We WereStream

Actor
Katie
Movie
1973
63%

Great PerformancesStream

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Franchise
1972

What's Up Doc?Stream

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Judy Maxwell
Movie
1972
89%

Up the Sandbox

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Margaret Reynolds
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1972

On a Clear Day You Can See Forever

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Daisy Gamble
Movie
1970

The Owl and the Pussycat

Actor
Doris
Movie
1970

Hello, Dolly!Stream

Actor
Dolly Levi
Movie
1969
45%

A Happening in Central Park

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1968

Funny GirlStream

Actor
Fanny Brice
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1968
94%

The Belle of 14th Street

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1967

Color Me Barbra

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1966

My Name Is Barbra

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1965

The Judy Garland Show

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Variety Show
1963

Today

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1952

What's My Line?Stream

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1950

News aboutBarbra Streisand