Barbra Streisand reflects on how things were while being honored at the SAG Awards

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Dressed in black and gold, with prepared notes held confidently in her gloved hands (knowing well enough not to trust teleprompters), Barbra Streisand gave a speech after being honored with the SAG Life Achievement Award she brought to the boy to the theater Anne Hathawayamong many other celebrities present, to tears.

Reflecting on her early days in Brooklyn, where her mother advised her to learn to type because she didn’t feel like she had the look of someone who could make it in Hollywood, Streisand said she “didn’t listen,” which worked out for the best, for the best. all of us.

“And somehow, it all came true,” she continued in her reflection on that leap that started it all, mentioning William Wyler, the director of her first film, “Funny Girl,” and her director of photography, Harry Stradling, as her first champions who had no problem working with a woman who had opinions and who never, ever put her down.

He said he prefers the world of cinema to reality and was grateful for the privilege of being part of an industry that allows people to sit in a movie theater and escape their problems for a few hours.

“I can’t help but think about the people who built this industry,” he said. “Ironically, they were also escaping their own problems. Men like Szmuel Gelbfisz, who changed his name to Samuel Goldwyn. Lazar Meir, who became Louis B. Mayer. And the four Wonsal brothers, who became Warner Brothers. They were all fleeing the prejudices they faced in Eastern Europe, simply because of their religion. And they were also dreamers, like all of us here tonight. And now I dream of a world where those prejudices are a thing of the past.”

Listen to his full speech here.

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