Barbra Streisand likely won’t make another movie: Here’s why

She’s raining on everyone’s parade.

Barbra Streisand revealed that she most likely won’t make another film due to the fact that she finds the process, well, tiring.

“It gets exhausting, trying to come up with the structure of the movie and then have it not happen,” Streisand, 81, told People magazine.

“I had many movies that I wanted to make, and then I get lazy,” she continued. “I go, ‘Oh yeah, to do this one, I have to have all these fittings for period clothes. This one, I’d have to live in Arkansas to do this one.’ I don’t know. It’s complicated, but I am complicated, I guess . . . I get lazy.”

The EGOT winner told the outlet that she never would have gotten around to writing her memoir, “My Name Is Barbra,” which was released last month, if she did more films.

“If I could have made my movies, I never would’ve written a book,” the “Hello, Dolly!” star said. “I had such good movies to make, meaning they were about things I cared about, very interesting subjects.”

The EGOT winner told the outlet that if she had continued making films, she never would have gotten around to writing her memoir, “My Name Is Barbra,” which was released last month. AP
Streisand, who was propelled to stardom after acting in the 1968 film “Funny Girl,” also admitted that she would “get lazy” while listing everything needed to get a project off the ground. Everett Collection / Everett Col

Streisand fought for several projects that never saw the light of day in the past, including “The Normal Heart,” a sequel to her film “The Way We Were,” and a film adaptation of the musical “Gypsy,” which tells the story of burlesque entertainer Gypsy Rose Lee.

The actress once admitted on “The Howard Stern Show” that Stephen Sondheim, who composed the musical, refused to give Streisand the rights due to the fact she wanted to star in and direct the film.

“[I’m] kind of overwhelmed,” Streisand told People. “Just the demands of having to speak about what I’ve done for over 10 years. I’m sort of sick of myself, to tell you the truth.” ©Apple TV/Courtesy Everett Collection
The “Way We Were” star’s 1,000-page autobiography gives die-hard Streisand fans an in-depth look at the two-time Academy Award winner’s life outside of the glitz and glamour of Hollywood.

Sondheim said the role was “too difficult” for Streisand to pull double duty. (He died at the age of 91 in 2021.)

With the release of her memoir, which became a near-instant New York Times best seller, Streisand hoped she would be able to relax and spend time with her husband, James Brolin — but boy was she wrong.

In one chapter of her book, Streisand revealed that Robert Redford (right), who starred opposite her in the 1973 film “The Way We Were,” was initially reluctant to sign on. Courtesy Everett Collection

“[I’m] kind of overwhelmed,” she told People. “Just the demands of having to speak about what I’ve done for over 10 years. I’m sort of sick of myself, to tell you the truth.”

The “Way We Were” star’s 1,000-page tome gives an in-depth look at the two-time Academy Award winner’s life outside of the glitz and glamour of Hollywood.

In one chapter, Streisand revealed that Robert Redford, who starred opposite her in the 1973 film “The Way We Were,” was initially reluctant to sign on.

It was also revealed that “Great Gatsby” star Robert Redford was concerned about the reputation of the “Hello, Dolly!” icon. ©20thCentFox/Courtesy Everett Collection
Another chapter in “My Name Is Barbra” includes how Streisand was repeatedly approached by Marlon Brando, who wanted to have an affair with her and how her “Yentl” co-star Mandy Patinkin (left) also allegedly wanted to have an affair. ©United Artists/Courtesy Everett Collection

According to Streisand, Redford, 87, was concerned that his character appeared undeveloped.

“Bob asked [director] Sydney [Pollack], ‘Who is this guy? He’s just an object . . . He doesn’t want anything. What does this guy want?’ In Bob’s opinion, he was ‘shallow and one-dimensional. Not very real.’ ‘A pin-up girl in reverse,’ as Sydney put it,” the “Star Is Born” actress wrote.

The “Great Gatsby” star was concerned about the reputation of the “Hello, Dolly!” icon, too.

“She has never been tested,” Redford told Pollack about Streisand at the time. “Her reputation is as a very controlling person. She will direct herself. It’ll never work.”

Other eyebrow-raising excerpts included Streisand alleging she was approached separately by Marlon Brando and her “Yentl” co-star Mandy Patinkin about wanting to have an affair. She declined both of them.

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