Fanny Brice, born Fania Borach, pictured in 1928. (Photo: Getty Archives) |
In William Wyler’s 1968 Funny Girl, Barbra Streisand gives one of the two or three greatest musical-comedy performances ever put on film as Fanny Brice, the Brooklyn burlesque comic who became a Broadway star when Florenz Ziegfeld tapped her to appear in his Follies in 1910. But Streisand’s is a reimagined Brice – more crafted, funny in a more modern mode, and more of a camera creation (even though Streisand had originated the role on stage and this was only her first picture). The real Fanny Brice, who can be glimpsed in only a handful of movies – Hollywood didn’t seem to know what to do with her, so when she retired from the stage in the 1930s she wound up on radio, where she played Baby Snooks for years – and heard in a couple of dozen recordings. (Jasmine Records has collected them all, including a couple of Baby Snooks routines, on Fanny Brice: The Rose of Washington Square. The song “Rose of Washington Square,” which she performed in Ziegfeld’s Midnight Frolic in 1920, is not, alas, among them.)
It’s strange that her movie career was scuttled so early, since she seems to have been the first woman to star in a talking film – 1928’s My Man, a musical melodrama named after her most famous tune, which she’d sung in the 1921 edition of the Ziegfeld Follies. And – unlike many stage performers grabbed up in the early days of talkies, when the studios were desperate for “voice actors,” then quickly discarded when they turned out to be awkward (or perhaps merely badly used) in front of a camera – Brice went on to make a second musical, a little (66-minute) charmer called Be Yourself!, in 1930. My guess is that it was a case of bad timing. So many of those early musicals were stinkers that in 1931 and 1932 Hollywood virtually stopped making them because audiences wouldn’t show up for them. (Moviehouse managers took to plastering disclaimers across their billboards promising that this week’s offering was not a musical.) Astaire and Rogers and Busby Berkeley resurrected the movie musical in 1933, but by that time the movies had pretty much lost interest in Brice. You can catch her as herself in the fifteen-minute section of the bio The Great Ziegfeld (1936) that deals with Ziegfeld’s discovering her at Keeney’s Burlesque and, working against his trademark of glorifying the American girl, putting her in a second-hand dress and a shawl to sing “My Man.” (Funny Girl dramatizes it quite differently: it’s Streisand’s Fanny who undermines Walter Pidgeon’s Ziegfeld when he tries to feature her in an extravagant show number.) Brice is the best thing in this long, dull (Oscar-winning) picture, even though the director, Robert Z. Leonard, stupidly cuts away from two of her three songs, including “My Man.” In Everybody Sing (1938) she plays a maid for an unhinged theatrical family who winds up in a Broadway revue along with the younger daughter, Judy Garland. And in the movie revue Ziegfeld Follies of 1946 she performs a sketch with Hume Cronyn and William Frawley called “The Sweepstakes Ticket.” That’s it as far as her movie output goes. My Man is a lost film (reportedly a couple of the reels have been found), though the entire soundtrack has survived. That’s less exciting than it sounds, since it was only a part-talkie and most of the dramatic scenes were silent, but there’s an extended dialogue between her and her leading man, Guinn Williams, that gives you a sense of how she played a dramatic part. Plus you can hear two versions of “My Man,” one played at a clip and one that’s slowed way down, with an extra verse that isn’t in the popular recording she did after she interpolated the ballad into the Follies.
Brice pictured with her children. |
The un-accented songs tend to be ballads, with a couple of distinguished
exceptions: the sly, flirtatious "I'd Rather Be Blue" (which, along with "My Man" and "Second Hand Rose," Streisand recreated in Funny Girl) and the distinctly
Depression-era “If You Want the Rainbow (You Must Have the Rain).” Both
were written for her by Fred Fisher and her second husband, Billy Rose, who
became a celebrated producer. More typically, they’re torch songs – “When a
Woman Loves a Man,” the much-covered standard “Melancholy Baby,” and of
course “My Man.” Actually we get “When a Woman Loves a Man” twice in Be
Yourself, both at the nightclub where her character, Fannie Field, is a
regular vocalist. (Brice, who was born Fania Borach, adopted Fannie as a
stage name and later changed the “ie” to a “y.” The characters she plays in
My Man and Be Yourself! are both named Fannie, with the original spelling.)
First she sings it with a deli-platter assortment of low-rent showgirls,
and it’s up-tempo and sashaying; the second rendition, after Fannie has
temporarily lost her boxer lover (the likable Robert Armstrong) to an
opportunistic tramp, Lil (Gertrude Astor), is downbeat, and she delivers it
with a handkerchief pressed to her breast, leaning back against a pillar,
as if she didn’t have the strength to stand on her own two feet. When she
finishes her gaze is wavering and restless and she barely seems conscious
of the club audience. (It’s a stunning performance.) The effect is similar
to the difference between the two versions of “My Man” on the soundtrack of
the film of the same name. This song was translated from a French ballad in
the antiquated Apache style of masochistic tales of anguish given voice by
women who won’t give up on their men, even though they treat them with a
mixture of indifference and brutality. Such songs would raise a storm of
protest these days, when we seem to be incapable of watching or listening
to anything that belongs to another time and reflects an outdated mindset
without editorializing about it; but if you can hear Brice’s reading of the
lyrics without looking down on the singer, it’s tremendously affecting.
My favorite of her ballads, though, is the most unusual one, and it’s not
well known. “The Song of the Sewing Machine” is sung by a young Jewish
woman who traveled from Europe in search of freedom in America and instead
finds herself chained to a sewing machine. Its “song” drowns out everything
else: the sun and the moon, nature, romance, time itself, even the world
beyond this one (“God is just another word / If you listen to the song of
the sewing machine”). It’s a proletarian protest song for the early
twentieth century, for the epoch of the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire.
Brice’s recording, performed with little vocal embroidery besides a trace
of tremolo, is achingly sad but strikingly without toughness or bitterness;
it has a stunning purity.
The idea of Funny Girl is that Fanny is condescended to by her mother’s
poker-playing pals and initially dismissed by the burlesque-house manager
Keeney for not being conventionally pretty enough to be a showgirl, but she
proves that, as the script has it, she’s merely an underappreciated bagel
on a plate of onion rolls – that is, she’s got talent that deserves a
showcase. (As the critic Pauline Kael puts it, the movie proves that talent
is beauty.) By contrast, in Be Yourself! no one disparages Fannie’s looks:
when she sings at the club, the reigning fighter Mac (G. Pat Collins) and
Armstrong’s Jerry Moore, who aspires to be champ, vie for her attention.
Photographs of Brice show an exotic near-beauty with deep, tragic eyes
(often accentuated by mascara), wearing beautiful dresses from the teens
and twenties with gravitas. In one amazing picture, she holds her two
children (by her first husband, Nick Arnstein, a convicted swindler)
tightly to her, as if facing off the world. This is a side of her that Be
Yourself! doesn’t capture – but it captures a lot of her. It gets the
clowning side (in “It’s Gorgeous to Be Graceful,” “Is There Something the
Matter with Otto Kahn?” and the marvelous half-love song, half-novelty
number “Cooking Breakfast for the One I Love”) and the torchy side, but
also the canny, practical, street-wise side – the tough-dame side. Fannie
Field manages Jerry and coaches him, turning him into a successful
prizefighter; then, when he deserts her for Lil, she’s clever enough to
hatch a scheme to get him back. Brice should have been a movie star as well
as a star of Broadway and radio. Fortunately you can watch Be Yourself! and
see what Hollywood missed – and you can listen to her recordings to hear
what everyone in America went crazy for.
– Steve Vineberg is Distinguished Professor of the Arts and Humanities at College of the Holy Cross in Worcester, Massachusetts, where he teaches theatre and film. He also writes for The Threepenny Review and is the author of three books: Method Actors: Three Generations of an American Acting Style; No Surprises, Please: Movies in the Reagan Decade; and High Comedy in American Movies.
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