James Spada's Hollywood
James Spada is a celebrated author who has written many books on Hollywood and the personalities behind its magic. James is a Hollywood insider who brings a fresh and intimate approach to his celebrity insights.
Sunday, November 2, 2014
BOOK SIGNING/HELLO, DOLLY! SCREENING A BIG SUCCESS.
I appeared at the Egyptian Theater in Hollywood last night (11/1) to sign copies of "Streisand: In the Camera Eye" and introduce a screening of "Hello, Dolly!" It was great to meet other Barbra fans, and the movie was, as always, a delight!
Tuesday, October 14, 2014
"STREISAND: IN THE CAMERA EYE" PUBLISHED TODAY
AOL IS RUNNING A SLIDE SHOW:
http://www.makers.com/blog/funny-girl-relive-barbra-streisands-best-moments?icid=maing-grid7|maing9|dl22|sec1_lnk2%26pLid%3D545255
Thursday, October 2, 2014
INTERVIEW WITH JAMES SPADA IN BROADWAY WORLD
BWW interviews: Author JAMES SPADA's New Streisand In The Camera Eye Is Fetching
October 1
2:23
2014
Renowned author/biographer James Spada, who has penned best-selling books on Grace Kelly, Marilyn Monroe, Bette Davis and Peter Lawford,
to name a few, has a new coffee table book which will hit the book
stands mid October, entitled Streisand in the Camera Eye. I have seen an
advanced copy, and it is simply beautiful..."Hello, gorgeous!" Barbra
would say as Fanny Brice.
Fans of Barbra will adore this one and even if you are merely fond of
her work, like me, you will be blown away by the beauty of these rarely
seen photographs accompanied by short descriptions of the time and place
by Spada. It's a real page turner, and each photograph is more
eye-catching, more vivid than the last.
Why another book about Barbra at this particular point in time?
Why another book about Barbra at this particular point in time?
2014 is the fiftieth anniversary of Barbra's opening on Broadway in Funny Girl. I wanted this book to be a celebration of her half century of superstardom.
What makes this book different from the other three you have written about her?
This is by far the most lavish, gorgeously produced book I've ever
done on anyone. Almost all of the photos are full page and in color. I
think my publisher, Abrams Books, did a great job in producing a really
beautiful book. I knew they would, which is why I wanted them to publish
it.
The photos you chose are out of this world beautiful. What specifications did you set up for selecting each?
The photos you chose are out of this world beautiful. What specifications did you set up for selecting each?
There were three: How rare the photo was, how good Barbra looked in
the photo, and how well the photo illustrated some aspect of Barbra's
career, life, or beauty.
I know the process must have been arduous. Describe just
how difficult it was to find photos and to get them? It must have cost a
great deal of money and time. Was there one specific photographer or
collector who contributed more than any other?
It was difficult to find some photographers, but once I did they were
very cooperative. I had a $25,000 photo budget, so I had to haggle over
prices sometimes to stay within the budget. A collector in Spain, Jorge
Rodriguez Garcia, contributed a great number of the photos. There are
three photographers,, all now deceased, who contributed four to five
photos each: David Drew
Zingg, who spent a day with Barbra in 1963 for a "Look" magazine
profile on Barbra; Craig D. Simpson, who took the very first studio
portraits of Barbra in 1960, before she had done anything but sing in
small clubs; ad Cecil Beaton,
who took stunning portraits of Barbra as Melinda Tentrees in the 1970
film of the musical On a Clear Day You Can See Forever, including the
cover shot.
You chose a mixture of career and personal pictures. I'm
sure she's fussy about the personal side of her life. So...you must have
used caution. Just how cautious were you in deciding what to use and
what not?
I didn't mean this book to be an "illustrated biography," but rather a
collection of photos that reveal Barbra's relationship with the camera
and her photographers, both still and motion picture. That said, I did
feel I needed to illustrate her with the three most important men in her
life--first husband Elliott Gould, long-time lover Jon Peters, and second husband James Brolin.
There are three photos of her with her son Jason--a lovely portrait of
them when he was an infant, a photo in a park when he was two, and a
photo of them at the Academy Awards in 1993 for her film The Prince of
Tides, in which Jason acted with his mother. I didn't include paparazzi
photos of her with any of her many boyfriends; the only one pictured at
all is Ryan O'Neal, and that's because they made two movies together.
You went chronologically. Which decade do you feel is her most prolific? There was certainly an abundance of film work in the late 60s, early 70s, but do you feel her best work was there or later?
You went chronologically. Which decade do you feel is her most prolific? There was certainly an abundance of film work in the late 60s, early 70s, but do you feel her best work was there or later?
I'd have to say the 60s, because she did so much, and such varied, work. She sang in nightclubs and on TV shows like Ed Sullivan's; she released at least one album a year; she appeared in an off-Broadway play and in two Broadway productions, one of which, Funny Girl,
made her a superstar; she made four television specials; sang for
150,000 people in Central Park; and appeared in three lavishly produced
Hollywood musicals, winning a Best Actress Oscar for her first film, the
movie version of Funny Girl. In the 70s she began to broaden
her range and contemporize her image. In the 80s and 90s she turned to
directing as well as starring in her films.In the 2000s she began
touring again. Just last week she became the only artist to have a #1
album in six consecutive decades. So there really hasn't been a fallow
decade in Barbra's career.
Fashion-wise, what kind of clothes were special to
Barbra, on and off screen? The pictures reflect a lot of change through
the years. When did the hairstyle stop changing and why?
Early on, and even somewhat today, Barbra loved to wear clothes she
found in thrift shops--1920s finery with finely-wrought beading, or
feathers and lace and fur. She still has a caracul coat she found in a
thrift store in 1960; she wore it at her audition for her first Broadway
show, I Can Get it For You Wholesale (or rather, she dragged
it along the floor behind her, for effect, as she crossed the stage to
sing.) There are two photos in the book of her wearing it, taken in 1960
by Craig D. Simpson.
Later in the 60s, she became a fashion icon wearing clothes by Rudi Gernreich and other hip designers. Today, she favors her good friend Donna Karan, who dresses her for all her concerts.
She's had many hairstyles--pageboy and bangs in the sixties, long straight blond hair and curly red hair in the 70s, wavy dirty blond hair in the 80s. In The Prince of Tides in 1992, she first wore the shoulder-length straight blond hair she favors today. I think she just felt that the style most flattered her so why not keep it?
Later in the 60s, she became a fashion icon wearing clothes by Rudi Gernreich and other hip designers. Today, she favors her good friend Donna Karan, who dresses her for all her concerts.
She's had many hairstyles--pageboy and bangs in the sixties, long straight blond hair and curly red hair in the 70s, wavy dirty blond hair in the 80s. In The Prince of Tides in 1992, she first wore the shoulder-length straight blond hair she favors today. I think she just felt that the style most flattered her so why not keep it?
Anything that you left out of this book that might make it into another?
There were some photographers I wasn't able to reach or who declined
to be a part of the project. But I really can't see doing another book
on Barbra--unless I get to work with her on her autobiography, which
would be a dream come true for me!
Anyone who has had limited knowledge of Barbra should
find this new book a treasure. And I'm certain it will do very well. Any
final comments as you await publication?
Even those who know Barbra well will be surprised by many of the
photos in the book That was my goal, and I believe I reached it.
GO TO AMAZON.COM TO PREORDER YOUR COPY TODAY:
http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_noss_1?url=search-alias%3Dstripbooks&field-keywords=Streisand%20in%20the%20Camera%20Eye
GO TO AMAZON.COM TO PREORDER YOUR COPY TODAY:
http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_noss_1?url=search-alias%3Dstripbooks&field-keywords=Streisand%20in%20the%20Camera%20Eye
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Sunday, September 21, 2014
Review of Barbra Streisand's New Album
http://www.amazon.com/Partners-Barbra-Streisand/dp/B00MIA0KGY/ref=sr_1_1?s=music&ie=UTF8&qid=1411344092&sr=1-1&keywords=streisand
Let's stop and think about this woman, Barbra Streisand. She has been working at the top of her game for over half a century, consistently releasing top-notch recordings and appearing in first-rate movies. So many female movie stars aged poorly and worked in Grade-B (or lower) movies (think Davis and Crawford). Many female recording stars lost their labels and had to work for inferior ones. Many saw their sales diminish until even inferior labels dropped them.
This never happened to Barbra Streisand. She's still playing starring roles, and she's still producing albums that reach #1 (as this one surely will). When it does, she will have had a #1 album in six consecutive decades--a feat only she will be able to top (it's only six years till the 2020's!).
She has done all this while maintaining a miraculously youthful voice. Her voice has changed a bit; she sometimes fails to reach the high notes as she used to; and she has occasionally sounded hoarse. But on this record she sounds great! On "It Had to Be You," her duet with Michael Buble, she sounds like she did when she first recorded it in 1964!
Some have complained about Barbra doing new versions of several of her standards--"People" with Stevie Wonder, "Evergreen" with Babyface, "The Way We Were" with Lionel Ritchie, "What Kind of Fool" with John Legend. I'm not someone who listens to Barbra's old albums much, so when I heard these songs it was like getting a visit from an old friend--one who had had a makeover!
If I have a complaint, it's that the older singers Barbra duets with--mainly Billy Joel and Stevie Wonder--don't have the voices they used to. (Lionel Richie, on the other hand, sounds fine.)
There is plenty here to please lifelong Barbra fans, and to entice younger listeners to go back into her catalog and discover all the wonders that lie in store for them.
Let's stop and think about this woman, Barbra Streisand. She has been working at the top of her game for over half a century, consistently releasing top-notch recordings and appearing in first-rate movies. So many female movie stars aged poorly and worked in Grade-B (or lower) movies (think Davis and Crawford). Many female recording stars lost their labels and had to work for inferior ones. Many saw their sales diminish until even inferior labels dropped them.
This never happened to Barbra Streisand. She's still playing starring roles, and she's still producing albums that reach #1 (as this one surely will). When it does, she will have had a #1 album in six consecutive decades--a feat only she will be able to top (it's only six years till the 2020's!).
She has done all this while maintaining a miraculously youthful voice. Her voice has changed a bit; she sometimes fails to reach the high notes as she used to; and she has occasionally sounded hoarse. But on this record she sounds great! On "It Had to Be You," her duet with Michael Buble, she sounds like she did when she first recorded it in 1964!
Some have complained about Barbra doing new versions of several of her standards--"People" with Stevie Wonder, "Evergreen" with Babyface, "The Way We Were" with Lionel Ritchie, "What Kind of Fool" with John Legend. I'm not someone who listens to Barbra's old albums much, so when I heard these songs it was like getting a visit from an old friend--one who had had a makeover!
If I have a complaint, it's that the older singers Barbra duets with--mainly Billy Joel and Stevie Wonder--don't have the voices they used to. (Lionel Richie, on the other hand, sounds fine.)
There is plenty here to please lifelong Barbra fans, and to entice younger listeners to go back into her catalog and discover all the wonders that lie in store for them.
Friday, August 22, 2014
NEW DVD GRACE KELLY BOX SET DUE THIS WEEK!!
GRACE KELLY COLLECTION This star’s two most significant movies, “High Noon” (1952) and the Hitchcock masterpiece “Rear Window” (1954), are missing from this six-DVD box. But Kelly’s uncanny poise is on display in two other Hitchcock features, “Dial M for Murder” (1954) and “To Catch a Thief” (1955), which, featuring the future princess romping around the Côte d’Azur, feels weirdly prophetic. Also included: John Ford’s “Red Dust” remake, “Mogambo” (1953); “The Country Girl” (1954); “The Bridge at Toko-Ri” (1954); “High Society” (1956); and a new documentary portrait, “Princess Grace de Monaco: A Moment in Time.” (Warner Bros.)
The New York Times
Monday, August 11, 2014
NEW BARBRA STREISAND ALBUM SET FOR SEPTEMBER 16 RELEASE!
Barbra Streisand's first studio album of original material in three years, "Partners" features duets with
Andrea Bocelli, Michael Buble, Babyface, Jason Gould, Josh Groban, Billy Joel, John Legend, John Mayer, Lionel Richie, Blake Shelton, Stevie Wonder, and....Elvis Presley! No song list yet. This could be the sixth decade a Streisand album hits #1 on the Billboard charts.
Here's Barbra's Twitter Announcement:
https://twitter.com/BarbraStreisand?original_referer=http%3A%2F%2Fbarbra-archives.com%2Fnews%2Findex.html&profile_id=20175292&tw_i=498834618918141952&tw_p=embeddedtimeline&tw_w=265775737846505472
Andrea Bocelli, Michael Buble, Babyface, Jason Gould, Josh Groban, Billy Joel, John Legend, John Mayer, Lionel Richie, Blake Shelton, Stevie Wonder, and....Elvis Presley! No song list yet. This could be the sixth decade a Streisand album hits #1 on the Billboard charts.
Here's Barbra's Twitter Announcement:
https://twitter.com/BarbraStreisand?original_referer=http%3A%2F%2Fbarbra-archives.com%2Fnews%2Findex.html&profile_id=20175292&tw_i=498834618918141952&tw_p=embeddedtimeline&tw_w=265775737846505472
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