Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Funny Girl is a 1968 American biographical musical film directed by William Wyler and written by Isobel Lennart, adapted from her book for the stage musical of the same title. It is loosely based on the life and career of comedienne Fanny Brice and her stormy relationship with entrepreneur and gambler Nicky Arnstein .
Funny Girl is a musical with score by Jule Styne, lyrics by Bob Merrill, and book by Isobel Lennart, that first opened on Broadway in 1964. The semi-biographical plot is based on the life and career of comedian and Broadway star Fanny Brice , featuring her stormy relationship with entrepreneur and gambler Nicky Arnstein .
Funny Lady is a 1975 American biographical musical comedy-drama film and the sequel to the 1968 film Funny Girl. The film stars Barbra Streisand, James Caan, Omar Sharif, Roddy McDowall and Ben Vereen. Herbert Ross, who helmed the musical sequences for Funny Girl (which had been directed by William Wyler), serves as the director.
The first Broadway revival of 'Funny Girl' reveals why it's taken so long to return. ... but cast albums live forever, and VHS recordings of William Wyler’s 1968 movie allowed for repeat ...
The reaction to Lea Michele's casting as Franny Brice in the Broadway show Funny Girl after Beanie Feldstein, explained, including those illiteracy rumors.
In the 1976 television series City of Angels, she played Marsha Finch, the ditzy secretary to Los Angeles private eye Jake Axminster (Wayne Rogers), who ran a call girl service on the side. She appeared with her husband Bobby Van in The Love Boat S2 E15 "Gopher's Opportunity" as Melody and Phil Livingston, hoteliers who want to hire Gopher.
Mimi Hines — the legendary singer, rubber-faced comedian, television star and Broadway performer who famously replaced Barbra Streisand in the original cast of Funny Girl — died on Monday, Oct ...
Funny Girl: Columbia Pictures: William Wyler (director); Barbra Streisand, Omar Sharif, Kay Medford: 18 Pretty Poison: Twentieth Century Fox: Noel Black (director); Anthony Perkins, Tuesday Weld, Beverly Garland: 22 The Split: Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer: Gordon Flemyng (director); Jim Brown, Diahann Carroll, Ernest Borgnine: 23 Charly: Selmur Productions