Yentl
Brief Synopsis
A Jewish girl masquerades as a boy to study Torah, but falls in love with her best friend.
Cast & Crew
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Barbra Streisand
Director
Barbra Streisand
Yentl
Mandy Patinkin
Avigdor
Amy Irving
Hadass
Nehemiah Persoff
Papa--Reb Mendel
Steven Hill
Reb Alter Vishkower
Film Details
MPAA Rating
Genre
Musical
Adaptation
Drama
Period
Religion
Romance
Release Date
1983
Production Company
Barwood Films; Completion Bond Company Inc; General Screen Enterprises; Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios Inc.
Distribution Company
MGM Distribution Company; MGM Home Entertainment; Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios Inc.
Location
Czechoslovakia
Technical Specs
Duration
2h 14m
Synopsis
A young Eastern European woman, circa 1904, disguises herself as a boy in order to pursue her passion for studying holy scripture.
Director
Barbra Streisand
Director
Cast
Barbra Streisand
Yentl
Mandy Patinkin
Avigdor
Amy Irving
Hadass
Nehemiah Persoff
Papa--Reb Mendel
Steven Hill
Reb Alter Vishkower
Ruth Goring
Esther Rachel
David De Keyser
Rabbi Zalman
Bernard Spear
Tailor
Doreen Mantle
Mrs Shaemen
Lynda Barron
Pesche
Jack Lynn
Bookseller
Anna Tzelniker
Mrs Kovner
Miriam Margoyles
Sarah
Mary Henry
Mrs Jacobs
Robbie Barnett
Tailor'S Assistant
Ian Sears
David
Frank Baker
Village Student
Anthony Rubes
Village Student
Renata Buser
Mrs Shaemen'S Daughter
Kerry Shale
Yeshiva Student
Gary Brown
Yeshiva Student
Peter Whitman
Yeshiva Student
Danny Brainin
Yeshiva Student
Jonathan Tafler
Yeshiva Student
Teddy Kempner
Yeshiva Student
Allan Corduner
Shimmele
David De Keyser
Crew
Barbara Allen
Production Coordinator
Zelda Barron
Script Supervisor
Frank Batt
Key Grip
Alan Bergman
Lyrics
Marilyn Bergman
Lyrics
Michael Bloom
Technical Consultant
George Brand
Music Editor
Jim Brennan
Location Manager
Shimeon Brisman
Technical Consultant
Garrett Brown
Steadicam Operator
Allen Burry
Publicist
Vladimir Cajahamel
Supervisor
Robin Clarke
Music Editor
Cis Corman
Casting
Tony Czech
Supervisor
Tessa Davies
Set Decorator
Larry Dewaay
Executive Producer
Lucjan Dobroszycki
Technical Consultant
Rick Edelstein
Special Consultant
Laura Geller
Technical Consultant (Religion)
Jan Gerstel
Production Assistant
Keith Grant
Sound Recording (Music)
Steven Harding
Assistant Director
Gordon Hayman
Camera Operator 2nd Unit (2nd Unit)
Les Healey
Assistant Editor
David Hildyard
Sound Recording
Louis Jacobs
Technical Consultant
David James
Stills
Colin Jamison
Hairstyles
William Lang
Location Manager
Steve Lanning
Assistant Director
Daniel Lapin
Technical Consultant (Religion)
Michel Legrand
Original Music
Michel Legrand
Music; Music Director
Rusty Lemorande
Coproducer
Rusty Lemorande
Co-Producer
Beryl Lerman
Makeup
Gillian Lynne
Choreography (Wedding Dance)
Peter Macdonald
Camera Operator
Barrie Melrose
Production Supervisor
Douglas Milsome
Camera Operator 2nd Unit (2nd Unit)
Judy Moorcroft
Costumes
Keith Morton
Wardrobe
Oldrich Okaj
Supervisor
Pamela Parker
Post-Production Coordinator
Toby F Phillips
Steadicam Operator
Rudi Prokes
Supervisor
Harry Rabinowicz
Technical Consultant (Religion)
Mila Radova
Supervisor
Terry Rawlings
Editor
Hillary Anne Ripps
Post-Production Coordinator
Jack Rosenthal
Screenwriter
Bill Rowe
Sound Rerecording
Wally Schneiderman
Makeup
Chaim Seidler-feller
Technical Consultant (Religion)
Andrew Shields
Video Operator
Jim Shields
Sound Editor
Isaac Bashevis Singer
From Story ("Yentl The Yeshiva Boy")
Karel Skop
Supervisor
Barbra Streisand
Producer
Barbra Streisand
Screenwriter
Leslie Tomkins
Art Direction
Sue Wain
Wardrobe
Josh Waletzky
Technical Consultant
Roy Walker
Production Designer
Peter Waller
Assistant Director
Joan Washington
Dialogue Coach
David Watkin
Director Of Photography
Terry Wells
Props
Jeff Werner
Post-Production Associate
Alan Whibley
Special Effects
Videos
Trailer
Hosted Intro
Film Details
MPAA Rating
Genre
Musical
Adaptation
Drama
Period
Religion
Romance
Release Date
1983
Production Company
Barwood Films; Completion Bond Company Inc; General Screen Enterprises; Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios Inc.
Distribution Company
MGM Distribution Company; MGM Home Entertainment; Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios Inc.
Location
Czechoslovakia
Technical Specs
Duration
2h 14m
Award Wins
Best Score (Adapt. & Orig. Song)
1983
Award Nominations
Set Decoration
1983
Best Song
1983
Best Supporting Actress
1983
Amy Irving
Articles
Yentl
Because they felt the music should be lushly romantic and rooted in the European tradition, the Bergmans considered Michel Legrand the perfect composer to collaborate on the Yentl score. "The kind of music Michel writes is timeless. It could be the 18th, 19th or 20th century," said Alan. Added Marilyn: "The challenge was to make the music exotic and colorful, but not so special that it doesn't have universality." In developing the songs, the trio joined Streisand for lengthy sessions in the music room of the Bergmans' Beverly Hills home. "Our housekeeper would bring us food trays and we'd eat up there," recalled Alan. "Sometimes we'd go late into the night. It was like there was no outside world; The greatest thing about working on the movie was, where else in the world could you call your director and say, "Come over and sing this song for us?"
The collaboration was so fruitful that Yentl won an Oscar for Best Song Score. The Bergmans and Legrand also were nominated twice in the "Best Song" category, for "Papa, Can You Hear Me?" and "The Way He Makes Me Feel." (The winner in that category was the title tune from Flashdance.) Yentl, released through MGM-UA, won only one other nomination, that of Best Supporting Actress for Amy Irving. Noticeably absent in every category for which she was eligible, Streisand did not attend the awards ceremony; Yentl's nominated songs were performed by Donna Summer and Jennifer Holliday. "In Hollywood, a woman can be an actress, a singer, a dancer," Streisand said later. "But don't let her be too much more."
Producers: Rusty Lemorande, Barbra Streisand
Director: Barbra Streisand
Screenplay: Jack Rosenthal, Barbra Streisand, from story by Isaac Bashevis Singer
Production Design: Leslie Tomkins, Roy Walker
Cinematography: David Watkin
Costume Design: Judy Moorcroft
Editing: Terry Rawlings
Original Music: Alan Bergman, Marilyn Bergman, Michel Legrand
Principal Cast: Barbra Streisand (Yentl/Anshel), Mandy Patinkin (Avigdor) Amy Irving (Hadass), Nehemiah Persoff (Yentl's father), Steven Hill (Hadass' father), Robbie Barnett (Zelig).
C-134m. Letterboxed. Closed captioning.
by Roger Fristoe
Yentl
"This has to be a musical!" Marilyn and Alan Bergman exclaimed in unison to Barbra Streisand when she showed the songwriters the script for Yentl. This project, developed from Isaac Bashevis Singer's Yentl (1983), the Yeshiva Boy, had been dear to Streisand's heart since she first optioned the story in 1968. It tells of a young Jewish woman in Poland who, after the loss of her father, disguises herself as a boy so she can go to a Yeshiva (Jewish school for priests) and study the Torah. Streisand, who ended up directing, co-producing and co-writing the film as well as starring in it, had planned it as an intimate, non-musical drama until the Bergmans persuaded her to add songs. As quoted by Streisand biographer James Spada, Marilyn Bergman explained, "We felt it was a wonderful story for a musical, because it is [about] a character with a secret. Throughout the picture, after her father dies, there is nobody to whom she can talk, to whom she can reveal her essential self. And this rich inner life becomes the [song] score."
Because they felt the music should be lushly romantic and rooted in the European tradition, the Bergmans considered Michel Legrand the perfect composer to collaborate on the Yentl score. "The kind of music Michel writes is timeless. It could be the 18th, 19th or 20th century," said Alan. Added Marilyn: "The challenge was to make the music exotic and colorful, but not so special that it doesn't have universality." In developing the songs, the trio joined Streisand for lengthy sessions in the music room of the Bergmans' Beverly Hills home. "Our housekeeper would bring us food trays and we'd eat up there," recalled Alan. "Sometimes we'd go late into the night. It was like there was no outside world; The greatest thing about working on the movie was, where else in the world could you call your director and say, "Come over and sing this song for us?"
The collaboration was so fruitful that Yentl won an Oscar for Best Song Score. The Bergmans and Legrand also were nominated twice in the "Best Song" category, for "Papa, Can You Hear Me?" and "The Way He Makes Me Feel." (The winner in that category was the title tune from Flashdance.) Yentl, released through MGM-UA, won only one other nomination, that of Best Supporting Actress for Amy Irving. Noticeably absent in every category for which she was eligible, Streisand did not attend the awards ceremony; Yentl's nominated songs were performed by Donna Summer and Jennifer Holliday. "In Hollywood, a woman can be an actress, a singer, a dancer," Streisand said later. "But don't let her be too much more."
Producers: Rusty Lemorande, Barbra Streisand
Director: Barbra Streisand
Screenplay: Jack Rosenthal, Barbra Streisand, from story by Isaac Bashevis Singer
Production Design: Leslie Tomkins, Roy Walker
Cinematography: David Watkin
Costume Design: Judy Moorcroft
Editing: Terry Rawlings
Original Music: Alan Bergman, Marilyn Bergman, Michel Legrand
Principal Cast: Barbra Streisand (Yentl/Anshel), Mandy Patinkin (Avigdor) Amy Irving (Hadass), Nehemiah Persoff (Yentl's father), Steven Hill (Hadass' father), Robbie Barnett (Zelig).
C-134m. Letterboxed. Closed captioning.
by Roger Fristoe
Quotes
Trivia
Miscellaneous Notes
Feature directorial debut for actress and singer Barbra Streisand.
Released in United States Fall November 18, 1983
Released in United States Fall November 18, 1983