Play Dates
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- London
- Midlands
- North
BFI Southbank
16/10/2019
- 26/11/2019
Lambeth,
London
Broadway Cinema
26/11/2019
- 26/11/2019
Nottingham
HOME
19/01/2020
- 22/01/2020
Manchester
JW3
26/12/2019
- 26/12/2019
Camden,
London
Norden Farm Centre for the Arts
08/12/2019
- 08/12/2019
Maidenhead
Northampton Filmhouse
13/11/2019
- 13/11/2019
Northampton
Pontio
27/11/2019
- 27/11/2019
Bangor
Storyhouse
17/11/2019
- 17/11/2019
Chester
The Venue
20/10/2019
- 20/09/2019
Lincoln
Tyneside Cinema
19/11/2019
- 19/11/2019
Newcastle upon Tyne
BFI Southbank
16/10/2019
- 26/11/2019
Lambeth,
London
JW3
26/12/2019
- 26/12/2019
Camden,
London
Broadway Cinema
26/11/2019
- 26/11/2019
Nottingham
Northampton Filmhouse
13/11/2019
- 13/11/2019
Northampton
HOME
19/01/2020
- 22/01/2020
Manchester
Tyneside Cinema
19/11/2019
- 19/11/2019
Newcastle upon Tyne
Norden Farm Centre for the Arts
08/12/2019
- 08/12/2019
Maidenhead
Pontio
27/11/2019
- 27/11/2019
Bangor
Storyhouse
17/11/2019
- 17/11/2019
Chester
The Venue
20/10/2019
- 20/09/2019
Lincoln
Barbra Streisand, Mandy Patinkin, Amy Irving
“Nothing mattered to me except getting this movie made.” – Barbra Streisand
As much as musicals put women at the forefront, it’s rare to see one directed by a woman, but Barbra Streisand’s Yentl is a key exception. Directed, co-written and co-produced by its lead star, Yentl also earned Streisand the honour of becoming the first – and so far only – woman to receive a Golden Globe for directing.
Based on Leah Napolin and Isaac Bashevis Singer’s play of the same name (itself based on Singer’s short story), Yentl sees Streisand portraying a young woman living in an Ashkenazi shtetl named Pechev in Poland in 1904. Desperate to receive an education in Talmudic Law before her father dies, she decides to dress and live like a man and enters a religious school in Bychawa, falling for a fellow student (Mandy Patinkin) along the way.
Even though Streisand was at the height of her fame when making Yentl, she had to fight for a decade to make it a reality. The result is a heartfelt, passionate, funny, kitschy and exceptionally charming film with an Academy Award winning score and songs by frequent Jacques Demy collaborator Michel Legrand, who sadly passed away in January 2019.