How I Got Radicalized

‘Funny Girl’ Made Me Rethink What It Means to Be a Leading Lady

I never thought I could be the star. Barbra and Fanny showed me the way.

Leah Rosenzweig
GEN
Published in
8 min readJan 12, 2021

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Photo illustration; source: ullstein bild/Getty Images

Welcome to “How I Got Radicalized,” a series from GEN that tells the story of a cultural moment that made you drastically rethink how society works.

There is something both horrifying and awe-inducing about the chorus girl. As a young girl, I was enraptured by this sort of pageantry, from the serene statues of the Ziegfeld Follies to the army of women in Busby Berkeley musicals. I loved the way the chorus girls, like rows of soldiers, swiveled and kicked in unison. I admired their commitment to bold lips, lashes, and pearls. They were glamorous and cool, with long legs and finger-curled hair — and yet somehow they were unbearable to watch, no better than pattern makers, metal casts of the same MGM Studios-manufactured woman.

Back then, musicals were my primary means for interpreting the world, and the women I saw in musicals were prim, controlled, and entirely unoriginal. They were sweet and unassuming, with singing voices that blended together to make just the slightest hum despite belonging to a chorus of hundreds. They seemed like the ideal woman. And for some reason I couldn’t fully grasp, I knew I’d…

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Published in GEN

A former publication from Medium about politics, power, and culture. Currently inactive and not taking submissions.

Leah Rosenzweig
Leah Rosenzweig

Written by Leah Rosenzweig

Writing about wine, cultural history, books, and more. Words in GEN, Slate, Eater, LitHub and more. I am extremely freckled.

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