Julia Roberts’ co-star remembers her being mistreated by the director on the set of Steel Magnolias. Directed by Herbert Ross, based on the 1987 play and adapted to the screen by Robert Harling, the 1989 film follows the close-knit bond between a group of women in a small Southern town and how they navigate the loss of one of their own. The movie stars Julia Roberts, Sally Field, Dolly Parton, Shirley MacLaine, Daryl Hannah, Olympia Dukakis, Tom Skerritt, Dylan McDermott, Kevin J. O’Connor, and Sam Shepard.
In her new memoir The Wall of Life (via Variety), Shirley MacLaine remembered Julia Roberts being mistreated by director Herbert Ross on the set of Steel Magnolias. She says the director mistreated and was unfair to Roberts, and seemed threatened by her talent and beauty. Eventually, the rest of the cast collectively urged the director to stop his mistreatment of the young actress. Read MacLaine’s full comments below:
He did not treat her well, and he was so unfair to her. Everyone else could see how talented and beautiful she was, so we didn’t take it too well. She seemed to threaten Herb Ross’ sense of power. We told him to knock it off and to leave her alone.
Earlier this year, Sally Field also opened up about director Herbert Ross’ mistreatment of Julia Roberts while filming Steel Magnolias. In an interview, Field said the director was “very, very, very hard on Julia. If you ever talk to Julia, she’ll tell you.” Field continues, describing how the cast coalesced around the young Roberts, “We would all rally around Julia, because she was the baby. She was sort of the newcomer. And she was wonderful, and he just picked on her. It was awful.”
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Field doesn’t see a particular reason why Roberts was mistreated, other than the director was “a real son of a bitch” and “some people just need to have somebody they pick on.” Field says it was Dolly Parton who first turned on the director, “always with humor, but usually the most vulgar humor you ever heard so that it was like, you just literally don’t have a leg to stand on.” Field says she doesn’t “mind notes” as an actor, but what the director did to Roberts was just plain “mean.”
Our Take On Julia Roberts’ Mistreatment On Steel Magnolias
There Was A Power Imbalance At The Time
There is an inherent power imbalance between directors and actors on film sets, and nowhere is that more apparent than on Steel Magnolias. At the time, Ross was known for directing 1977’s The Turning Point, receiving Academy Awards nominations for Best Director and Best Picture, and afterward, he went on to direct a big-box office success in 1984’s Footloose. On the other hand, 1989’s Steel Magnolias was one of Roberts’ first credits, though she quickly made a name for herself by earning the first Oscar nomination of her career, signaling to future collaborators that she shouldn’t be messed with.
Source: Variety