When playwright Robert Harling wrote Steel Magnolias back in 1987, he undoubtedly had no idea that more than 30 years later, people would still be quoting it regularly. Its original incarnation was a play that had a successful off-Broadway run. Then Paramount bought the movie rights and Harling wrote the script, transforming the play into a movie. Thanks to his witty words, a poignant story, the powerful portrait of strong Southern friendships, and an all-star cast that included Sally Field, Dolly Parton, Shirley MacLaine, Daryl Hannah, Olympia Dukakis, and Julia Roberts, the movie became a smash hit that has lasted through the ages. The film is a Southern staple with something for everyone who loves to laugh, cry, or eat armadillo cake. Here are 17 things you may not know about Steel Magnolias.
‘Steel Magnolias’ was based on a true story
Actor and writer Robert Harling wrote the play based on the true story of his sister, Susan Harling Robinson, who died from complications with diabetes.
The movie offered healing
Harling wanted his mother to leave the set when they filmed Julia Roberts’s death scene, but his mother insisted on staying so she could see Julia get up and walk away after the director yelled cut. “I said, ‘I can’t believe you put yourself through that,’” Harling recalled saying to his mother in an interview with the Huffington Post. “But Julia had become so special to my parents. She took some peace with that.”
The film gave back to others
The nurses and other hospital staff seen in Julia Roberts’ life-support scenes are actual medical professionals who focused on Harling’s sister in her final days.
It took 10 days to write
“The events that inspired it were so powerful that, after I found the story arena, it just poured out into my typewriter in a 24/7 tsunami of Southernness,” Harling told Garden & Gun in 2013 about the speedy writing process. “I had no idea what I’d written. I asked the first person I gave it to if it even looked like a play. I wasn’t really sure. All I knew was that I felt it portrayed my sister’s life and spirit accurately , and that was enough for me.”
It was originally a short story
Harling originally wanted to turn his sister’s life into a short story, but it quickly turned into a play because he wanted its Southernness to come out. “I was missing the sound of the wonderful vernacular,” he told Today in 2014. “It became a play because I wanted to hear the dialogue. And that was it.”
The author’s sister inspired a famous scene
When Harling hit a patch of writer’s block while working on the play, he channeled his sister for one of its most famous scenes. “I said, ‘What would Susan do?’ and what Susan would do would be outrageous,” he told Today. “She would do something completely inappropriate and completely out of the box.” The result is that at Shelby’s funeral, when her mother M’Lynn is understandably distraught, Clairee cheekily suggests that M’Lynn took out her grief by hitting Ouiser. “Here, hit this!” Clairee says in one of the film’s memorable scenes.
Others were considering playing Shelby
Originally, Winona Ryder was considered for the part of Shelby, but producers decided she was too young. Instead, they settled on Meg Ryan, who committed to the role before dropping out for a little film called When Harry Met Sally. That’s when Julia Roberts stepped in. “She walked into the room and that smile lit everything up, and I said ‘That’s my sister,’” Harling told The Daily Mail. “So she joined the party and she was magnificent.”
Another fun fact about Shelby’s role? When Nicole Kidman was starting out as an actress in Sydney, Australia, one of her earliest roles was Shelby in the stage version of Steel Magnolias.
Hollywood royalty wanted in
Elizabeth Taylor went to see Steel Magnolias during its off-Broadway run, and thanks to her rave review, Hollywood legend Bette Davis called up Harling and started a push to be cast in the film as Ouiser. She also thought that Katharine Hepburn could make a fantastic Clairee and Elizabeth Taylor would be perfect as M’Lynn. Harling said that Davis even invited him to tea to convince him that she was right for the role. The role, of course, went to Shirley MacLaine.
Harling wrote Truvy for another actress
While Dolly Parton was perfect in the role of beauty shop owner Truvy, the role was actually written for someone else entirely—Margo Martindale. Harling and Martindale were friends in real life and he wrote the part for her. She originated the role of Truvy in the play’s off-Broadway debut.
‘Steel Magnolias’ led to ‘Soapdish’
After long days on set in Natchitoches, Louisiana, the cast will gather together to play games and chat. One night, according to the Huffington Post, Harling asked each actress to name the role she’d most like to play. Sally Field said she always played “really noble, earnest women that wear crummy clothes. For once I’d like to play a b—h that gets to wear nice clothes.” Harling loved the idea and st