The dancer is a woman with black and curly hair. She has an orange undershirt with a black vest and a tie with white and pink stripes on top of that. Along with it, she has black shorts, and a belt and chain attached to the short. She also has open-toed orange heels. She has a purple outline.
Remake
In her remake, her outfit is more realistic, the colors are the same but now they are shown in a lighter color scheme and slightly glow. Her tie now has purple stripes instead of magenta stripes. Her pants are shown in a slightly bluish color. Her face is less visible and her outline changes colors depending on the color scheme of the background. It is orange if the color scheme is blue, blue if the color scheme is orange, and a darker purple if the color scheme is pink. Also, her hair is neater and in a dark shade of purple.
Extreme
The extreme dancer is a man with long red hair and a purple mustache. He wears a turquoise head band, an orange sweater with purple and aqua stripes, purple shorts, green socks with a peach stripe and white and red shoes with purple laces.
The dancer is Papa Smurf. He has blue skin and a bushy white beard. He wears red pants and a matching red Phrygian cap.
Background
Classic
Original
The background is a dark street with lots of cafes and shops. Lots of neon signs light up with the beat of the song. There is also the word "STOP" on the ground with squares close to it, suggesting the dancer is dancing on the road.
Remake
The background will start pitch black at first. The sides of the road and then a stoplight light up and the dancer appears. The road is now wider. The buildings and road are now completely pitch black, but a glow emits from the buildings. The signs will now flash individually instead of all together and display different words and pictures. The word "STOP" and the squares around it are no longer visible with the rest of the road but will also light up like the signs. Additionally, instead of each part of the street having a blue, orange and purple color scheme respectively, the color scheme is a lighter blue, orange and pink respectively. When the dancer does the move where she pulls her right hand back and then moves it close to her left hand, the background slowly turns pitch black and a glow appears where her left hand is.
Extreme
It contains silhouettes of a beach with flamingos, colorful palm trees and stripes that glow. It has a very similar appearance to the background from Mr. Saxobeat.
Gold Moves 1 and 3: Put your hands at your chin as if you are surprised. Gold Moves 2 and 4: Put your right hand on the air while your left hand touches your left leg.
Both versions of Barbra Streisand appear in Puppet/Party Master Modes. Here are the captions attributed to her/his dance moves:
Classic
Clap That Hand
Hips Lock
Just Say No
NYC
Side To Side
Slap It
Watch Out
Wind Up Pony
Extreme
Free Style
Locking
No Straining
Techno Break
Techno Lock
Techno Slide
Techno Twitch
Trivia
Barbra Streisand is the first song by Duck Sauce in the series.
The Extreme dancer messes up on the third Gold Move by pointing left once and pointing right twice.
The dancer appears on the NTSC boxart.
In the NTSC cover she is displayed with high green-striped socks and has slightly longer hair and different color scheme.
In the trailer she is also depicted with slightly longer hair.
The code for the Extreme version is in the buttons of the controller of the console and the order of how they're pressed. The pattern is up-up-down-down-left-right-left-right.
This code is also known as the famous Konami Code, a code used in various Konami games as a way to get extra lives or extra content. It fits, as an Extreme version is extra content.
According to justdancegame, the only way to get the code is to purchase any Kellogg’s item at Wal-Mart; this has been found to be unnecessary.[1][2]
This is likely left over due to the fact the engine is based off of Just Dance 3.
This is the first song in the series to have been named after a real person (in this case, the singer Barbra Streisand). It is followed by Alfonso Signorini (Eroe Nazionale).
A scene from the Classic routine is featured in the 2014 edition of the Guinness Book of World Records.
The beginning of the song i's shortened.
The Classic coach appears in the teaser for the song I’ll House You by Don Diablo featuring Jungle Brothers, along with Wild and Just Dance.[3]
The beginning of the Classic routine has differences between the Xbox 360 and the Wii/PS3 version: on the Wii and PS3, the background and the coach zoom in fast, but this doesn't happen on the Xbox 360.
The Extreme routine is the first Extreme routine in the series.
Barbra Streisand is also the second song in the series to have an Alternate routine, after When I Grow Up.