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Sally Field Says Julia Roberts Was Mistreated By 'Steel Magnolias' Director Herbert Ross

Julia Roberts hit a professional milestone in 1989 with the release of “Steel Magnolias” ― but according to one of her co-stars, she was enduring some behind-the-scenes bullying from the movie’s director, Herbert Ross.

In a new interview with New York magazine’s Vulture, Sally Field described Ross being “very, very, very hard” on Roberts while filming the dramedy, which raked in more than $83 million at the U.S. box office ― a rarity for a female-led film at the time.

“If you ever talk to Julia, she’ll tell you,” Field said. “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.”

As to why Ross might have singled Roberts out, Field said: “Because he could be a real son of a bitch, that’s why. Some people just need to have somebody they pick on. But we all came to her aid.”

Field, a two-time Oscar winner, said Ross didn’t subject her to the same treatment “because he dared not.”

“I mean, I don’t mind notes, but I will argue if it doesn’t make sense to me,” she explained. “But if you’re gonna be mean to me, then you’re gonna find a warrior. I may be small, but you don’t want to do that.”

Ross, whose Hollywood résumé also included “The Goodbye Girl” and “Footloose,” died in 2001 at age 74.

Based on Robert Harling’s 1987 stage play, “Steel Magnolias” follows a close-knit group of female friends in small-town Louisiana as they come to terms with the unexpected death of one of their own. Harling found inspiration for the story in his sister, Susan Harling Robinson, who died of complications related to Type 1 diabetes in 1985.

When translating “Steel Magnolias” from stage to screen, Ross and his team assembled an all-star cast

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