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Paperback Judy Garland: A Biography Book

ISBN: 1589797876

ISBN13: 9781589797871

Judy Garland: A Biography

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Book Overview

Edwards's biography presents a complete picture of the late actress--and not just the boozing, drug-addicted caricature of a woman central to lesser biographies. We learn, for example, that Garland saw it as her duty to provide for her family financially, a generosity that her mother Ethel exploited with disastrous results. Above all, Judy Garland sought to please, whether it was an audience or a studio head, and therein lies her powerful and heartbreaking...

Customer Reviews

2 ratings

A super- sympathetic biography of one of the greatest stars of all

This is a detailed and highly readable biography. Edwards is very sympathetic to Judy Garland and she makes her out to be a victim. She is first of all a victim of her frustrated, ambitious stage- mother who cared more for her daughter's show- business success than she did for her family. Garland is too shown to be the victim of Metro- Goldwyn- Mayer, of the big studio's regimentation, and exploitation. Here the monster figure is Louis B. Mayer. Later Judy is portrayed as victim of second husband Vincente Minelli ( father of her first daughter, Liza) and third- husband Sid Luft( father of Lorna and Joey Luft). Luft served as her manager for ten years and had an off- again, on - again relationship with her for years after this. Garland's path to self- destruction through use of drugs and alcohol is a major theme of the work. Edwards' claim is that this began in her days at Metro, and also had to do with the dieting she had to do to stay in shape. While this book is filled with the woes and sufferings of Garland it also filled with the story of her great vitality and tremendous achievements. She was of course one of the great superstars of American entertainment. She remains today a 'classic ' figure in American culture. 'Somewhere over the Rainbow ' is the ever- hopeful anthem of a whole culture. Edwards tells of the years at Metro co-starring with her friend Mickey Rooney in the Hardy films, of the breakthrough of 'Somewhere Over the Rainbow' of her eventually losing her place there. The great second career afterwards as a performer, her incredible performances at Palladium and at the 'Palace' are written about with breathtaking skill and drama. Also she tells the story of her second truly great film ' A Star is Born'. One especially moving set of stories has to do with Garland's connecting with and caring for orphan children. She as Edwards makes clear suffered from abandonment and loneliness in childhood and so had special feeling for these children. Edwards too writes in a good way about what Judy Garland came to mean for her audiences. They saw themselves in her brokenness , in her desparate struggle just to keep going. The sympathy love her audiences gave her was something special. And she most often did not disappoint them. She sang with everything she had. With all this Edwards does not really go into what it must have meant to live with someone like Garland. She does indicate that Lorna Luft often was mother to her mother. But she does not give us a sense really of how trying, difficult, demanding, impossible a person on drugs and alcohol can be. This said she does bring out the loving and caring sides of Garland, and above all her unquestioned greatness as actress and singer.

Judy Garland: Not Just the Eternal Victim

Judy, Judy, Judy, the entertainer extraordinaire,greatly loved: movie star and stage performer. In this book, Anne Edwards suggests, think Judy, think "Eternal Victim." But that was the view held in the 70's, shortly after Garland's death: it may not be the most useful to us. This biography is an oldie but a goodie. Edwards, who was English, was a London neighbor of Judy's: she treats Judy with respect, affection, and sympathy. She's decent; discreet about some sad episodes of Judy's life about which we don't really need to know; she takes Judy's word on things. Almost all the books written about Judy up until Edwards' focused on Judy's use of booze and drugs, her scandals. Edwards was the first to try to convey the complexity of the woman, the heart and soul of this great talent. If you want a better, later, more complete chronicle of Judy's career, you might want to read John Fricke's "Judy Garland, Art and Anecdote." But Edwards' book stands on its own; it captures the warmth, the essence of this remarkable performer. Edwards has written several show business biographies, of Katherine Hepburn and Vivien Leigh, among others. She may not rake all the dirt that's to be found, but she's consistently compassionate, interviews many people, and writes smoothly and well. So, Judy Garland,born Frances Gumm, sang "Jingle Bells" on the vaudeville stage at two 1/2 years old, and was greeted rapturously. She was supporting her family by the time she was four. She wasn't born a beautiful child, but she was born with a great big beautiful voice. She was born to Ethel, who would be a strong candidate for worst stage mother ever. Her father, Francis, was a weak and charming Irishman: later Judy was to bring up suppressed memories of finding him engaged in homosexual activities. At the age of twelve, an overweight, not very pretty Judy sang "Zing Went the Strings of My Heart" to the terrifying Louis B. (LB) Mayer, tyrant of the powerhouse film studio Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. He signed her, but didn't quite know what to do with her until he decided to try pairing her with the equally young Mickey Rooney. Starting with "Love Finds Andy Hardy," she made a string of popular depression-era movies with Rooney, who was paid better than ten times her salary. (LB, Judy's mother Ethel, and Judy's tame agent seemed to keep setting her salary very low, during all the years Judy was making a fortune for them.) Edwards states that young Judy was 5'2"; Judy's fans say she was 4'9". Thinking she should weigh no more than 98 pounds, the studio put her on a starvation diet, including drugs. Soon they would discover that the easiest way to enable her to work the long hard hours they demanded was to put her on more drugs, uppers and downers, to wake and to sleep. She was to struggle all her life with weight, and drug issues; ballooning to 150 pounds, then shrinking to frightening frailty. Over the years, she would require quite a few expensive hospitalizations fo
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