Daughter keeping Garland’s legacy alive
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Tom Titus
The last movie Judy Garland made was called “I Could Go on Singing.”
In a way, she’s still doing just that, thanks to her younger
daughter, who’s keeping the legendary vocalist’s legacy alive some 35
years after her mother’s death.
Lorna Luft, a Broadway and cabaret star in her own right, has
taken on the mission to preserve the Judy Garland story for
succeeding generations with her touring show entitled “Songs My
Mother Taught Me.”
She’ll bring this very personal tribute to Founders Hall of the
Orange County Performing Arts Center Nov. 16 for a week-long
engagement.
“I’ve been doing the show for five years now, and it’s been
incredibly well received,” Luft said in a telephone interview shortly
after returning home to Beverly Hills after performing for two months
in London’s West End.
At the time, she was getting ready to take her act to Florida --
“I’m so glad it’s still there [after four consecutive hurricanes],”
she said.
There are those who believe no one but Judy should ever attempt to
sing the songs she made famous, such as “Over the Rainbow,” “You Made
Me Love You” or “The Man That Got Away.” Until recently, Lorna and
her more celebrated sibling, Liza Minnelli, were among them.
Minnelli’s Carnegie Hall album contains none of her mother’s
signature numbers.
“Liza’s begun just recently to sing Mama’s songs,” Luft said.
“We’re two totally different people. It took me way into my 40s
(she’ll turn 52 the day after her show closes) to feel comfortable
enough to see that people never, ever forget what she’s done. She was
too important to the entertainment world for us not to say thank you
to.”
Actor Kevin Spacey, Luft said, put it in perspective when,
discussing who should carry Garland’s torch musically, he said, “If
not you, who else?”
Who else, indeed. But Luft’s initial tribute didn’t involve her
vocal cords. In 1997, she wrote the book, “Me and My Shadows,” about
growing up with a legend. In 2001, it was turned into a four-hour
television miniseries entitled “Life With Judy Garland: Me and My
Shadows,” starring Judy Davis and executive produced by Luft.
What was Luft’s involvement with that project?
“Everything down to the color of the costumes,” she said. “I
really wanted it to be right. All other producers and directors would
go on to other things. If this wasn’t done right, everybody would
remember that I did it.”
Evidently, she did it right. The show was nominated for 13 Emmys
and won five. Davis’ performance even was acknowledged by Meryl
Streep when she picked up her own Emmy for “Angels in America.”
In Luft’s musical valentine to her mother, there will be family
songs and stories set against a backdrop of film and video clips that
work in concert with the singer’s live performance, resulting in a
sort of mother-daughter duet similar to Natalie Cole’s
“Unforgettable” number with Nat King Cole.
Their first actual performance together came on TV’s Judy Garland
Show in 1964, when Lorna was 11. During one segment, Garland sang
“Liza” and “Happiness is Just a Thing Called Joe” for two of her
children but regretted that “no one ever wrote a song about a Lorna.”
So Garland called on Johnny Mercer, who came up with the number
“Lorna” -- which Luft will include in her show at the center.
Lorna followed in her mother’s footsteps -- only on stage rather
than in film -- headlining regional theater and international
productions of “The Boy Friend,” “Grease,” “Carnival,” “Little Shop
of Horrors,” “The Unsinkable Molly Brown,” “Follies,” “Girl Crazy”
(the stage version of one of Judy’s movies), “Mame” and, most
recently, as Mama Rose in “Gypsy.” She starred in the national tours
of “They’re Playing Our Song,” Jerry Herman’s “Broadway Years” and as
Miss Adelaide in the national and world tour productions of “Guys and
Dolls.”
Having established her own name, Lorna Luft then set out to ensure
that audiences would never forget her mother’s. The format for “Songs
My Mother Taught Me” was written by Ken and Mitzie Welch, who
scripted the hugely entertaining Carol Burnett Show for TV. Luft’s
10-piece band will perform under the baton of her husband, Colin
Freeman.
Will the show spark a renewed interest in her talents and perhaps
lead to another stint on Broadway? Luft sincerely doubts it, and
frankly, she’s not all that anxious to pursue it. Broadway, she
admits, scares her, and London is even worse.
“The theater business is so risky right now,” she said. “With the
way critics have been treating Broadway, it’s too frightening. You
put your heart and soul into a show, and people can close it with
what they say.
“London critics are just as cruel. I would rather give people a
great night in a concert and not give them a sitting target. They’ve
stepped over the line so far. There’s a very anti-American feeling in
London right now. It’s very frightening and sad.
“When Judi Dench, Trevor Nunn and Neil Simon start writing
reviews, that’s when people should read them. They’ve been there and
done it. People don’t understand what it takes to put on a Broadway
or West End show, and there are a few critics in London who hate the
theater.
“People really work hard in theater, and concerts are expensive.
If you paid to see someone, you deserve 110%, and that’s what we
give.”
One final word about her mother: “She was an amazing human being.
This is the way I’m able to say thank you. There are generations
growing up that may not know what she did. Please come -- and bring
your children.”
Lorna Luft will be singing all the “Songs My Mother Taught Me” at
7:30 p.m. from Nov. 16 to Nov. 20 in Founders Hall at the Orange
County Performing Arts Center. Advance reservations are being taken
at (714) 556-2787.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Daily Pilot. His reviews
appear Fridays.
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