A rather odd way to phrase it. Amazing how unfair life is. Kirk Douglas just died, and Judy died, what 50 years ago. Yet Kirk was 5 years older. Its too bad she didn't have a long career like Mickey Rooney.
So many good movies in such a short career though.
Not big into "musical numbers" outside of the movie/play they're a part of. However, speaking of Ms. Garland, I just watched a great little movie she starred in, "The Clock". I'll highly recommend it as a cleanser for today's "media".
Judy Garland and Over the Rainbow. Nat King Cole and Stardust. Doris Day and Que Sera Sera. Bing Crosby and White Christmas. These songs go beyond nostalgia. They create their own happy memory. Extra poignancy points if they also had special poignancy for your parents.
We have watched "Meet Me In St. Louis" so many times I can't count. We call it, for short, "Ketchup" because of the opening scene. Every other minute has a in-joke for us.
That tennis outfit is one of the ugliest garments ever put on film.
Other happy memory songs associated with a particular artist,
Goldfinger, Shirley Bassey I Left My Heart in San Francisco, Tony Bennett Margaritaville, Jimmy Buffett Alfie, That’s What Friends Are For, Dionne Warwick, plus a bunch of other Burt Bacharach songs Piano Man, Billy Joel The Gambler, Kenny Rogers
as for Nate King Cole, I'd choose Autumn Leaves or Unforgettable
My favorite scene in a Judy Garland movie is the way she is totally mean and dismissive to three guys who want to dance with her at a small local cotillion in Saint Louis - one of the guys has ugly glasses, the other looks like a badly dressed Italian immigrant, and the third looks like her husband, the not-very masculine director Minelli.
She is also really mean to the Cowardly Lion - I think she slaps his face and laughs right in his face at one point.
In real life, she was probably a very kind and nice person when she was not strung out, but she did have a talent for playing mean people in the movies.
In the Sixties, The Wizard of Oz was on every year, and families watched it together. Maybe it still is, though there may not be as much familial togetherness. Her other pictures were also shown in prime time.
I can understand if those born at the end of the century don't know who she was. Maybe they don't know who Hope and Crosby or Abbot and Costello or Martin and Lewis were. But Oz was a part of growing up 60 years ago.
It's unfortunate that she became a way of snidely referring to homosexuals at a time when America barely knew what homosexuals were. She was, from what I can tell, as talented as any of the major male performers of her day.
What Education Realist said. Also, if you ever get a chance, watch on TCM or on one of the recent videos that are closer to the original - she was one of the first performers to really get how to perform for the cameras of the early "movies in color" years. And while my prior comment about her being mean was an attempt (as usual, a mostly failed attempt) at humor, she was either a really good actress in her later darker roles, or else she really meant what she was saying when she was in character (I don't and never have acted, but I am guessing they are different things).
Now I'm wondering about the connection between (cultural) immortality and technology.
Will the tech-enabled immortality of Garland and other 20th C performers be a different kind of immortality than say, Jenny Lind or Sarah Bernhardt enjoyed?
Who?
Exactly.
I'm only familiar with the hard-to-avoid (back then) Wiz, myself.
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What kind of people know who July Garland is? I barely do (mid-Boomer) and thought, "Wait, isn't she dead?"
Had to look. Still dead.
A rather odd way to phrase it. Amazing how unfair life is. Kirk Douglas just died, and Judy died, what 50 years ago. Yet Kirk was 5 years older. Its too bad she didn't have a long career like Mickey Rooney.
So many good movies in such a short career though.
Had a tortured life.
TCM is currently showing her movies.
Not big into "musical numbers" outside of the movie/play they're a part of. However, speaking of Ms. Garland, I just watched a great little movie she starred in, "The Clock". I'll highly recommend it as a cleanser for today's "media".
Would have been....
Judy Garland isn't 100, she would have been 100.
Thanks so much for posting this, Professor. What an amazing talent!
100 years old?
Judy would drink to that.
Judy Garland "would be" 100. Reading the headline I thought she was still alive.
Ummm...her rotting corpse is 100...
She is timeless. Has there ever been another who displayed such vulnerability on the screen, or brought so much joy?
That's a remarkably sensible list.
Judy Garland and Over the Rainbow. Nat King Cole and Stardust. Doris Day and Que Sera Sera. Bing Crosby and White Christmas. These songs go beyond nostalgia. They create their own happy memory. Extra poignancy points if they also had special poignancy for your parents.
We have watched "Meet Me In St. Louis" so many times I can't count. We call it, for short, "Ketchup" because of the opening scene. Every other minute has a in-joke for us.
That tennis outfit is one of the ugliest garments ever put on film.
Other happy memory songs associated with a particular artist,
Goldfinger, Shirley Bassey
I Left My Heart in San Francisco, Tony Bennett
Margaritaville, Jimmy Buffett
Alfie, That’s What Friends Are For, Dionne Warwick, plus a bunch of other Burt Bacharach songs
Piano Man, Billy Joel
The Gambler, Kenny Rogers
as for Nate King Cole, I'd choose Autumn Leaves or Unforgettable
I chose to write the post title that way, knowing that at least somebody would make that pedantic objection.
If you only had a heart…
The meaning is: she is immortal.
My favorite scene in a Judy Garland movie is the way she is totally mean and dismissive to three guys who want to dance with her at a small local cotillion in Saint Louis - one of the guys has ugly glasses, the other looks like a badly dressed Italian immigrant, and the third looks like her husband, the not-very masculine director Minelli.
She is also really mean to the Cowardly Lion - I think she slaps his face and laughs right in his face at one point.
In real life, she was probably a very kind and nice person when she was not strung out, but she did have a talent for playing mean people in the movies.
Sorry to live down to your expectation, but don't be so touchy. I didn't disparage her or her work, and had to look up her dates. Honest.
If Judy Garland was alive today she would be 100. If Jack Benny was alive today he would be 39.
No, she is dead. Memory of her is likely going to be immortal.
Not just one but three songs from Easter Parade should have made the list, along with Atchison Topeka and the Santa Fe (which won an Oscar).
I was just watching Elaine Stritch's one woman show with her great Judy Garland impression of the two of them partying after her Carnegie Hall show.
"Elaine," she said. "I never thought I'd say this, but....good night!"
Immortal for as long as gay men feel misunderstood.
In the Sixties, The Wizard of Oz was on every year, and families watched it together. Maybe it still is, though there may not be as much familial togetherness. Her other pictures were also shown in prime time.
I can understand if those born at the end of the century don't know who she was. Maybe they don't know who Hope and Crosby or Abbot and Costello or Martin and Lewis were. But Oz was a part of growing up 60 years ago.
It's unfortunate that she became a way of snidely referring to homosexuals at a time when America barely knew what homosexuals were. She was, from what I can tell, as talented as any of the major male performers of her day.
What Education Realist said. Also, if you ever get a chance, watch on TCM or on one of the recent videos that are closer to the original - she was one of the first performers to really get how to perform for the cameras of the early "movies in color" years. And while my prior comment about her being mean was an attempt (as usual, a mostly failed attempt) at humor, she was either a really good actress in her later darker roles, or else she really meant what she was saying when she was in character (I don't and never have acted, but I am guessing they are different things).
Now I'm wondering about the connection between (cultural) immortality and technology.
Will the tech-enabled immortality of Garland and other 20th C performers be a different kind of immortality than say, Jenny Lind or Sarah Bernhardt enjoyed?
Who?
Exactly.
I'm only familiar with the hard-to-avoid (back then) Wiz, myself.
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