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#BornThisDay: Liza Minnelli

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liza-minnelli

March 12, 1946Liza Mae Minnelli Allen Haley Gero Gest:

“Momma always taught me: ‘Be the best version of yourself. Don’t be the second best version of somebody else.’ I’ve always stuck to that. I performed with her at the Palladium and it was tough to keep up although I never tried to imitate her. She’d be pleased I’ve made a name for myself.”

They come in all stripes, shapes and shades, so I am rather certain that there must be some gay folks that do not care for her. I mean, there are unbelievably, Gay Republicans after all,  but for me, I wouldn’t be a proper gay guy having my gay day without mentioning that today is the birthday of Liza Minnelli.

For you kids who are too young to understand, her mother was Judy Garland, whose own father was gay, two of her husbands were gay, the man she handpicked as a husband for her Liza was gay, her gay fans remained her most steadfast fans through the drugs and the booze, the highs and the lows. Her father was Vincente Minnelli, the director of classic MGM musicals like Meet Me In St. Louis (1944), Gigi (1958) and An American In Paris (1951), who lived a life as peculiar as the dream ballets that became his trademark. Even Liza got her start at MGM, at two years old, in a scene with her mother in The Good Old Summertime (1949).

The first two visitors to her famous mother’s bedside when she had given birth to Liza were Frank Sinatra and Noël Coward. Minnelli:

“Honey, I’ve been famous since before I was born.”

That has been both her blessing and her curse.

Fully recognizing her illustrious pedigree (her parents were both Academy Award winners) I first saw her in The Sterile Cuckoo (1969), which brought her an Oscar nomination. I was rather astonished by her performance which was followed by another in Tell Me That You Love Me, Junie Moon (1970). Of course, there was the double whammy in 1972 of the film version of the musical Cabaret plus the television special Liza With A Z, all formidable, heady stuff for a baby gay like me.

Minnelli started her career in her teens, working first in nightclubs, crooning the standards while dreaming of being an actor. While it lacked the glamour of Broadway or the prestige of films, the years of performing before a small audience helped her build her acting chops and her assured stage presence. She was one of the replacements for the role of Luisa in the long-running The Fantasticks Off-Rroadway and on tour. She made it to Broadway with credits that include: Flora The Red Menace (1965), Chicago (1976), The Act (1978), The Rink (1984), Victor/Victoria (1997), plus a series of Broadway concerts, the first in 1974 and the last 2009.

You kids might know Minnelli from her role in the cult hit Arrested Development (2003-05, 2013). What you might not have noticed was the amount of inside jokes the writers crammed into her appearances; mocking and paying homage to everything from her biggest roles to her famous friends. Minnelli camping it up as the horny, rich, dizzy (literally) Lucille was one of the best surprises on a show filled with great ones.

There is no denying the talent: An Oscar, Emmy, Tony, Grammy, BAFTA, and Golden Globe all sit on her mantle, one of only 16 people to have won them all.

For me, Minnelli was miscast in her most famous role as Sally Bowles in Cabaret, a character decidedly marked by her lack of talent. But it is bad casting that worked out rather nicely. Minnelli was absolutely wrong for the role, yet she made it her own and ruined it for every actor that followed.

Through the ups and downs, the drugs and booze, the weight gains and losses, and the marriages, just when she seems a joke, Minnelli redeems and reinvents herself with choices like Results, her terrific 1989 album with Pet Shop Boys.

Minnelli’s performing style is so: “Please, Please, Love Me”, that I find it simply rude not to. At 70 years old she keeps on giving and giving and demanding the love.

Minnelli, performing since  she was 2 eyears old, isn’t about to retire.  Just six months ago, she gave a series of concerts in the UK, including a night at The Palladium, the same venue at her mother’s famous comeback concerts in 1964. Garland died with a huge debt. Minnelli has bills to pay too:

“I have two business managers and they’re both in jail! I mean, Marty Scorsese and I had the same business manager… and he’s in the clink! Luckily, now I insist on always signing my own checks. You learn a little bit as you go along.”

The showbiz must go on.

Minnelli has always been an outspoken advocate for LGBTQ people. But did you know that she claims that she told Elizabeth Taylor about HIV/AIDS while talking about their mutual friend, Rock Hudson? She has given a lot  time to Taylor’s organization, amfAR (The Foundation for AIDS Research).

Minnelli has long been associated with the music of Kander and Ebb, and in 1994 she recorded their song The Day After That, donating the proceeds to amfAR. She performed the song in front of thousands of fans at a Central Park concert on the 25th anniversary of the Stonewall Riots.

Like her mother before her, at least 3 of her husbands were gay. They practically invented the term “Gay Marriage”.

On a lovely spring day in 1977, I followed her for several blocks until she went into the Russian Tea Room, where she met Lauren Bacall in the doorway with a kiss. I followed the pair of stars inside and sat at the bar, but I couldn’t bring myself to approach her. I may have seen her at Studio 54 during that same era, who knows, what with the Quaaludes and the cocaine; maybe I just thought I saw her with Halston, Bianca and Andy.

“Listen, everyone ages but not everyone has to get old. I’ve never lost my curiosity and I think that keeps you young.”

The post #BornThisDay: Liza Minnelli appeared first on The WOW Report.


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