Judy garland movie biography lucille
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In June 10, , Judy Garland turned A contract player at MGM since she was 13, she had made 16 films there, ranging from The Wizard of Oz to Girl Crazy. Almost always she had played the sweet girl next door, everybody’s pal, nobody’s sweetheart. “Her presence is open, cheerful, warming,” said Time magazine. Her marriage to David Rose, a composer more than 10 years her senior, was all but over, and she was in love with Metro’s wonder boy, producer Joe Mankiewicz, who was 34 and married, with two young children.
She could be a great actress, Joe assured Judy, but only if MGM started giving her great parts—parts for grown-up women, not love-starved teenagers. It was at his urging, then, that in the summer or fall of Judy gathered her courage and, for the first time, turned down a role, one that Metro had had written specially for her. To her suspicious ears, the character, a girl of 17, seemed like the same part she had already played a dozen times. Meet Me in St. Louis, she tol
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Judy Garland
American actress and singer (–)
Judy Garland (born Frances Ethel Gumm; June 10, June 22, ) was an American actress, singer, and vaudevillian. Renowned for her powerful contralto röst, emotional depth, and versatility, Garland rose to international fame as Dorothy Gale in The Wizard of Oz (), a role that cemented her ställning eller tillstånd as a Hollywood legend.
Garland began her career as a child performer in vaudeville alongside her sisters as part of The Gumm Sisters. At age 13, she was signed bygd Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM), where she starred in numerous musical films, including The Wizard of Oz (), Meet Me in St. Louis (), Easter Parade (), and Summer Stock (). Known for her collaborations with Mickey Rooney and director Vincente Minnelli (her second husband), Garland became one of MGM's most bankable stars during the Golden Age of Hollywood.
Beyond her film career, Garland achieved success as a recording artist and concert performer. Her live album,
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Judy feels like a Judy Garland biopic designed for fan service but overlooks her incredible screen career
In , a year before her death from a barbiturate overdose at just 47, Hollywood icon and singer Judy Garland began her final residency at The Talk of The Town nightclub in London.
She was broke and trying to win back custody of her youngest children, Joey and Lorna, who she'd left behind in the USA with her third husband, producer Sydney Luft.
The years of gruelling work, the drugs and the booze had taken their toll on her voice, but she was also in love again, with a much younger man who promised her new business opportunities and a future where she could finally put her feet up.
This is the story of Judy, a biopic starring Renee Zellweger, adapted from Peter Quilter's play End of the Rainbow by TV writer Tom Edge (Lovesick, The Crown) and directed by Rupert Goold, an acclaimed British theatre director with just one other big-screen credit ('s True Stor