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Classic Films
Related: About this forumTCM Schedule for Friday, June 3, 2022 -- What's On Tonight: Star of the Month - Judy Garland
In the daylight hours, TCM is celebrating two birthday girls -- Paulette Goddard and Judy Garland. As Judy is the Star of the Month, let's get a little information about Pauline Marion Goddard Levy from IMDB:Marion Goddard Levy was born in Whitestone Landing, New York, on 3 June 1910. She was a beautiful child who began to model for local department stores before she made her debut with Florenz Ziegfeld's Follies at the age of 13. For three years she astounded audiences with her talent.
She married Edgar James when she was 17, but the union was doomed to failure and was dissolved in 1930. By then Paulette had begun to make her mark on Hollywood with a small bit appearance in the film Berth Marks (1929). Her age (19) didn't help her in getting better parts. She would continue in bit roles in films such as The Girl Habit (1931), The Mouthpiece (1932), and Young Ironsides (1932). For the next four years she searched for parts but came up empty-handed. It wasn't until 1936 that Paulette would again appear in a motion picture, Charlie Chaplin's last silent film, Modern Times (1936).
Three years later she gained a decent part in The Women (1939), and Paulette thought that maybe her career was finally taking off. In her next film, she played Joyce Norman in The Cat and the Canary (1939), which was intended to be a send-off vehicle for Bob Hope. It not only did that, but it established her as a genuine star. Her performance won her a ten-year contract with Paramount Studios, which was one of the premier studios of the day. Her next feature film was with the great Fred Astaire in the acclaimed musical Second Chorus (1940). Later that year she once again teamed up with Bob Hope for the film The Ghost Breakers (1940), a huge hit. This was just the beginning because the 1940s was the decade that kept her busy and in the American movie-going public's eyes. Motion pictures such as The Great Dictator (1940) with husband Charles Chaplin, Pot o' Gold (1941), and The Lady Has Plans (1942) were added to her already sparkling resume.
In 1943, Paulette was nominated for Best Supporting Actress in the film So Proudly We Hail! (1943). She didn't win, but it solidified her as a top draw. Although Standing Room Only (1944) with Fred MacMurray didn't bring in the crowds at the box office, the production is still remembered as a delightful comedy, a must-see for any film buff. Paulette reached the pinnacle of her career in Mitchell Leisen's Kitty (1945). The film was a hit with moviegoers, as she played an ordinary English woman transformed into a duchess. The film was filled with plenty of comedy, dramatic and romantic scenes that appealed to virtually everyone. As Abby Hale in Unconquered (1947), Paulette once more found herself with a profit-making flick. This Cecil B. DeMille film paired her with Gary Cooper in an 18th century romantic drama. The critics weren't too keen on it, but the public could not have cared less. They loved this long-running (146 minutes) movie.
She appeared in only six feature films in the 1950s, the last being Charge of the Lancers (1954). She would not be seen again on the silver screen until in Time of Indifference (1964). Her career was just about finished, although she did appear in a made-for-TV film called The Snoop Sisters: The Female Instinct (1972) as Norma Treet. She retired from the film world for good. On 23 April 1990, she died of emphysema and heart failure in Ronco, Switzerland, at the age of 79.
She married Edgar James when she was 17, but the union was doomed to failure and was dissolved in 1930. By then Paulette had begun to make her mark on Hollywood with a small bit appearance in the film Berth Marks (1929). Her age (19) didn't help her in getting better parts. She would continue in bit roles in films such as The Girl Habit (1931), The Mouthpiece (1932), and Young Ironsides (1932). For the next four years she searched for parts but came up empty-handed. It wasn't until 1936 that Paulette would again appear in a motion picture, Charlie Chaplin's last silent film, Modern Times (1936).
Three years later she gained a decent part in The Women (1939), and Paulette thought that maybe her career was finally taking off. In her next film, she played Joyce Norman in The Cat and the Canary (1939), which was intended to be a send-off vehicle for Bob Hope. It not only did that, but it established her as a genuine star. Her performance won her a ten-year contract with Paramount Studios, which was one of the premier studios of the day. Her next feature film was with the great Fred Astaire in the acclaimed musical Second Chorus (1940). Later that year she once again teamed up with Bob Hope for the film The Ghost Breakers (1940), a huge hit. This was just the beginning because the 1940s was the decade that kept her busy and in the American movie-going public's eyes. Motion pictures such as The Great Dictator (1940) with husband Charles Chaplin, Pot o' Gold (1941), and The Lady Has Plans (1942) were added to her already sparkling resume.
In 1943, Paulette was nominated for Best Supporting Actress in the film So Proudly We Hail! (1943). She didn't win, but it solidified her as a top draw. Although Standing Room Only (1944) with Fred MacMurray didn't bring in the crowds at the box office, the production is still remembered as a delightful comedy, a must-see for any film buff. Paulette reached the pinnacle of her career in Mitchell Leisen's Kitty (1945). The film was a hit with moviegoers, as she played an ordinary English woman transformed into a duchess. The film was filled with plenty of comedy, dramatic and romantic scenes that appealed to virtually everyone. As Abby Hale in Unconquered (1947), Paulette once more found herself with a profit-making flick. This Cecil B. DeMille film paired her with Gary Cooper in an 18th century romantic drama. The critics weren't too keen on it, but the public could not have cared less. They loved this long-running (146 minutes) movie.
She appeared in only six feature films in the 1950s, the last being Charge of the Lancers (1954). She would not be seen again on the silver screen until in Time of Indifference (1964). Her career was just about finished, although she did appear in a made-for-TV film called The Snoop Sisters: The Female Instinct (1972) as Norma Treet. She retired from the film world for good. On 23 April 1990, she died of emphysema and heart failure in Ronco, Switzerland, at the age of 79.
Then in prime time, we start the month-long look at Star of the Month, Judy Garland.
STAR OF THE MONTH: JUDY GARLAND
By Rebecca Kumar May 12, 2022
Friday June 3 to Friday June 24, 2022 31 Movies
This month TCM celebrates the 100th birthday of Judy Garland (June 10, 1922-June 22, 1969) an international star on screen, stage, and in sound. She appeared or starred in over 35 films, hosted her own television show, The Judy Garland Show, recorded countless songs, and performed in concert over 1,100 times. To say she was versatile is an understatement. She received an Academy Juvenile Award, a Golden Globe Award, and a Special Tony Award. Moreover, Garland was the first woman to win the Grammy Award for Album of the Year for her 1961 live recording, Judy at Carnegie Hall. She is not only remembered for her success as a performer, but as a child turned adult star who burned hot and fast. She suffered through a series of personal and professional challenges and obstacles, yet always remained gracious to her loyal fans.
Born Frances Ethel Gumm in Grand Rapids, Minnesota, Garland is perhaps best known for playing the role of Dorothy Gale in The Wizard of Oz (1939), the most seen film in movie history. Yet, her career began nearly a decade earlier. She and her sisters, Mary Jane Suzy/Suzanne Gumm and Dorothy Virginia Jimmie Gumm were a vaudeville troupe known as the Gumm Sisters but changed their name to the Garland sisters in 1934. Frances changed her name to Judy soon after, inspired by the popular Hoagy Carmichael song. The troupe broke up in 1935 and Judy went solo, signing with MGM that year.
TCM starts the celebration of Garlands cinematic work where she debuted: in Pigskin Parade (1936), which tells the story of husband-and-wife college football coaches who convince a backwoods player named Amos Dodd (Stuart Erwin) to play for their team so they can go to the big game. Amos is discovered tossing melons with his kid sister, Sairy, performed by a fourteen-year-old Garland. Despite the role, Garlands career at MGM was precarious. She was in an open competition with a young singer named Deanna Durbin, a blond beauty with a voice for opera. However, when Garland sang You Made Me Love You (I Didnt Want to Do It), a tribute to Clark Gable in Broadway Melody of 1938 (1937), she outshined Durbin and became an overnight sensation.
MGM found a winning cinematic formula when it paired Garland with Micky Rooney in a string of backyard musicals. Garland and Rooney first appeared together as a duo in Thoroughbreds Dont Cry (1937). Garland was then put in the cast of the Hardy family movies, playing the literal girl-next-door to Rooneys character, Andy Hardy, in Love Finds Andy Hardy (1938), Andy Hardy Meets Debutante (1940), and Life Begins for Andy Hardy. The two teamed as leads in Babes in Arms (1939), Babes on Broadway (1940), and Strike Up the Band (1940).
Despite her early promise and overnight popularity, Garland was berated and criticized by MGM studio executives for her physical appearance. She was just under 5 ft tall, and her cute, brunette, girl-next-door looks did not reflect the glamourous aesthetic associated with the more successful and sought-after leading female actresses at the time. As a result, Garland was pigeonholed into more childish, saccharine, and painfully innocent roles some quite embarrassing as the studio had her in blackface like in Everybody Sing (1938) and even in Babes in Arms. (These blackface performances are striking and confusing in hindsight, particularly given Garlands progressive views on race in her adult life; she took part in The March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom and held a press conference to protest the bombing of the 16th Street Baptist Church in Birmingham in 1963).
Charles Walters who directed Garland in a number of films during that era, described her as the ugly duckling on set and claimed that co-founder of MGM, Louis B. Mayer, referred to her as his little hunchback. This brutal body shaming continued throughout her career. To meet the demands of Hollywood, Garland reports she was prescribed substances to deal with the long hours on set and was encouraged to maintain restrictive eating regimen to stay slim. While filming The Wizard of Oz, she often only ate a bowl of soup and a plate of lettuce for her meals. Her diet was accompanied by swimming, hiking, tennis, and badminton. The blue gingham dress synonymous with Dorothy was chosen for Garland for its blurring effect on her figure. As if to reward her sacrifices, The Wizard of Oz was a critical success. In 1939, Garland received her only Oscar for her performance in it as well as Babes in Arms, the Juvenile Award. She was the fourth person to receive the award as well as the only one of twelve in history to be presented with one.
After The Wizard of Oz, Garland was one of the most bankable actresses in Hollywood and she graduated from backyard musicals and parted ways with Rooney. She stepped into an adult role, playing both daughter and mother, in Little Nellie Kell (1940). The role was challenging; she had to use an accent and have her first adult kiss. Her co-star George Murphy, who was 20 years her senior, said he felt like a hillbilly with a child bride. She performed, as an adult, with Gene Kelly in his first screen appearance in the war film, For Me and My Gal (1942). And the next year, she was given the glamor treatment MGM said she would never have in Presenting Lily Mars (1943), a film about a small-town girl with big-city ambitions, hoping to make it on Broadway.
One of Garlands most successful films for MGM was Meet Me in St. Louis (1944), a series of seasonal vignettes revolving around the Worlds Fair. Garland debuted the standards, The Trolley Song, The Boy Next Door, and Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas, all of which became hits after the film was released. The Clock (1945) was Garlands first straight romantic drama; though it was praised and earned a profit, most movie fans expected her to sing. As a result, she did not act again in a non-singing dramatic role for many years. Garlands other films during that time included The Harvey Girls (1946) and Till Clouds Roll By (1946).
Toward the end of the decade, in 1948, during filming for The Pirate (1948), Garland had a nervous breakdown. Though she was able to complete filming, she attempted to commit suicide and had to complete a two-week treatment at a psychiatric hospital. Between the increased expense of shooting delays while Garland was ill and the publics unwillingness to accept her in such a sophisticated film, The Pirate did not garner a profit. Garland was nevertheless cast with Fred Astaire in Easter Parade (1948,) which became her top-grossing film at MGM. However, she never fully recovered from her psychological distress. She was taking prescription drugs along with illicitly obtained morphine pills. Around this time, she also developed an alcohol dependence. MGM temporarily suspended her from acting so she could be treated until they summoned her back for her last appearance with Micky Rooney in Words and Music (1948) and to replace a pregnant June Allyson in the musical film, In the Good Old Summertime (1949), which was an enormous success. Behind the scenes, though, Garland was still depressed, and undergoing electroconvulsive therapy for her condition. So severe was her anxiety that she was cast but immediately replaced by Betty Hutton for the lead role in Annie Get Your Gun (1950). In the wake of that loss, she underwent an extensive hospital stay and was weaned off the drugs. When Garland return to Los Angeles to continue to work, she was healthier, but heavier. She was again cast opposite Gene Kelly in Summer Stock (1950) but had to lose weight for the role. She went back on the pills and relapsed). Summer Stock was her final film with MGM.
During the 1940s, Garland had a series of failed relationships and affairs. Earlier in the decade, when she was still a teenager, she experienced her first serious romance with bandleader, Artie Shaw and was devastated when he eloped with Lana Turner. She also had a relationship with musician David Rose who proposed to her when she turned eighteen. The studio intervened, because at the time he was still married to actress and singer, Martha Raye. Once his divorce cleared, Garland and Rose were wed on July 27, 1941, but were divorced by 1944. In 1941, Garland had an abortion while pregnant with Roses child. She had another one in 1943 when she became pregnant from her affair with Tyrone Power. She went on to have a brief affair with film director, Orson Welles, who at that time was married to Rita Hayworth. During the filming of Meet Me in St. Louis, Garland and the director Vincente Minnelli initially had some conflict, but entered into a romantic relationship and married in 1945. They were divorced in 1951. He was 20 years older than her.
Garland made her Hollywood comeback in the Warner Bros. film, A Star is Born (1954), the first remake of the 1937 film, this time directed by George Cukor. She starred as Esther Maine and produced the film through Transcona Enterprise, the production company she shared with her then husband, Sidney Luft. Initially she was fully dedicated to the project, but soon began to complain of the same illnesses she experienced while at MGM. The film suffered from project timeline setbacks, creative disagreements, and severe edits. Though it was met with critical and popular acclaim, it was a financial failure. Nevertheless, Garland was nominated for an Academy Award for her performance in the film and won the Golden Globe for Best Actress in a Musical.
Garlands subsequent films after A Star is Born included Judgement at Nuremburg (1961), for which she was nominated for both an Oscar and Golden Globe for Best Supporting Actress), the delightful animated musical Gay Purr-ee (1962), and A Child Is Waiting (1963). Her final film was the aptly titled, I Could Go on Singing (1963).
Garlands birthday falls during LGBT Pride Month and, since the 1960s, she has been a quintessential gay icon. Being a friend of Judy was a popular euphemism for being gay during a time when homosexuality was illegal and actively policed by authorities. White male gay audiences, in particular, have attached queer meaning to her oeuvre. The song with which Garland is now constantly identified, Somewhere Over the Rainbow, from The Wizard of Oz, reflects a longing for another place, one that is kinder and more colorful. Some queer fans say that the song was an inspiration for the LGBT Rainbow Flag. The song, Come Out, Come Out also from the soundtrack has long been heard as a call to abandon the closet. Garlands campy performance in the Trolley Song from Meet me in St. Louis remains a staple of queer sing-alongs. In general, the storylines in most of her films appeal to gay audiences as they involve her characters being overlooked or abandoned by men, longing for love that goes unrequited. Gay fans also sympathize with her offscreen hardships, as she juggled Hollywoods impossible demands and the pains of her love life. Garlands daughter, Liza Minnelli is likewise a gay icon, coming into queer popularity with her performance in Cabaret (1972). Minnelli recently made a rare public appearance at the 94th Academy Awards alongside Lady Gaga, who played Allie Maine in the fourth iteration of a Star is Born (2018).
Garland enjoyed popularity on television and in concerts, sometimes performing with her daughter, for most of the 1960s. During this time, she was also embroiled in a heated divorce suit with Luft who she accused of mental and physical abuse. Moreover, she suffered from severe financial instability, due to mismanagement of her affairs by her representatives and staff. She died of a substance overdose in 1969. She was only 47 years old.
By Rebecca Kumar May 12, 2022
Friday June 3 to Friday June 24, 2022 31 Movies
This month TCM celebrates the 100th birthday of Judy Garland (June 10, 1922-June 22, 1969) an international star on screen, stage, and in sound. She appeared or starred in over 35 films, hosted her own television show, The Judy Garland Show, recorded countless songs, and performed in concert over 1,100 times. To say she was versatile is an understatement. She received an Academy Juvenile Award, a Golden Globe Award, and a Special Tony Award. Moreover, Garland was the first woman to win the Grammy Award for Album of the Year for her 1961 live recording, Judy at Carnegie Hall. She is not only remembered for her success as a performer, but as a child turned adult star who burned hot and fast. She suffered through a series of personal and professional challenges and obstacles, yet always remained gracious to her loyal fans.
Born Frances Ethel Gumm in Grand Rapids, Minnesota, Garland is perhaps best known for playing the role of Dorothy Gale in The Wizard of Oz (1939), the most seen film in movie history. Yet, her career began nearly a decade earlier. She and her sisters, Mary Jane Suzy/Suzanne Gumm and Dorothy Virginia Jimmie Gumm were a vaudeville troupe known as the Gumm Sisters but changed their name to the Garland sisters in 1934. Frances changed her name to Judy soon after, inspired by the popular Hoagy Carmichael song. The troupe broke up in 1935 and Judy went solo, signing with MGM that year.
TCM starts the celebration of Garlands cinematic work where she debuted: in Pigskin Parade (1936), which tells the story of husband-and-wife college football coaches who convince a backwoods player named Amos Dodd (Stuart Erwin) to play for their team so they can go to the big game. Amos is discovered tossing melons with his kid sister, Sairy, performed by a fourteen-year-old Garland. Despite the role, Garlands career at MGM was precarious. She was in an open competition with a young singer named Deanna Durbin, a blond beauty with a voice for opera. However, when Garland sang You Made Me Love You (I Didnt Want to Do It), a tribute to Clark Gable in Broadway Melody of 1938 (1937), she outshined Durbin and became an overnight sensation.
MGM found a winning cinematic formula when it paired Garland with Micky Rooney in a string of backyard musicals. Garland and Rooney first appeared together as a duo in Thoroughbreds Dont Cry (1937). Garland was then put in the cast of the Hardy family movies, playing the literal girl-next-door to Rooneys character, Andy Hardy, in Love Finds Andy Hardy (1938), Andy Hardy Meets Debutante (1940), and Life Begins for Andy Hardy. The two teamed as leads in Babes in Arms (1939), Babes on Broadway (1940), and Strike Up the Band (1940).
Despite her early promise and overnight popularity, Garland was berated and criticized by MGM studio executives for her physical appearance. She was just under 5 ft tall, and her cute, brunette, girl-next-door looks did not reflect the glamourous aesthetic associated with the more successful and sought-after leading female actresses at the time. As a result, Garland was pigeonholed into more childish, saccharine, and painfully innocent roles some quite embarrassing as the studio had her in blackface like in Everybody Sing (1938) and even in Babes in Arms. (These blackface performances are striking and confusing in hindsight, particularly given Garlands progressive views on race in her adult life; she took part in The March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom and held a press conference to protest the bombing of the 16th Street Baptist Church in Birmingham in 1963).
Charles Walters who directed Garland in a number of films during that era, described her as the ugly duckling on set and claimed that co-founder of MGM, Louis B. Mayer, referred to her as his little hunchback. This brutal body shaming continued throughout her career. To meet the demands of Hollywood, Garland reports she was prescribed substances to deal with the long hours on set and was encouraged to maintain restrictive eating regimen to stay slim. While filming The Wizard of Oz, she often only ate a bowl of soup and a plate of lettuce for her meals. Her diet was accompanied by swimming, hiking, tennis, and badminton. The blue gingham dress synonymous with Dorothy was chosen for Garland for its blurring effect on her figure. As if to reward her sacrifices, The Wizard of Oz was a critical success. In 1939, Garland received her only Oscar for her performance in it as well as Babes in Arms, the Juvenile Award. She was the fourth person to receive the award as well as the only one of twelve in history to be presented with one.
After The Wizard of Oz, Garland was one of the most bankable actresses in Hollywood and she graduated from backyard musicals and parted ways with Rooney. She stepped into an adult role, playing both daughter and mother, in Little Nellie Kell (1940). The role was challenging; she had to use an accent and have her first adult kiss. Her co-star George Murphy, who was 20 years her senior, said he felt like a hillbilly with a child bride. She performed, as an adult, with Gene Kelly in his first screen appearance in the war film, For Me and My Gal (1942). And the next year, she was given the glamor treatment MGM said she would never have in Presenting Lily Mars (1943), a film about a small-town girl with big-city ambitions, hoping to make it on Broadway.
One of Garlands most successful films for MGM was Meet Me in St. Louis (1944), a series of seasonal vignettes revolving around the Worlds Fair. Garland debuted the standards, The Trolley Song, The Boy Next Door, and Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas, all of which became hits after the film was released. The Clock (1945) was Garlands first straight romantic drama; though it was praised and earned a profit, most movie fans expected her to sing. As a result, she did not act again in a non-singing dramatic role for many years. Garlands other films during that time included The Harvey Girls (1946) and Till Clouds Roll By (1946).
Toward the end of the decade, in 1948, during filming for The Pirate (1948), Garland had a nervous breakdown. Though she was able to complete filming, she attempted to commit suicide and had to complete a two-week treatment at a psychiatric hospital. Between the increased expense of shooting delays while Garland was ill and the publics unwillingness to accept her in such a sophisticated film, The Pirate did not garner a profit. Garland was nevertheless cast with Fred Astaire in Easter Parade (1948,) which became her top-grossing film at MGM. However, she never fully recovered from her psychological distress. She was taking prescription drugs along with illicitly obtained morphine pills. Around this time, she also developed an alcohol dependence. MGM temporarily suspended her from acting so she could be treated until they summoned her back for her last appearance with Micky Rooney in Words and Music (1948) and to replace a pregnant June Allyson in the musical film, In the Good Old Summertime (1949), which was an enormous success. Behind the scenes, though, Garland was still depressed, and undergoing electroconvulsive therapy for her condition. So severe was her anxiety that she was cast but immediately replaced by Betty Hutton for the lead role in Annie Get Your Gun (1950). In the wake of that loss, she underwent an extensive hospital stay and was weaned off the drugs. When Garland return to Los Angeles to continue to work, she was healthier, but heavier. She was again cast opposite Gene Kelly in Summer Stock (1950) but had to lose weight for the role. She went back on the pills and relapsed). Summer Stock was her final film with MGM.
During the 1940s, Garland had a series of failed relationships and affairs. Earlier in the decade, when she was still a teenager, she experienced her first serious romance with bandleader, Artie Shaw and was devastated when he eloped with Lana Turner. She also had a relationship with musician David Rose who proposed to her when she turned eighteen. The studio intervened, because at the time he was still married to actress and singer, Martha Raye. Once his divorce cleared, Garland and Rose were wed on July 27, 1941, but were divorced by 1944. In 1941, Garland had an abortion while pregnant with Roses child. She had another one in 1943 when she became pregnant from her affair with Tyrone Power. She went on to have a brief affair with film director, Orson Welles, who at that time was married to Rita Hayworth. During the filming of Meet Me in St. Louis, Garland and the director Vincente Minnelli initially had some conflict, but entered into a romantic relationship and married in 1945. They were divorced in 1951. He was 20 years older than her.
Garland made her Hollywood comeback in the Warner Bros. film, A Star is Born (1954), the first remake of the 1937 film, this time directed by George Cukor. She starred as Esther Maine and produced the film through Transcona Enterprise, the production company she shared with her then husband, Sidney Luft. Initially she was fully dedicated to the project, but soon began to complain of the same illnesses she experienced while at MGM. The film suffered from project timeline setbacks, creative disagreements, and severe edits. Though it was met with critical and popular acclaim, it was a financial failure. Nevertheless, Garland was nominated for an Academy Award for her performance in the film and won the Golden Globe for Best Actress in a Musical.
Garlands subsequent films after A Star is Born included Judgement at Nuremburg (1961), for which she was nominated for both an Oscar and Golden Globe for Best Supporting Actress), the delightful animated musical Gay Purr-ee (1962), and A Child Is Waiting (1963). Her final film was the aptly titled, I Could Go on Singing (1963).
Garlands birthday falls during LGBT Pride Month and, since the 1960s, she has been a quintessential gay icon. Being a friend of Judy was a popular euphemism for being gay during a time when homosexuality was illegal and actively policed by authorities. White male gay audiences, in particular, have attached queer meaning to her oeuvre. The song with which Garland is now constantly identified, Somewhere Over the Rainbow, from The Wizard of Oz, reflects a longing for another place, one that is kinder and more colorful. Some queer fans say that the song was an inspiration for the LGBT Rainbow Flag. The song, Come Out, Come Out also from the soundtrack has long been heard as a call to abandon the closet. Garlands campy performance in the Trolley Song from Meet me in St. Louis remains a staple of queer sing-alongs. In general, the storylines in most of her films appeal to gay audiences as they involve her characters being overlooked or abandoned by men, longing for love that goes unrequited. Gay fans also sympathize with her offscreen hardships, as she juggled Hollywoods impossible demands and the pains of her love life. Garlands daughter, Liza Minnelli is likewise a gay icon, coming into queer popularity with her performance in Cabaret (1972). Minnelli recently made a rare public appearance at the 94th Academy Awards alongside Lady Gaga, who played Allie Maine in the fourth iteration of a Star is Born (2018).
Garland enjoyed popularity on television and in concerts, sometimes performing with her daughter, for most of the 1960s. During this time, she was also embroiled in a heated divorce suit with Luft who she accused of mental and physical abuse. Moreover, she suffered from severe financial instability, due to mismanagement of her affairs by her representatives and staff. She died of a substance overdose in 1969. She was only 47 years old.
Enjoy!
6:00 AM -- An Ideal Husband (1947)
1h 36m | Comedy | TV-G
An upstanding politician is haunted by his past when a blackmailer threatens to reveal a youthful indiscretion.
Director: Alexander Korda
Cast: Paulette Goddard, Michael Wilding, Hugh Williams
The large emerald-and-diamond necklace and matching earrings that Mrs Cheveley wears to the ball at the start, was Paulette Goddard's own. It was a gift from one-time husband Charles Chaplin, and Goddard charged the studio a rental fee for its use.
7:45 AM -- Dramatic School (1938)
1h 20m | Drama | TV-G
A young actress struggles to make a hit on stage and in married life.
Director: Robert B. Sinclair
Cast: Luise Rainer, Paulette Goddard, Alan Marshall
MGM had planned for Greer Garson to make her film debut in the film, but shortly before shooting began, Garson injured her back and the role was recast with Luise Rainer.
9:15 AM -- The Great Dictator (1940)
2h 9m | Comedy | TV-PG
A Jewish barber takes the place of a war-hungry dictator.
Director: Charles Chaplin
Cast: Charles Chaplin, Paulette Goddard, Jack Oakie
Nominee for Oscars for Best Actor in a Leading Role -- Charles Chaplin, Best Actor in a Supporting Role -- Jack Oakie, Best Writing, Original Screenplay -- Charles Chaplin, Best Music, Original Score -- Meredith Willson, and Best Picture
During filming, Sir Charles Chaplin's relationship with Paulette Goddard began to deteriorate, but both tried very hard to save it. In 1942, Chaplin proudly introduced her as "my wife" (a position that was always considered sketchy) at a New York engagement, but within months they were amicably divorced, and the notoriously finicky Chaplin agreed to a generous divorce settlement. In the 1960s, both Chaplin and Goddard were living in Switzerland, but having made no contact, they spotted each other at a café and had lunch together. It was their last meeting.
11:30 AM -- Modern Times (1936)
1h 27m | Silent | TV-G
When an oppressed assembly-line factory worker is mistaken for a radical politician.
Director: Charlie Chaplin
Cast: Charlie Chaplin, Paulette Goddard, Henry Bergman
According to some accounts, working together on the film put a strain on Sir Charles Chaplin and Paulette Goddard's relationship. Contrary to the way young actresses were presented on screen, Goddard was to wear shabby clothing and no make-up as the Gamin. When she showed up for filming with her hair beautifully coiffed, Chaplin dumped a bucket of water over her head.
1:00 PM -- Pigskin Parade (1936)
1h 33m | Musical | TV-G
College football scouts recruit a country bumpkin with a killer kick.
Director: David Butler
Cast: Stuart Erwin, Patsy Kelly, Jack Haley
Nominee for an Oscar for Best Actor in a Supporting Role -- Stuart Erwin
Feature-film debut of Judy Garland. This Twentieth Century-Fox picture was her one loan-out during her 15 years with MGM (1935-50).
3:00 PM -- Broadway Melody of 1938 (1937)
1h 50m | Musical | TV-G
Backstage problems jeopardize a Broadway musical.
Director: Roy Del Ruth
Cast: Robert Taylor, Eleanor Powell, George Murphy
The song "Dear Mr. Gable" was a birthday present for Clark Gable's 36th birthday. Composer and arranger Roger Edens adapted the old song "You Made Me Love You" by James V. Monaco. It was sung at Gable's birthday party by a young Judy Garland. Producer Louis B. Mayer was so impressed by it, that he gave order to let Garland sing it again in the next great musical MGM was going to produce.
5:00 PM -- Everybody Sing (1938)
1h 20m | Musical | TV-G
A theatrical family tries to put on a show but is upstaged by their servants.
Director: Edwin L. Marin
Cast: Allan Jones, Judy Garland, Fanny Brice
A boys choir was used to provide the singing voices for the schoolgirl chorus that backs Judy Garland on her numbers.
6:30 PM -- Listen, Darling (1938)
1h 10m | Romance | TV-G
Two children try to find a new husband for their widowed mother.
Director: Edwin L. Marin
Cast: Judy Garland, Freddie Bartholomew, Mary Astor
Mary Astor fondly remembered working on "Listen, Darling" with the 16-year-old Judy Garland. "She was so young and vital - it was no act. Something would strike her as funny, and her face would get red, and 'There goes Judy!' would be the cry. And we just had to wait until she got over it. She was a kid, a real kid. It didn't take long for her to get over that."
WHAT'S ON TONIGHT: STAR OF THE MONTH -- JUDY GARLAND
8:00 PM -- Babes in Arms (1939)
1h 36m | Musical | TV-G
A group of second-generation entertainers puts on a show to launch their careers.
Director: Busby Berkeley
Cast: Mickey Rooney, Judy Garland, Charles Winninger
Nominee for Oscars for Best Actor in a Leading Role -- Mickey Rooney, and Best Music, Scoring -- Roger Edens and George Stoll
The parody sequence, "My Day," featuring Mickey Rooney as President Franklin D. Roosevelt and Judy Garland as First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt, was removed from the negative after the president's death on April 12, 1945. The routine, for many years thought to be lost, was rediscovered on 16-millimeter film and now can be viewed on Warner Home Video's DVD, "The Mickey Rooney & Judy Garland Collection."
10:00 PM -- Babes on Broadway (1941)
1h 58m | Musical | TV-PG
Show-biz hopefuls stage a benefit for an orphanage.
Director: Busby Berkeley
Cast: Mickey Rooney, Judy Garland, Fay Bainter
Nominee for an Oscar for Best Music, Original Song -- Burton Lane (music) and Ralph Freed (lyrics) for the song "How About You?"
A third "Babes" picture for Garland and Rooney, director Busby Berkeley, and producer Arthur Freed entitled 'Babes in Hollywood' was shelved after Freed decided to produce the long awaited Girl Crazy (1943) instead and give Garland a leading lady role in For Me and My Gal (1942). 'Babes in Hollywood' was intended to be an update of "Merton of the Movies", filmed in Technicolor with cameo appearances by MGM's stable of stars. 'Harry Warren' and Leo Robin were hired to compose the score (which then included "A Journey to a Star", "Polka Dot Polka", and "No Love No Nothin" ) with additional songs by Hugh Martin and Ralph Blane. Sid Silvers was hired to write the script, which never got past a first draft. After the project was shelved, 20th Century Fox hired Berkeley, Warren, and Robin for The Gang's All Here (1943). The songwriters used their songs written for the scrapped film at MGM and Berkeley's elaborate "Polka Dot Polka" finale with neon hula-hoops (originally meant for 'Babes in Hollywood') was staged with all-out abandon.
12:15 AM -- Strike Up the Band (1940)
2h | Musical | TV-G
A high-school band sets out to win a national radio contest.
Director: Busby Berkeley
Cast: Mickey Rooney, Judy Garland, Paul Whiteman And His Orchestra
Winner of an Oscar for Best Sound, Recording -- Douglas Shearer (M-G-M SSD)
Nominee for Oscars for Best Music, Original Song -- Roger Edens and George Stoll for the song "Our Love Affair", and Best Music, Score -- George Stoll and Roger Edens
The puppet orchestra made of fruit that comes to life playing instruments for Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland on a kitchen table, was the work of animator George Pal. He had just arrived in Hollywood from Europe via New York and this was among his first projects. Pal's work was relatively unknown by American audiences, thus he was uncredited. The idea for the sequence was that of another New York-to-Hollywood transfer: Vincente Minnelli.
2:15 AM -- The Beast Must Die (1974)
1h 33m | Horror
Eight people have been invited to an island estate for the weekend. One of them is a werewolf.
Director: Paul Annett
Cast: Calvin Lockhart, Peter Cushing, Charles Gray
Think!, originally composed by Merv Griffin for the game show Jeopardy! (1964), can be heard during the Who is the werewolf break.
4:00 AM -- The Howling (1981)
1h 30m | Horror | TV-14
After taking part in a risky police operation intended to trap a serial murderer, a witness develops selective amnesia.
Director: Joe Dante
Cast: Dee Wallace Stone, Patrick MacNee, Slim Pickens
There were times during shooting when Robert Picardo was very despondent about the hours he had to spend in makeup. On the Special Edition DVD, he remarked, "One day, after spending six and a half hours in the makeup chair, I was thinking, 'Trained at Yale, two leading roles on Broadway. My first acting role in California, my face gets melted in a low-budget horror movie.' All the crew had to say to that was, 'Bob, next time read the script all the way through first!"'