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An informative look at Liza

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  • An informative look at Liza

    An informative look at Liza
    By KEVIN McDONOUGH, United Features Syndicate

    Times Union, Albany, NY
    June 11 2004

    First published: Friday, June 11, 2004

    Unlike the vast majority of celebrity profiles that simply reiterate
    the obvious and belabor the hideous, tonight's two-hour "Biography"
    (8, A&E) taught me many things I did not know and reminded me of
    other things I had forgotten about Liza Minnelli. This troubled and
    talented singer, dancer and actress has spent the better part of five
    decades trying to get out from under the shadow of her doomed mother.

    The daughter of Judy Garland and director Vincente Minnelli, Liza
    made her screen appearance as a toddler in the 1949 "In the Good Old
    Summertime." Unfortunately, Minnelli explains, the Hollywood staff
    that costumed her in 19th-century finery forgot to provide underwear,
    and she felt decidedly cranky while being held aloft by family friend
    Van Johnson. In a remarkable clip from the old Jack Paar show, we
    watch Liza make her TV singing debut -- introduced not as herself,
    but as an Armenian gypsy girl whose name turned out to be an anagram of
    "Judy Garland."

    This superior "Biography" is filled with informative and painful
    recollections from Minnelli as well as legions of lifetime friends
    and admirers, including songwriters John Kander and Fred Ebb
    ("Cabaret"). Mia Farrow, a fellow child of Hollywood who has known
    Minnelli since preschool, praises her friend's talent and acting
    ability. Farrow describes Minnelli's performance in the 1969 "The
    Sterile Cuckoo" as a tour de force. Marisa Berenson, Joel Grey
    and Michael York (in an archival interview) recall the special
    circumstances that made filming "Cabaret" so difficult and memorable.

    Having won a Tony, an Emmy and an Oscar before turning 30, Minnelli
    has had a decidedly bumpy second act. Her Scorsese-directed musical
    "New York, New York" faded from memory almost as quickly as its title
    song became known as Frank Sinatra's signature tune. Her spirited
    performance in "Arthur" was overshadowed by those of Dudley Moore and
    John Gielgud. And, of course, there were the frequent visits to rehab
    clinics and her recent freakish marriage to her controlling producer.
    While these difficult times are chronicled here, this "Biography"
    accentuates the positive and recalls Minnelli's gifts as she prepares
    to make yet another revival in a life that has become defined by
    stumbles and comebacks.
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