The Strings of Judy Garland’s Heart
by Mary Claire KendallThirty years after Judy Garland-”Dorothy”-first publicly performed “Over the Rainbow” on June 29, 1939, previewing the soon-to-be-released Wizard of Oz, this quintessential girl-next-door reached for more sleeping pills and hoped-for sleep, only to be, mercifully, granted eternal rest.
She always wanted to be “glamorous,” forgetting her far-surpassing appeal as the very essence of America.
Her story, the final earthly chapter ending forty years ago today, embodies American triumph and tragedy.
Born Frances Ethel Gumm on June 10, 1922, in Grand Rapids, Minnesota, her life nearly ended in 1921 after her parents’ marriage was rocked by revelations of her father’s homosexual infidelity.
But, family physician Dr. Marcus Rabwin told Frank Gumm, “you go back to your wife and tell her I said she must have this baby.” The “powerful” Garland “force field,” as fellow MGM star Ann Miller put it, was evidently already at work.
“Baby” Gumm first stole hearts when, at age 2½, she performed “Jingle Bells” before an audience, discovering to her delight that, besides her father, her other great love was performing and making people happy.
She just couldn’t stop singing; so her father finally had to carry her off the stage.
The family soon decamped to a desert California town north of Hollywood after her father was “caught with a young boy.” There, Ethel, sought solace from her troubled marriage by single-mindedly devoting herself into making the “Gumm Sisters” stars.
Needless to say, little Frances was the standout-their big break coming in 1929 with four one-reel shorts. But when comedian George Jessel evoked howls of laughter just by mentioning their name, he suggested they take New York Drama critic Robert Garland’s surname; Frances took her first name from Hoagie Carmichael’s popular song “Judy.”
On November 16, 1935-six months after Metro Goldwyn Mayer’s Louis B. Mayer signed up “Judy Garland”-she sang her first professional rendition of “Zing! Went the Strings of My Heart,” live on coast to coast radio, as her father lay dying. Dr. Rabwin, who 14 years earlier had advised the family to bring their daughter to term, called Judy to let her know her beloved father would be listening-radio waves being their last physical “connection;” he died early the next morning.
The young, 4′11″ Garland came to studio executives’ attention when she sang “You Made Me Love You” to Clark Gable at MGM’s party celebrating his 35th birthday-a rendition she repeated, while looking adoringly at Gable’s photograph, in the all-star extravaganza Broadway Melody of 1938.
Bandleader Artie Shaw famously summed up Judy’s talent, singing and dancing her way into America’s hearts, telling her, “You become the song.”
So, too, she became the tragedy of American culture-force-fed uppers and downers, plus diet pills, by five different doctors so she could keep up the pace of performance demanded by her MGM bosses who were giddily beside themselves with her money-making potential.
MGM hit the jackpot when it paired Garland with Mickey Rooney in a string of “backyard musicals.” This winning formula, first showcased in the ironically titled 1937 B movie Thoroughbreds Don’t Cry, was followed by Love Finds Andy Hardy, leading to eight more films featuring this adorable, dynamic duo.
Dr. Rabwin’s wife, Marcella, then working at MGM, asserted, “They didn’t mean to addict her. They were trying to get a picture finished.” Yet, the hard truth is, in the process of finishing the picture they laid the groundwork for Judy’s early demise.
As E.Y. Yip Harburg, Wizard of Oz lyricist, explained, “A picture is one of the most devastating things to your nervous system.” Even more so for Judy. As Robert Goulet said, “No one came close to her because she was so vulnerable.”
Her very vulnerability-she required constant reassurance she was, indeed, talented and pretty, given her high-strung, insecure nature, exacerbated by her teenage loss of paternal affirmation-was the source of her greatness. This mega-talented star was all heart and just poured herself into her performances. But, combined with all the barbiturates and amphetamines, it was a toxic mix. As Oscar Levant wrote in his 1969 book, The Unimportance of Being Oscar, “at parties, Judy could sing all night, endlessly… but when it came time to appear on a movie set, she just wouldn’t show up.”
In 1940, after Judy collapsed on the set of Strike Up the Band, in desperate need of months-long rest, she was given only weeks to recover.
Besides her flagging energy, her tendency to show up late rankled her bosses, and on June 17, 1950, a week after she turned 28, MGM cut its prized star loose-the last straw being the demands of Royal Wedding (1951). Thus, began a series of incredible comebacks, starting with her dazzling concert tour, including her history-making performance at the London Palladium.
Judy became close friends of Betty Hutton during Las Vegas performances, overcoming hurt feelings over Betty replacing her in Annie Get Your Gun (1950).
Betty-while a lesser star, albeit possessing the same booming talent, paternal void, and extremely sensitive nature-almost died of a drug overdose just three years after Judy’s death, only to be “saved” by Fr. Peter Maguire, who helped her play the role of a lifetime-”Being Beautiful Betty.”
“Being Beautiful Judy” was the one role Garland never mastered. But, as a star, looking down from the celestial firmament, it’s a good bet she’s mastered it now.
*********************
Sources (among others): Judy Garland: Beyond the Rainbow, A&E Biography (1997), one of ten lives featured, including that of Ronald Reagan, during Biography’s 10th Anniversary celebration; Me and My Shadows: A Family Memoir by Lorna Luft (1998); Life with Judy Garland: Me and My Shadows (winner of five Emmys, based on Luft’s book), Lifetime Television (2001).







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An interesting article — I must admit to never having been that big of a fan of Judy Garland (admittedly a little before my time in her prime.) She certainly was talented, but I really mainly remember her for, of course, Dorothy. She is, yet another example of how hard it can be to deal with fame and celebrity.
Hey, I'm just glad this site finally did something on, you know, Hollywood, instead of Obama's teleprompter.
Judy Garland was my mothers favorite, and I still get choked up some when I see her do "Some where over the rainbow" from the Wizard of OZ. 1939 was a hard year and they years that followed would be harder. Yet Mickey Rooney is still with us, and he still works. Judy should have had a long and happy life, maybe it was the price for the great voice she had. My mom cried for days when she passed on, she played all of her records not stop for a week. 40 years, I was just getting old enough to drive.
Love me some GOP — real Americans! Yeah, baby!
I thought she was great in the Wizard of Oz. In fact, she did such a great job that I honestly can't see anyone else taking that role.
Ah! A movie fan! Then you must know this one:
"I really wouldn't know, sir. I'm just a servant… On the other hand… "
with the current trend for remakes and sequels, please don't give them any ideas. (the one sequel was enough, thank you very much)
I always though that Judy Garland was such a pretty lady… it's too bad that she had such a troublesome life…
Admittedly, I only knew Judy Gardland as Dorothy. But after reading a BH blog entry around Easter, I discovered one of my new favorite movies, "Easter Parade," starring her and Fred Astaire. What an amazing talent. Now I plan on seeing her other movies. Boy, have I been missing a lot!
Wow, you deleted that guy's/gal's post? No cuss words, just an opposite opinion?
Such tender sensibilities.
I guess your faith in your beliefs are pretty weak.
heh, clever.
I bet your post doesn't get erased…
but we could have some fun casting the flying monkeys and the oompa-loompas:
flying monkey #1) joe biden. he's the monkey that won't stop screeching about all things he knows nothing about.
My wife will stop what she's doing if she knows "Meet me in St. Louis" is coming on the tube. All I know about Judy Garland is that she was a tragic figure and a pretty interesting singing talent. Some of those old school singers are worth hearing even today. Especially Sinatra.
Tim Burton already attempted to re-do the oompa loompas from Willy Wonka– and they were just flat creepy. I think he's currently redoing Alice in Wonderland. I'm uttering a quick prayer that The Wizard of Oz doesn't end up on Burton's radar.
Amen to that. WoO is "un-remake-able" as far as I'm concerned. If anyone ever starts talking about doing it, I hope their efforts are cursed.
Nice piece about an unbelievable talent. Here's a couple of stories for you.
The druggist at the old Schwab's drugstore was Sam Bazrod, a lifelong Republican. Sam knew about Judy's pill problem and would only give her one pill per night – it had to be picked up each day.
A better story was told to me by Hy Kantor (real name) who was head of music at MGM (or something like that) when the execs were talking about pulling "Over The Rainbow" from the picture because they thought it interrupted the story too much at that point. He told them they were crazy, that he'd put his job on the line, betting the song would make as much money as the movie, it and the sequence were so good. Hy's wife Lorraine, BTW, was the "Sweet Lorraine" in the Nat King Cole hit. What a guy, what a song, what a movie, what a star!
I love "Meet me in St. Louis" too! The majority of the music I listen to is older stuff-Sinatra, Dino, Crosby. They could actually sing, unlike the bulk of "music artists" today.
Anyone who wants to hear a performance should check in with "Stormy Weather" in the restored version of "'A Star is Born." I know her being a gay icon is hard for some guys, but just try it!
I thought the original oompa loompas were plenty creepy, too.
This was a great post about a great talent but exactly how does it embody American triumph and tragedy? I guess I'm a dolt but most Americans don't have such a dramatic story. Or are you talking about our history?
If they do recast it in Washington, I hope they drop a house on Pelosi.
I want to like Tim Burton's stuff, and I really do like Nightmare Before Christmas, but the rest of it just leaves me cold.
"The Wizard of Oz" scared the mess out of me when I was a kid. So did "Chitty-Chitty Bang Bang"!
I would come out from hiding under my blanket when Judy began to sing. There is something about her voice which made you believe things were going to be better, or things were going to be magical. If she was singing, they usually were. One of my favorite Judy Garland movies is "The Harvey Girls". The one movie many do not mention, but I believe reveals her incredible acting talent is "Judgment at Nuremberg". Her performance was short, but powerful.
I love "Easter Parade" but it is painful to watch her thin body dance about the screen. The hobo scene with Astaire is just the top. It really does not matter to me whether, or not her performances were always equal to "The Wizard of Oz", or any of the other championed Garland greats, I thought she was terrific.
I have made sure my kids knew who she was, and we purchased one of those six disc Garland music libraries which has every Garland song on it. They love listening to it. Garland movies are a staple in our house. You cannot be a real lover of American movies without at least one Garland movie in your movie library.
Enjoyed the article!
Definitely, The Wizard of Oz, is a masterpiece leave it alone, we’ll wind up with something like The Wiz, yuk!
Being straight, I never understood the gay zeal for Judy Garland.
I have always liked the films and music of that era and early Judy before she 'becomes' the weepy figure that some people seem to idolize is a treat to watch and hear. She could singm had tons of energy and knew how to putover a song.
Post 1050 Judy is not too much to my tastes, though A STAR IS BORN is incredible.
I could bever get into the 'tramp/hobo' costume deal. I just wanted her to drop the drama and simpy stand there and sing.
Her Carnegie Hall concert is supposed to be fantastic, but I have yet to hear it. Gay guys rave about this one. They can't all be wrong! Haha.
Anyway – she was a hell of a talent and entertainer – so much more than just "Over the Rainbow". It's a lovely song, but it's become such a grim anthem now only associated with her and her troubles.
I agree with you regarding Tim Burton, but Ed Wood is just wonderful. I wish his other films were as good.
ROFLMAO – choicest rejoinder I've ever seen on Big Hollywood!
That tickled me to find out someone else was terrified of Chitty Chitty Bang Bang as a child. That Child Catcher character was so darn eerie!
And don't get me started on the moving subway columns in The Wiz. I can still hear that weird sound they made in my head.
Garland was terrific in Judgment at Nuremberg. Her performance was just heartbreaking.
Also check out Mel Torme's "The Other Side of the Rainbow," about the Judy Garland TV show.
Thanks Skip! It came from the heart.
That tickled me to find out someone else was terrified of Chitty Chitty Bang Bang as a child. That Child Catcher character was so darn eerie!
Well, that's what you get when Roald Dahl writes your screenplay.
So many typos!
Post 1050 = Post 1950
"Mercifully granted eternal rest?" Sorry, but suicide isn't God's mercy. It is a irretrievable error (some still call it the ultimate sin) It is the exact opposite answer to what is needed when one hits the bottom -giving up hope in this world is understandable -but giving up hope in God is the inevitable result of not knowing God. Perhaps, that's why so many in Hollywood hit the bottom anyway. Perhaps, that's why so many poor souls in Hollywood need all that special attention, all those self-congratulatory awards, and all that applause. God applauded you when He made you. He said it was Very Good when He created man. It is our rejection or remaking of God in our image that brings us to the bottom.
I can appreciate your views on this, but it is impossible to put yourself in someone elses shoes when trying to understand one's mental state.
The article wasn't using eternal in the religious sense. the author chose this phraseology to avoid suicide or something like that. The article doesn't explore her relationship with God.
The woman is dead. Let it be.
I found that strange wording for a suicide as well. My father loved her and I do think she has a sad tenderness in many of her songs (Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas) yet her constant drama was exhausting and rather selfish.
Was the overdose intentional? Was she trying to kill herself? Only God knows. If it was suicide, Donla is dogmatically (in both Christianity and Islam) correct.
One should, however, never attempt to define a limit for God's love of us.
Letting it be and ignoring dangerous beliefs are two different things -the fact is that the author has seen fit to award her heaven :. "But, as a star, looking down from the celestial firmament" (this used to once be known as the sin of presumption)
I merely am concerned about harming other souls in the desire to honor this poor soul. Doing evil (playing God) to bring about a good (honoring this great talent) does nothing to help those who will make the same irreversible mistake. Truth is indeed uncomfortable.
Some? Almost any one of the "old school singers" are far more worth hearing than almost any one (and at that I'm being generous) of the "singers" we have around today, who think that holding the final note of a song for five minutes is the ultimate expression of vocal talent. Thank God for CDs!
Then again, why is Liza just like her? What happened to Judy's sisters? Lorna seems sane but there certainly are some gene questions here. Another time to feel grateful for my loving, disciplining parents and the gift of faith I
received from them.
Bravo Jimbo. So well stated, "One should, however, never attempt to define a limit for God's love of us". Excellent and something that everyone should remember.
I never knew how much her father messed her up. It just goes to prove that a father's love and acceptance is what can build up a young girl into a women. Judy had looks and talent, but it shows her needs were more basic than fame and fortune.
I cried for days when I got the news myself. We were visiting family in Poughkeepsie, and were watching a game show when the text notifying everyone of her death crawled across the bottom of the screen. Grief-stricken, but hardly surprised, given the state of her health at the time.
Now I'm thinking of Susan Boyle and what she's going through. Probably not the same, but some things never change.
Judy Garland is one of my favorites, so talented and a born performer. I heard the story on TCM that while making The Harvey Girls, there were problems with her missing rehearsals and she had not rehearsed the train scene where she sings 'On the Atchison, Topeka, and the Santa Fe', but the day it was to be filmed, she performed it for the first time with the cast (large) and that's the scene in the movie.
I think I first got hooked on old movies from watching the Andy Hardy movies that were on TV Sat. and Sun. mornings when I was young. Meet Me in St. Louis is one of my favorites and I played The Trolley Song over and over from one of my father's albums.
That her life had so much hardship and that she died so young is tragic. That the Hollywood machine took part in her struggles with their sanctioning of drugs for their own benefit is disgusting.
Could have been a glitch. The admin is software.
"Mercifully granted eternal rest? Sorry, but suicide isn't God's mercy."
Who said suicide is God's mercy? God's mercy is His divine love, granted to even the most undeserving (in human's eyes).
"but giving up hope is the inevitable result of not knowing God." I disagree. You may know God but faith (the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not yet seen) can be challenged as life throws you curves.
One should not presume to know the boundaries of God's mercy.
I had giant kid sized Raggedy Ann and Andy dolls. After I saw it for the first time, I laid the dolls out in the bed, climbed in between them so if the little man came in my room in the night, he would grab one of the dolls first, and this would give me time to get away. LOL! I had nightmares for years after watching that movie!
Don't even get me started about the flying monkeys and the witch in the Wizard of Oz! LOL!
On September 29th I will be buying "The Wizard of Oz" on Blu-ray. It made Judy a star, and Judy made the movie a classic.
Great piece. My wife has always had a Judy Garland fascination. I was in my mid-teens before I found out she died so young only a month after my own birth. Now at 40 I look back at her tragic life and find it hard to believe that 4 decades later handlers are still pushing talent to these extremes at times. I think of Britney Spears as merely one example.
Fame is one of those things that everyone wants, until they have it.
Judy Garland is today what she always will be – an American entertainment icon. Her voice, her dancing ability, her acting ability, so versatile, so energetic even at the height of her pain, made her Hollywood's finest and we all loved her so much. To lose her so tragically and so soon was something to never-get-over. I was 15 when she died and I cried then as I do now every time I see her fabulous movies on classic movie networks and hear her heavenly voice. Female entertainers of today would do well to emulate her style and her stage presence. Classic songs? Tons of 'em! Trolley Song, Over the Rainbow, You Made Me Love You, Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas, Easter Bonnet (with fellow immortal Fred Astaire), oh so many – to hear her sing them over and over again is a pleasure. Yes, Judy (Frances) had her troubles and her foibles, no doubt. But you know what? She made a hell of a lot of us happier with her never ending talent. Judy, you were the best, girl! For all of us, up there in heaven right now, take a bow. We sure as hell miss you. Hollywood was a better place for having had Miss Gumm. RIP lovely lady!
"…only to be, mercifully, granted eternal rest." This certainly imply's God -death and all that.
I'm not judging the moral condition of her soul. That's is clearly God's domain, but Christians are obligated to discern wrong and admonish those who support or do it to stop (check St. Paul) I merely noted that the article has judged at least the objective act to be forgiven (mercy and looking down celestially) I'd suggest that many here might confuse observation of wrong with judgement of a soul (condemnation?)
The best judgment is, she didn't commit suicide… her pattern was to take more sleeping pills when she woke up in the early morning, as she did that fateful day, so she could get a few more hours of sleep… in recent weeks she was telling friends to remind her to breathe, otherwise she would forget… her system was slowing down…
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