Connecticut Post (Sunday)

Being Judy Garland won Zellweger an Oscar. Is a Grammy next?

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Renée Zellweger is known for acting but you could easily write a thesis about her love for music.

The entertaine­r won her second Academy Award for portraying Judy Garland in last year’s “Judy,” for which Zellweger did her own singing in front of live audiences. She was praised for her performanc­e in 2002’ s “Chicago.” And she’s an avid concertgoe­r and live- music appreciato­r who jumped up and down in her gown when Eminem surprised the audience at last year’s Oscars and despite being an A- list star, sneaks out to concerts just to get her music fix.

She’s also a proud card- carrying member of the Beyhive.

“She raises the bar when it comes to work ethic. I admire with her that if she’s going to do it, she’s knocking it into the stratosphe­re or she’s not going to do it,” said Zellweger, who gushed over Beyoncé’s groundbrea­king performanc­e at the 2005 Oscars. “She was the north star on that one ... She’s the one carrying that gift we’re all so blessed to experience in one way or another.”

So it should be no surprise — unless you’re Zellweger — that she’s earned her first Grammy nomination this year. The “Judy” soundtrack, which features Zellweger covering songs like “Over the Rainbow” and “The Trolley Song,” is nominated for best traditiona­l pop vocal album — an award Tony Bennett has won a dozen times.

“I don’t guess that’s something I thought about to be honest,” Zellweger said in a phone interview about hearing the words “Grammy- nominated” before her name. “That’s not something I walked around imagining. It sure was a thrilling surprise.”

She is competing in a category with musicians whose concerts she’s attended and songs she’s played for years. Nominees include Burt Bacharach, James Taylor, Harry Connick Jr. and Rufus Wainwright, who performs “Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas” with Zellweger on the

“Judy” album.

“It was scary to ask Rufus, ‘ Hey, what are you doing? Want to come sing a duet with me?,’” she recalled. “I know people say that all the time, but it’s the truth: I really have been singing with Rufus for 20 years- plus in my car.”

Zellweger remembers seeing Connick Jr. live, describing the crooner as “an authentic person and performer.”

“What you see is what you get,” Zellweger said. “Stomping his foot up there onstage at the Hollywood Bowl and you feel like you’re in the living room with him or something.”

“Speaking of the living room,” she continued, “a friend of mine had won this lottery thing or bid on something. It was a private concert with Burt ... and Carole

Bayer Sager and they played in the living room. And he played ‘ Alfie’ in the living room. Oh, believe me. I was downloadin­g every moment in my memory — just to savor it and to smile on it.”

Getting Zellweger to go on and on about music is light work. The Texan has been going to concerts for years and she even had tickets for a show that was recently canceled because of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The 2021 Grammys will mark a full circle moment for Garland and her impact on pop culture — Zellweger’s performanc­e of her songs is being honored nearly six decades after Garland made history at the 1962 show, becoming the first woman to win album of the year with “Judy at Carnegie Hall.”

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