The Peterborough Examiner

Judy’s was a complex life run by men

New documentar­y shows how Garland was never able to tell her own story

- AMY KAUFMAN LOS ANGELES TIMES

Deep in the San Fernando Valley, there is an unremarkab­le warehouse where some of the few remaining pieces of Judy Garland’s life are stored. They are kept in cardboard boxes and film cans, never subjected to temperatur­es above 18 C. The rare concert footage and home video recordings have barely been touched since their owner — the performer’s third husband and longtime manager, Sid Luft — died in 2005.

But Luft’s archives were recently, for the first time, made available to a documentar­y crew that partnered with the trust on a film about Garland’s life. “Sid & Judy,” new on Showtime, is like many portraits of the singer’s life in that it details the struggles she faced: her substance abuse, bouts of depression, five marriages and child custody battles. But by culling from Luft’s collection, the documentar­y offers a more unvarnishe­d take on Garland’s life than, say, “Judy,” the scripted film currently in theatres that is earning star Renee Zellweger Oscar buzz.

Over the course of their 13-year marriage — Garland’s longest — she and Luft had two children together, and he remained her manager until she died in 1969 at age 47. He would later write about their relationsh­ip in a book that was eventually published in 2017. Though he was legitimate­ly close to Garland, Luft was hardly the only one to publicly offer his take on the star.

Garland was never able to tell her own story in full. Looking for a way to stave off financial ruin in the 1960s, she attempted to put together her own autobiogra­phy.

Some of her writings, as well as tape-recorded dictation meant to be used for the book, are now part of a Columbia University archive.

We hear some of those recordings in “Sid & Judy.” But even through the voices of others, a fuller portrait of Garland’s life — wretched, heroic, unjust — begins to emerge. Addiction battles

The documentar­y does not shy away from Garland’s lifelong battle with prescripti­on medication and alcohol. In excerpts from his memoir — which are read in the film by Jon Hamm — Luft describes how the actress’ weight was “constantly monitored” from the time she was a young girl working at MGM. “Amphetamin­es were commonly doled out by studio doctors,” he explained. “Amped up on bennies, she would be worked to near-collapse on films like ‘Girl Crazy,’ with director Busby Berkeley pushing her to the limit to complete his elaborate concepts. She had to be as alert and vital on the last take at 11 p.m. as she had on the first take at 9 a.m.”

In 1953, shortly after the couple moved into a plush mansion in Holmby Hills, Luft said Garland’s addictions nearly burned the house down. She was in the midst of shooting “A Star Is Born,” and one night, strung out, she passed out in a chaise and her cigarette fell to the ground.

Luft goes on to admit he was “enabling” her drug problem, coming up with a plan to employ an MGM doctor “for the length of the shoot to monitor her and keep her on an even keel.”

“In hindsight, I was enabling,” he reflected in his book. “A lesser version of what MGM had blatantly and inhumanly jammed down her throat.”

The roller coaster of addiction continued to upend the marriage.

At one point, Luft said, Garland expressed a desire to go to Alcoholics Anonymous, but the couple made it to only one meeting in Pasadena.

Later, they visited Narcotics Anonymous in a “room lit by spooky lights” that had “the atmosphere of an opium den.” Garland did not take to the environmen­t, he said, declaring, “It’s enough to make a person want to stay bombed forever!” and heading to then-popular restaurant Romanoff’s for a cocktail.

When Luft tried to control Garland’s pill intake, she turned his “concern into a game,” he said, referring to him as “the cop, the narc, the flatfoot.” When he searched for medication within their home, he’d find pills hidden in cigarette cartons and Seconals in her bath powder.

But when she was touring, he had a more difficult time controllin­g things. “On the road, she could score from anybody — a chorus boy, a musician, a hairdresse­r, a friend,” he said.

Garland would later die from an accidental barbiturat­e overdose while travelling in London. A complicate­d romance

The relationsh­ip between Garland and Luft perplexed many in Hollywood, including those close to the couple. In one of Luft’s recorded phone calls, actor Andre Philippe told Luft that Garland referred to him as an alcoholic who never works and gambled away her fortune.

“Are you two still in love with each other? I don’t understand the whole relationsh­ip,” Philippe asked.

“Nobody will,” Luft replied. “Nobody ever will.”

Later, though, Garland and Luft would go on to have two children together — Lorna and Joey — and the singer would sometimes stay up all night and leave love notes for her husband to find in the morning. John Kimble, who manages Luft’s trust, said that even though “everybody thought Sid was the villain,” he was devoted to her. Kimble met Luft through his son, Joey, and they became friends. A man’s world

After Luft and Garland divorced in 1965, a friend attempted to comfort the performer by telling her she’d simply gotten involved with the

wrong man.

“The wrong man?” she replied. “I’ve been involved with men in business all my life. One’s no different than the other. You’re all up each other’s asses. You’re all in the Judy Garland business.”

The degree to which men controlled Garland’s life — both emotionall­y and financiall­y — is a strong theme in “Sid & Judy.” In one of Luft’s secret phone calls, film producer Freddie Fields tries to reassure Garland’s spouse that all of her troubles will be eased if she just keeps working.

“I honestly, I really now firmly, sincerely, deeply believe that the best thing for this girl’s health, security, mind, sanity, is to get back to work,” Fields said.

“This girl’s reality is work. She takes less drugs when she works. She drinks less when she works. She agitates less when she works. If she goes down the drain, then I don’t know what the hell you got — maybe the best you’ll get is a wife in a hospital.”

Kijak said he was astonished when he first heard the way that the men were discussing a grown woman in her 40s, referring to her as a “sad, poor girl.”

“It’s so demeaning,” the director said. “We sit here from our perspectiv­e going, ‘What’s changed?’

“There’s a temptation to look at it from the post-#MeToo movement. But there was just so much pervasive, systemic sexism then that she had to constantly fight against.” ‘The tenacity of a praying mantis’

Listening to Garland recounting her origin story, it’s difficult not to feel like her fate was sealed from birth. In the recordings unearthed for the film, she describes how her mother, Ethel Gumm, never wanted her to be born.

She “always took great delight in telling rooms full of people how difficult it was for her because I was not scheduled,” Garland said. “My mother did not want any more children. She did everything to get rid of me. She must have rolled down 19,000 flights of stairs, jumped off of tables, and for some reason I was a very stubborn child. I was not about to be shaken loose.”

Even at her lowest — like when she slipped into postpartum depression in 1952 — Garland never spent long wallowing. After taking a razor to her throat, she said she felt “a terrific feeling of guilt and awful shame ... because actually I didn’t want to die. I had a baby to live for. It was just that the pressure had been too much for me.”

Death, she insisted, was not at all what she wanted.

What kept her going, she said, was her ability to laugh at herself — the fact that she never took herself seriously. “I have the tenacity of a praying mantis,” she said, “with a little black Irish witch involved.”

It’s that grit that Kijak is hoping audiences take away from “Sid & Judy.”

 ?? SHOWTIME ?? Top: Sid Luft looks on as Judy Garland holds newborn Joey Luft in an image from a new documentar­y about the actor and singer’s life, “Sid & Judy.”
SHOWTIME Top: Sid Luft looks on as Judy Garland holds newborn Joey Luft in an image from a new documentar­y about the actor and singer’s life, “Sid & Judy.”
 ??  ?? Left: Renee Zellweger portrays Garland in a scene from the new film “Judy.” DAVID HINDLEY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Left: Renee Zellweger portrays Garland in a scene from the new film “Judy.” DAVID HINDLEY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

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