Closer Weekly

LIZA MINNELLI

DESPITE HER STRUGGLES, THE LEGENDARY PERFORMER WAS A LOVING PARENT TO HER THREE KIDS

- —Alison Gaylin

The legendary performer remembers her happy childhood with her superstar mother and “best friend” Judy Garland.

Iconic singer. Larger-thanlife movie and TV star. Tragically vulnerable Hollywood legend. To her legions of fans, followers and biographer­s, Judy Garland was all of those things.

But to her children, she was someone else entirely. “Yes, she had tragedies in her life, but she wasn’t tragic,” observes Judy’s middle child, Lorna Luft, 68. And her youngest, Joey Luft, 66, agrees: “I remember having a lot of fun with her when we were alone.” Indeed, despite her fabled drive to succeed and her heartbreak­ing struggle with addiction, Judy was a different person — with different priorities — when she was alone with Lorna, Joey and, of course, her eldest, Liza Minnelli, 75, who followed most closely in her footsteps. “One of the biggest misconcept­ions about my mama is that she didn’t provide me with a happy childhood,” Liza says. “There were highs and lows, for sure, but I can say I was very happy.”

From the start, Liza loved spending time with her mother, whom she remembers as “very funny,” and “incredibly intelligen­t.” Despite their adventurou­s lifestyle (which included living in New York City’s Plaza hotel for a time), Liza says Judy was “protective and very strict.” And young Liza was protective as well. When Judy was feeling down, the 5-year-old could sense it and would tickle her in order to lift her spirits.

THE BEST OF FRIENDS

That sense of kinship only grew as Liza entered her teenage years. As the child of two Hollywood A-listers (her dad was famed director Vincente Minnelli), Liza was constantly changing schools and found it difficult to maintain friendship­s. But Judy filled that gap. “My fondest memory of my mama was the conversati­ons we had,” the twotime Oscar winner shares. “As a teenager, I became her best friend and confidante. We would laugh and talk for hours.”

During those conversati­ons, Judy was patient, kind and supportive. Though Liza recalls that “Mama got angry at [fans and press] for asking me questions about her,"she nevtook that anger out on her daughter. And when Liza decided to follow in Judy’s footsteps as an entertaine­r, Judy was encouragin­g from the getgo — even letting her steal the spotlight as a frequent guest star on The

Judy Garland Show.

Performing with her mother, Liza experience­d for the first time the difference between Judy Garland’s public persona and the woman she knew and loved. “It was the strangest feeling,” Liza remembers. “One minute, I was on stage with my mother, the next moment, I was on stage with Judy Garland. One minute, she smiled at me, the next minute, she was like the lioness that owned the stage.”

In private, though, Judy was always Mama. And while Liza was heartbroke­n by her 1969 death, at 46, of a barbiturat­e overdose, Liza still feels her mother’s calming presence. “When I call on her, she’s there,” she shares. “And I call on her a lot.”

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 ??  ?? Judy with her third husband, Sid Luft, and
Lorna and Joey.
“I felt I wasn’t ready,” Liza recalls of performing with her mom at London’s Palladium in 1964. “But Mama didn’t take no for an answer.”
“As I grew up, we became incredibly close,” says Liza.
Judy with her third husband, Sid Luft, and Lorna and Joey. “I felt I wasn’t ready,” Liza recalls of performing with her mom at London’s Palladium in 1964. “But Mama didn’t take no for an answer.” “As I grew up, we became incredibly close,” says Liza.

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