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Liza Minnelli
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Although singer-actress
Liza Minnelli
can count Academy Award-winning film roles, Tony Award-winning musical theater performances, Emmy Award-winning television specials, and gold-selling records among her accomplishments, she is primarily a concert performer whose career has been defined by a series of stage acts dating back to her nightclub debut in 1965. Her best work in film, in the musical theater, and on television has taken advantage of and grown out of her reputation as a live performer, and many of the
albums she has released under her own name are concert recordings. (She has also appeared on numerous soundtracks and cast albums.) Since she began performing in the early '60s,
Minnelli
has displayed an energetic style that combines technical precision with warmth and enthusiasm, allowing her to transcend the contrary trends in popular music over the course of her career and maintain her status as a major star.
Minnelli
is the daughter of film director
Vincente Minnelli
and actress-singer
Judy Garland
. As such, her show business career began early, when she was cast as a baby in the 1949 film In the Good Old Summertime starring her mother and directed by her father. When she was five, her parents divorced, agreeing on joint custody, and she shuttled between them for the rest of her childhood, living alternately in Hollywood, where her father continued to direct movies, and on the road with her mother, who toured the world as a concert performer. She first performed on-stage with her mother at the age of ten and also made occasional appearances on television as a child. Due to her mother's peripatetic career, she attended many different schools. By her teens, she had decided she wanted to pursue a career as an entertainer, and in 1961 she passed the audition for admittance to the New York High School for the Performing Arts, though, typically, she did not stay there long. In 1962, she recorded the voice of Dorothy, the part played by her mother in the film The Wizard of Oz, for an animated sequel called Journey Back to Oz that was shelved until 1974, when it resulted in a soundtrack album on RFO Records called
The Return to Oz
. Later in 1962, following a brief attendance at the Sorbonne in Paris, she abandoned formal education to try to become an actress in New York. She made her professional debut at 17 in an off-Broadway revival of the 1941 musical Best Foot Forward, which opened April 2, 1963. It ran 244 performances, and Cadence Records released a cast album that marked her recording debut.
Minnelli
sang with her mother on two episodes of the television series The Judy Garland Show in November and December 1963, and the performances have turned up on several
Garland
albums. In 1964,
Minnelli
gained experience in touring companies of the musicals Carnival! and The Fantasticks, and she signed a recording contract with Capitol, which released her debut LP,
Liza! Liza!
, in September. The album reached the Billboard charts, but its successors,
It Amazes Me
(March 1965) and
There Is a Time
(December 1966), did not. In November 1964, she was co-billed with her mother at the London Palladium, and their appearance was recorded for a 1965 Capitol album,
Live at the London Palladium
, that reached the Top 100.
Minnelli
was given her first starring role in a Broadway musical at the age of 19 with Flora, the Red Menace, featuring a score by composer
John Kander
and lyricist
Fred Ebb
, that opened on May 11, 1965, but closed after only 87 performances. Despite its failure, she became the youngest woman ever to win a Tony Award for Best Actress in a Musical. The resulting cast album, released on RCA Victor Records, reached the charts. She formed a lasting association with
Kander & Ebb
, who frequently wrote for her from then on. On September 14, 1965, she made her nightclub debut at the Shoreham Hotel in Washington, D.C., in an act written by
Ebb
. From there, she went on to Las Vegas, Los Angeles, Miami, and other stops on her first tour. For the rest of her career, her work in clubs, theaters, concert halls, hotels, and casinos would be a constant, with other activities fitted in around it. On November 28, 1965, she starred in the television musical The Dangerous Christmas of Red Riding Hood, featuring songs by
Jule Styne
and
Robert Merrill
. A soundtrack album was released on ABC Records in January 1966.
Minnelli
performed in prestigious venues such as the Persian Room of the Plaza Hotel in New York and the Talk of the Town nightclub in London during 1966. On March 3, 1967, she married singer/songwriter
Peter Allen
. They divorced on July 24, 1974. She was also married to movie producer
Jack Haley, Jr.
(1974-1979), stage manager
Mark Gero
(1979-1992), and concert promoter
David Gest
(on March 16, 2002). She turned to screen acting with a featured role in the drama Charlie Bubbles, which was released in February 1968. Her first starring role in a movie came with the drama The Sterile Cuckoo, which was released in October 1969 and brought her an Academy Award nomination for Best Actress. Meanwhile, as a recording artist she had switched from Capitol to A&M Records, which released her albums
Liza Minnelli
(May 1968),
Come Saturday Morning
(April 1970, named after the theme song from The Sterile Cuckoo),
New Feelin'
(November 1970), and
Live at the Olympia in Paris
(July 1972), of which only
New Feelin'
reached the charts.
Minnelli
continued to work steadily in the early '70s, headlining her first television special on June 29, 1970, and starring in the film Tell Me That You Love Me, Junie Moon, released that July. But her career really took off in 1972. The year marked her starring role in the film adaptation of
Kander & Ebb
's musical Cabaret, directed by
Bob Fosse
, which was released in February and became a major hit. The soundtrack album, released by ABC Records, went gold, and she won the Academy Award for Best Actress. She again teamed with
Kander
,
Ebb
, and
Fosse
for her next television special, a taped version of her live show dubbed Liza with a "Z". Broadcast September 10, it won the Emmy Award for Outstanding Variety/Music Program, and Columbia Records' soundtrack LP reached the Top 20 and went gold. The album marked the beginning of her new record contract with Columbia, and she followed with an album of contemporary songs,
Liza Minnelli, the Singer
, which reached the Top 40 in 1973.
Minnelli
did not immediately follow up on her film success, but instead continued to tour with her live act. Her sold-out three-week appearance at the Winter Garden on Broadway in January 1974 was recorded for the Columbia album
Live at the Winter Garden
and earned her a special Tony Award. She finally returned to filmmaking in 1975, shooting Lucky Lady (December 1975) and A Matter of Time (October 1976), the latter directed by her father; neither was well received. In between the two, she filled in for an ailing
Gwen Verdon
in the recently opened Broadway musical Chicago (directed by
Fosse
, with music by
Kander & Ebb
) for several weeks in the summer of 1975, and Columbia released a single of her recording of
"All That Jazz"
from the score.
In June 1977,
Minnelli
co-starred with
Robert DeNiro
in
Martin Scorsese
's film musical New York, New York, about the star-crossed romance between a band-singer-turned-Hollywood-star and a jazz musician in the 1940s and '50s.
Kander & Ebb
wrote the period-style music, and the soundtrack album reached the Top 50. The lengthy, big-budget movie itself was not a financial success, but the title song went on to become a standard after it was recorded by
Frank Sinatra
, though it remained a signature song for
Minnelli
. She next made a disco-styled album,
Tropical Nights
, for Columbia, then teamed again with
Scorsese
, who directed her in the Broadway musical The Act, featuring songs by
Kander & Ebb
. It opened on October 29, 1977, and ran 233 performances, winning her a third Tony Award. The cast album was released on DRG Records.
In the late '70s,
Minnelli
returned to concert work primarily, as her recording contract had lapsed and her string of unsuccessful films had hurt her movie career. Such setbacks could not keep her from selling out 11 consecutive nights at Carnegie Hall in September 1979, a record for the venue. In July 1981, she appeared in the successful film comedy Arthur, but her focus remained on concertizing, as she toured around the world in the early '80s. She co-starred with
Chita Rivera
in the Broadway musical The Rink, a
Kander & Ebb
effort that opened February 9, 1984, produced a cast album on Polydor Records, and ran 204 performances. She left the show in July 1984 to overcome substance abuse at the Betty Ford Clinic. By June 1985, she was back to touring. On October 28, 1985, she starred in the television movie A Time to Live, a drama. She won a Golden Globe Award for her performance.
Minnelli
continued to perform internationally in the mid-'80s. Her record-breaking three-week stand at Carnegie Hall in the spring of 1987, which launched a national tour, was taped for her first album in ten years,
Liza Minnelli at Carnegie Hall
, released by Telarc that September; it made the charts. In 1988, she appeared in two films, Rent-a-Cop and Arthur 2: On the Rocks. She also starred in another TV movie, Sam Found Out: A Triple Play, on June 7 and substituted for an ailing
Dean Martin
on a September concert tour with
Frank Sinatra
and
Sammy Davis, Jr.
, that later moved on to Europe and Asia and culminated in a performance broadcast on cable television. She surprised fans by collaborating with
the Pet Shop Boys
on a dance music arrangement of
Stephen Sondheim
's
"Losing My Mind,"
which became a Top Ten hit in the U.K. upon its release by Epic Records in the spring of 1989 and placed in the dance charts in the U.S. (as did its B-side,
"Love Pains"
). This prefaced a full-length album,
Results
, released in September, that made the Top Ten in England and charted in America. In September 1991, she appeared in the film musical Stepping Out and on the soundtrack album released by Milan Records.
Still, concert performing remained her primary means of expression, and her next album, released by Columbia Records in connection with a video in late 1992, was
Live from Radio City Music Hall
. She appeared in the cable-television movie Parallel Lives on August 14, 1994. Hip replacement surgery in December 1994 only interrupted her road work briefly; she was back on tour in March 1995. Another TV movie, West Side Waltz, was broadcast on November 23, 1995. In March 1996, Angel Records released
Gently
, an album of traditional pop standards, and she toured to support it. It charted briefly and earned a Grammy nomination for Best Traditional Pop Vocal Performance. In January 1997, she substituted for
Julie Andrews
in the Broadway musical Victor/Victoria. Her next stage act, launched with a month-long run at the Palace Theater in New York in December 1999, was called Minnelli on Minnelli and focused on songs featured in movie musicals directed by her father. She recorded it for an album released on Angel in February 2000, but the subsequent national tour was cut short in April when she contracted double pneumonia. In October, she fell ill with a life-threatening attack of encephalitis. During 2001, she recovered from the illness and underwent a second hip replacement operation, and in the spring of 2002 she returned to live performing with multiple shows at the Royal Albert Hall in London and the Beacon Theater in New York, produced and directed by her new husband,
David Gest
. J Records released an album drawn from the Beacon performances,
Liza's Back
, in October. A proposed reality TV series featuring her and
Gest
for the cable network VH1 was scuttled at the last moment in early 2003 amid mutual recriminations, and she embarked on a national tour. She and
Gest
filed for divorce in July. In November, she began a continuing role on the television series Arrested Development that ran through 2005. In 2006, she appeared in the film The OH in Ohio and was reported to be working on a tribute album to
Kay Thompson
, the nightclub singer, author of the children's book Eloise, and MGM vocal coach. ~ William Ruhlmann, All Music Guide
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Albums (33)
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It Amazes Me
(19 songs)
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Liza! Liza!
(18 songs)
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There Is A Time
(18 songs)
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Finest
(43 songs)
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