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The other side of the rainbow; with Judy Garland on the dawn patrol (1970)

by Mel Tormé

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"The Judy Garland Show," which aired Sunday nights at nine on CBS twenty-six times between June 1963 and March 1964, was the last glimmer of a fading star. As Dorothy in The Wizard of Oz Judy Garland had charmed the world, singing and dancing down a golden path to fame; now she was middle-aged and wracked with personal problems, habitually late for rehearsals, often not showing up at all. When she made what proved to be her final appearance on Stage 43 in Television City (dressed, rather ironically, as a clown), one stagehand, assessing her thin and haggard figure, sighed "no more yellow-brick road." In The Other Side of the Rainbow--now reissued with a new preface--Mel Torme takes us on a Hollywood roller-coaster ride through the triumphs and disasters of this short-lived show, at the same time revealing a personal side of Judy Garland rarely glimpsed. While she was notoriously hard to work with, and her affection for "the Blue Lady" (Blue Nun leibfraumilch), vodka, and pills was well-known even at this time, Torme shows that Judy was still capable of breathtaking performances, that she could still earn the sobriquet "High Priestess of the entertainment world." Torme signed on to "The Judy Garland Show" as its musical director, writing special tunes, putting together medleys, at times even coaching Judy from an off-camera position. He was there from the start, survived an almost total purge of show staff, and left just before the final telecast. Consequently, we see it all from center stage: Mickey Rooney saving a virtually unrehearsed early show from failure, Lena Horne storming over Judy's lack of professionalism, Cary Grant refusing to do his oft-imitated "JU-dy, JU-dy, JU-dy" (insisting he had never said it), daughter Liza Minelli singing a duet with her beaming mother, and Judy herself, alone on the set, belting out a powerfully moving rendition of "The Battle Hymn of the Republic" only weeks after the assassination of JFK. (Her desire to do a special program dedicated to Kennedy's memory was nixed by CBS: this was her unexpected and defiant response.) Behind the scenes we witness Judy at her best (Torme remembers of feeling "chills of delight" as Garland sang "Mama's Gone, Goodbye" during their first session together), her funniest (telling dirty stories to the production crew), and her worst, drunk and hysterical, waking her colleagues with early morning telephone calls. Known as The Dawn Patrol, Torme and others would leave their beds and rush to Garland's Brentwood home to offer whatever assistance they could. Brimming with anecdotes, illustrated with rare photographs of Judy on the television stage, and informed by the insights of a fellow performer who saw it all, The Other Side of the Rainbow offers a rare and compassionate look at one of America's most beloved and misunderstood entertainment icons.… (more)
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Torme focuses almost exclusively on Garland's short lived television variety show 'The Judy Garland Show'. If you've never seen footage of it online (i.e. Youtube) it's a fascinating view of Garland as a performer, under tremendous pressure (and medication) to do well as her movie career had ultimately dried up at this point. Life on 'The Judy Garland Show' was never easy for anyone, with little network support from CBS, constant personnel changes behind the scenes, and an erratic Garland who did the very best she could (which varied from day to day).

Overall a fascinating read, poignant, personal, and somewhat haunting in the depiction of Garland's final years.
  JCLHeatherM | Jan 27, 2018 |
Torme focuses almost exclusively on Garland's short lived television variety show 'The Judy Garland Show'. If you've never seen footage of it online (i.e. Youtube) it's a fascinating view of Garland as a performer, under tremendous pressure (and medication) to do well as her movie career had ultimately dried up at this point. Life on 'The Judy Garland Show' was never easy for anyone, with little network support from CBS, constant personnel changes behind the scenes, and an erratic Garland who did the very best she could (which varied from day to day).

Overall a fascinating read, poignant, personal, and somewhat haunting in the depiction of Garland's final years. ( )
  JCLHeatherM | Jan 27, 2018 |
this is the original, unexpurgated, unrefined, unedited blather published just one year after garland's death by the egomaniacal torme. his claim to historical bone fides comes from his role as music director/arranger on garland's 1963-1964 CBS television show. the era captured in this book. during the same time, he later admits, torme was socializing with the ladies, in the middle of a marriage that was breaking up, and feeling as though he should have been starring in his own show rather than working with another singer ... with this energy, through this lens, he wrote this book, almost 40 years ago in its original edition.

torme rewrote much of this book in a later edition i have not read, that (from all reports) edits out assertions, modifies observations, tempers creativity. it seems disingenuous, this later edition. Those who read only the 1991 version of this book could be as confused as one fellow Garland fan who could not make sense of reports of the earlier version (in conversation with two of us who had read and stopped there) and the later version he had just completed. there will well be confusion with the intense anger provoked in fans by the mere mention of this book (its 1970 edition), the fact that the 1991 version does not annotate the corrections only reinforces my passion to keep the record straight.

reading just the 1991 edition is coming into the story part way through, it appears to me. torme cashed in in 1970, perverted the history of judy's television series and for a time the sense of judy herself for several decades with his published words. then he comes in after other researched and well-regarded works have been published about the same era and the same series (sanders, fricke, others) to reframe his words.

hmm. he's saying: 'pay no attention to that man behind the curtain' .. or ... "pay no attention to my past deeds ... read this now .. really .. this is my truth' ... well, i don't buy it. i am glad that he cleaned up his book for the 1991 edition. but was he intellectually honest enough to annotate the fiction he published as "fact" in 1970 that he corrected in this later edition? no it seems not .. he leaves it for the archivists and fans to compare and contrast and highlight these passages and details. memoirists are writing from their own feelings and sense of their world; historians are held to another standard. torme's work in ON THE DAWN PATROL was promoted as more than personal memoir for years; in 1991 he attempts to reframe this. again i say: this is intellectual dishonesty.
  msteketee | Aug 17, 2009 |
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For my wife, Jan
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It was the largest turnout Campbell's Funeral Parlor had seen since that now-famous day back in the twenties when thousands of people had lined up to pay their last respects to Valentino, dead at thirty-one of peritonitis.
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"The Judy Garland Show," which aired Sunday nights at nine on CBS twenty-six times between June 1963 and March 1964, was the last glimmer of a fading star. As Dorothy in The Wizard of Oz Judy Garland had charmed the world, singing and dancing down a golden path to fame; now she was middle-aged and wracked with personal problems, habitually late for rehearsals, often not showing up at all. When she made what proved to be her final appearance on Stage 43 in Television City (dressed, rather ironically, as a clown), one stagehand, assessing her thin and haggard figure, sighed "no more yellow-brick road." In The Other Side of the Rainbow--now reissued with a new preface--Mel Torme takes us on a Hollywood roller-coaster ride through the triumphs and disasters of this short-lived show, at the same time revealing a personal side of Judy Garland rarely glimpsed. While she was notoriously hard to work with, and her affection for "the Blue Lady" (Blue Nun leibfraumilch), vodka, and pills was well-known even at this time, Torme shows that Judy was still capable of breathtaking performances, that she could still earn the sobriquet "High Priestess of the entertainment world." Torme signed on to "The Judy Garland Show" as its musical director, writing special tunes, putting together medleys, at times even coaching Judy from an off-camera position. He was there from the start, survived an almost total purge of show staff, and left just before the final telecast. Consequently, we see it all from center stage: Mickey Rooney saving a virtually unrehearsed early show from failure, Lena Horne storming over Judy's lack of professionalism, Cary Grant refusing to do his oft-imitated "JU-dy, JU-dy, JU-dy" (insisting he had never said it), daughter Liza Minelli singing a duet with her beaming mother, and Judy herself, alone on the set, belting out a powerfully moving rendition of "The Battle Hymn of the Republic" only weeks after the assassination of JFK. (Her desire to do a special program dedicated to Kennedy's memory was nixed by CBS: this was her unexpected and defiant response.) Behind the scenes we witness Judy at her best (Torme remembers of feeling "chills of delight" as Garland sang "Mama's Gone, Goodbye" during their first session together), her funniest (telling dirty stories to the production crew), and her worst, drunk and hysterical, waking her colleagues with early morning telephone calls. Known as The Dawn Patrol, Torme and others would leave their beds and rush to Garland's Brentwood home to offer whatever assistance they could. Brimming with anecdotes, illustrated with rare photographs of Judy on the television stage, and informed by the insights of a fellow performer who saw it all, The Other Side of the Rainbow offers a rare and compassionate look at one of America's most beloved and misunderstood entertainment icons.

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