Judy Garland first achieved huge fame in ‘The Wizard of Oz,’ but her best songs prove that she was much more than that. “She was the greatest. The rest of us will be forgotten, but never ...
“The Trolley Song,” a second-act standout from the 1944 movie musical “Meet Me in St. Louis,” was sung by Judy Garland in striking Technicolor. It was released back when gay was more ...
The song also became not about the future but ... My all-time favorite versions are from the olden days. Judy Garland, of course, [was] always tops with me. And Mel Torme, who wrote a beautiful ...
Judy Garland has been gone for more than half a ... The smash appears for the very first time on the Holiday Streaming Songs chart, arriving at No. 47. The version of “Have Yourself A Merry ...
One Pair Was Lost Renée Zellweger's Judy Garland Cries Over Kids, Sings 'The Trolley Song' in New 'Judy' Trailer Liza Minnelli Says Her Mother Judy Garland 'Would Have Laughed' at Lady Gaga's' A ...
Some little something, meaning love can not die, No matter where you chance to be. Though I'll pray for you, night and day for you; It will see me through like a charm, Till you're returning. So give ...
Singer and actress Judy Garland (June 10, 1922–June 22 ... but it reached no. 5 on the Billboard charts in 1939 and became her signature song. The song also endeared her to the gay community, which ...
The song first became widely popular when Judy Garland recorded it in 1941. Joy: Christmas with The Tabernacle Choir, featuring Michael Maliakel and Lesley Nicol, was made possible in part by ...
The evening opened with Get Happy – the Judy Garland song from That’s Entertainment – and continued with a selection from The Sound of Music.