Issue 81 - Judy
Issue 81 - Judy
In this issue…
A Star is Reborn
Guy Lodge meets Renée Zellweger for our expansive lead profile.
The Story of a Scene
Judy director Rupert Goold breaks down the process of filming the first big music number.
The World of Judy
Three features exploring the life and times of Judy Garland
1. What Price Hollywood?
The story of George Cukor’s seminal 1954 musical melodrama, A Star Is Born – featuring Judy Garland’s greatest performance. Words by Trevor Johnston.
2. Andy Loves Judy
The story of Andy Warhol’s obsession with Judy Garland and how she eventually became a facet of his art.
Words by Justine Smith.
3. The Photoplayers
The story of Hollywood fan magazines and how they operated as little more than propaganda outlets for the film studios.
Lindsay Lohan in Nine Acts
The rise and fall of a modern day movie diva, by emeritus Lindsay Lohan scholar, Philippa Snow.
Books / Records / Films: A Judy Garland miscellany
Gateway items for those looking to flesh-out their Garland collection. By Abbey Bender, Emma Fraser and David Jenkins.
Munchkinland: A Wizard of Oz Gift Shop
A visual spectacular of gifts and tattoos inspired by the fantasy epic that started them all. Created and curated by Sophie Mo.
Illustrations by Lauréne Boglio, Jennifer Dionisio, Lucille Michieli and Stéphanie Sergeant.
I’ll be deadly honest with you: if you told me a year ago that we’d be putting out an issue of Little White Lies with Renée Zellweger on the cover and celebrating a brand new music biopic, I’d look at you with a quizzical eye and chuckle nervously. We often hear people say things like, “it’s a Little White Lies movie”, which usually translates that it’s got a indie flavour, slightly left field subject matter, visually very stylish.
It’s a very certain type of film. But the view from the inside is that all movies are Little White Lies movies, or at least have the potential to be. Is there anything more amazing than the feeling of going to see a film for which your expectations are somewhat muted, and then being completely swept off your feet by it? You’re just left there, gawping at the screen and hoping your seat neighbours don’t spot the tear tramlines when the lights go up.
This is exactly what happened to me at a screening of Rupert Goold’s Judy, the story of Judy Garland’s haphazard residency at London’s Talk of the Town at the tail end of 1968 and through to 1969 – the year that would end up being her last. In the lead role is Renée Zellweger, taking up the task of representing a real celebrity – one of the most beloved of the modern age, no less – and making her Hollywood colleagues look like rank amateurs.
Hers is not a performance powered by affectation and conspicuous showboating, but one which is blessed with the weight of history and an understanding of deep sorrow. When a film feels right, then it’s right. And Judy feels right for this moment, and out 81st cover film.