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NEW YORK – OCTOBER 26: Actress/singer Liza Minnelli attends the 2005 Princess Grace Foundation-USA Awards Gala at Cipriani 42nd Street October 26, 2005 in New York City. (Photo by Paul Hawthorne/Getty Images)

LIZA MINNELLI: GROWING UP IN HOLLYWOOD

For  forty  years  Golden Globes voters  have  audio- taped  famous actors  and  actresses. The  world’s  largest collection  of  its  kind — over  10,000  Star  Speaks — is now in  the  Academy  of  Motion  Pictures  Arts &  Sciences  Library.  To  veteran  stars,  the Globes  journalists  are  well known;  they  banter  with  them and  they  speak  openly about themselves  and  their artistry. LIZA  MINNELLI

 

LIZA MINNELLI

I  have  a  Beverly  Hills  mentality.  I  can’t  help  it.  Not  only  did  I grow  up  in  Beverly  Hills,  but  I  knew  every  single  famous  person who  lived  here.  That’s  really  saying  something. Until  I  left  Hollywood, it  didn’t  seem  extraordinary.  Then  I  thought, “My  God, look what  happened  to  me. I  met  all those  terrific  people.” But  when  I  was  growing  up  it  was  just  normal.  They  were  the people  who  worked  with  my  mom  ( Judy  Garland)  and  dad (Vincent  Minelli ).  Everybody’s  parents  were  famous, everybody’s  friends  were  famous. When  I  got  to  New  York,  it  killed  me  I hadn’t  appreciated  that. My  mother  was a  very  strict  disciplinarian,  but  fair.  It  was  a  matter  of  talking. You  had  to  learn  to  use  your  brain  fast  in  her household.  She  wouldn’t  say,  “You  can’t  do  that.”  She  would  not do  it  directly  like  a  parent.  It  was  always  like  a  friend.  “Why  did you  do  that?  What  were  you  thinking  about  at  the  time?  How  could  you  do  something  so  stupid?” When  you’r  five  years  old,  this  hurts,  but  it  teaches  you  to  use your  head.  She  was  always  fair.  She  never  overpunished us. I  think I was  a  quiet  kid  and  kept  a lot  to  myself. When  I  hit  twenty-two,  that  all  changed  and  I  became  very  noisy. But  when  i  was  growing  up  I  was  quiet.  There’s  a  part  of  me that  still  remains,  that  says,  “Well  I  won’t  worry,  I’m  not  gonna let  it  bother  me  today.  I’ll  think  about  it  later.”  So I think I do  have a  reserve  of  emotion. I  would   never  write  a  book  about  my  mother,  ever, I  would  never play  my  mother.  That’s  something  I  hold  very  dear  and  I  want  to leave  it  alone.  I  don’t  want  to  rewrite  it  for  other  people.  That’s mine.  I  hold  it  sacred,  it  took  me a long  time  to  realize  my mother was  dead.  That’s  very important  for  me  to  know. Otherwise, you’re carrying  around  a  whole  bunch  of  luggage  that  you  don’t  need, that’s  too  heavy.” —– Edited by Jack Tewkesbury