Other works
Album: "Judy Garland at Carnegie Hall", 1961 (Capitol). Won five Grammys.
Radio: Appeared on "Lux Radio Theatre" (ep. "Strike Up the Band", 28 October 1940).
Recordings (notable singles): "Over the Rainbow" [from
The Wizard of Oz (1939)] (Decca, 1939); "I'm Nobody's Baby" [from
Andy Hardy Meets Debutante (1940)] (Decca, 1940); "For Me and My Gal" / "When You Wore a Tulip (And I Wore a Big Red Rose") [with
Gene Kelly, from
For Me and My Gal (1942) (Decca, 1942); "Zing! Went the Strings of My Heart" (Decca, 1943); "A Journey to a Star" [from
The Gang's All Here (1943)] (Decca, 1944); "The Trolley Song" [from
Meet Me in St. Louis (1944)] (Decca, 1944); "Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas" [from
Meet Me in St. Louis (1944)]/"The Boy Next Door" (Decca, 1944); "Yah-Ta-Ta Yah-Ta-Ta (Talk, Talk, Talk) [with 'Bing Crosby'] (Decca, 1945); "This Heart of Mine" (Decca, 1945); "On the Atchison, Topeka, and the Santa Fe" / "Wait and See" [from
The Harvey Girls (1946)] (Decca, 1946); "You'll Never Walk Alone" (Decca, 1946); "For You, For Me, Forevermore" [with
Dick Haymes, from
The Shocking Miss Pilgrim (1947)] (Decca, 1947); "Without a Memory" (Columbia, 1953); "The Man That Got Away" [from
A Star Is Born (1954)] (Columbia, 1954).
Won special TONY
Award in 1952 in recognition of her contribution to
Broadway with her record-breaking show, "Judy at the Palace."
Won five GRAMMY
Awards in her career.
Radio: Appeared on "Lux Radio Theater". "A Star is Born" broadcast December 28, 1942. With
Walter Pidgeon. Directed by
Cecil B. DeMille.
Radio: Appeared on "Lux Radio Theater". "Morning Glory" broadcast October 12, 1942. With
John Payne,
Adolphe Menjou. Directed by
Cecil B. DeMille.
Radio: Appeared on "Lux Radio Theater". "Strike up the Band" broadcast October 28, 1940. With
Mickey Rooney. Directed by
Cecil B. DeMille.
Radio: "Lux Radio Theater". "Merton of the Movies" broadcast November 17, 1941. With
Mickey Rooney. Directed by
Cecil B. DeMille.
Print advertisement: Friskies cat food (tie-in with
Gay Purr-ee (1962)) (1962)
Stage: On 7/31/67 opened on
Broadway at the Palace Theatre in a variety revue titled "Judy Garland; At Home at the Palace." Joining her onstage to perform were her children,
Lorna Luft and
Joey Luft. The show ran for 32 performances.
Stage: On 5/11/59 she opened on
Broadway at the Metropolitan Opera House for a series of seven concerts, ending May 17, 1959. Comedian
Alan King appeared as part of the opening act.
TV commercial: M&M's (archive footage from
The Wizard of Oz (1939)) (2004)
According to
Margaret O'Brien, Garland rewrote the lyrics for "Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas" from
Meet Me in St. Louis (1944).
Radio: Appeared on "Lux Radio Theater". "The Clock" broadcast January 28, 1946.
CD (w/
Carol Channing): "The Ladies of Show Biz" (ZSSP)
CD: "The Music, The Life, The Legend" (ZPlat)
CD: "Somewhere Over the Rainbow" (ZGO)
CD: "Judy" (Columbia)
CD: "Miss Show Business" (Columbia)
CD: "Judy: That's Entertainment" (Columbia)
CD: "I Could Go On Singing" (Columbia)
CD: "20th Century Masters/Millennium Collection" (Uni)
CD: "The Best of Judy Garland" (Uni)
CD: "As Long As You Need Me" (ZABM)
CD: "Over the Rainbow" (USP)
CD (w/
Liza Minnelli: "Judy Garland/Liza Minnelli: Back to Back Hits--Two Generations of Genius" (Columbia)
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