[June 10th would have been Judy Garland’s 100th birthday. So this week I’ll AmericanStudy a handful of Garland’s performances, leading up to a weekend post on LGBTQ icons.]
I’ve seen Judgment at Nuremberg
(1961) only once all the way through, at some point in high school while we
were in a unit on the Holocaust. I don’t know if I was aware at that time that
the role of Irene Hoffmann was played by Judy Garland, but if I was, I had
entirely forgotten that fact before researching options for this week’s series.
And I mostly wanted to include the film in the series to make sure we’re all
aware, and in particular to share this scene (the YouTube clip’s title for
which seems to be making a point about another context of which I’m not
certain, but the scene is the scene):
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_HP1oiEhgaE&t=16s
A couple of
additional thoughts on that stunning scene, one of only three in the film for
Garland totaling just under 15 minutes (but does she ever make the most of her
limited screen time):
1)
It had been seven years since Garland was last
in a film (in yesterday’s subject, 1954’s A
Star is Born), and she was apparently so happy to be working again that it
took some effort for her to be able to cry on camera (she used her
relationship with her late father as inspiration for the scene’s heightened
emotions). As you can see, she certainly got there, one more testament to her
serious acting chops.
2)
One of the most important things about Judgment as a feature film focused
entirely on the war crimes tribunal (rather than, for example, using that as a
frame to flash back to the Holocaust/war itself) is that it can explore in
depth a number of layers to the Holocaust, the Nazi regime, and their effects
on both Jewish and non-Jewish victims. Garland’s character is the latter, a
German woman who had an intimate (non-sexual) relationship with an older Jewish
man, and in this scene we can see what he and that relationship meant, and what
it meant when the Nazis destroyed it and him.
3)
It’s very tough to get typecast as a certain
kind of performer and then find opportunities to branch and break out. Garland’s
typecasting led to some lifelong successes to be sure, including the show that
will be the subject of tomorrow’s last post in the series. But I’m sure it also
meant she missed many chances to demonstrate the full range of her talents—and I’m
very glad that she didn’t miss the chance to be part of Judgment, nor that my failure to remember her and scenes like this
were permanent.
Last Garland
performance tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What do you
think? Other Garland works or moments you’d highlight?
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