May 28, 1942: This article by Robbin Coons was apparently done while Judy was filming 'For Me And My Gal'. On this day, 'For Me And My Gal' filming continued with scenes shot on the âExterior French Square.â There is no such scene in the final film, but it could have been the set for the recently recorded and filmed âThree Cheers For The Yanksâ which was deleted from the final cut.
Judy Garland Reminiscences
HOLLYWOOD â Miss Judy Garland, practically out of her teens, was moved today to look back down the long corridor of the years and reminisce.
She had ample urging. Her new movie, âMe and My Galâ is a yarn about vaudeville when there was a Palace and all vaudevillians dreamed of playing it. Judy herself is a veteran vaudevillian of the later days when all of them dreamed of playing Graumanâs Chinese â and wowing the movies.
Judy was two years old when the Gumm Sisters initiated a new member in their song-and-dance act. She was 13 when, with the other Gumms married and retired, and Judy carrying on alone, she was picked up by the movies.
Her first picture was that famous short of Metroâs â the one in which two little girls named Garland and Durbin showed off their voices, after which Miss Durbin was dropped and Miss Garland kept on the payroll in a small way. Then Miss Garland was loaned to 20th to play a raucous little girl in pigtails for âPigskin Parade,â thus beginning her own pigtail parade.
Miss Garland in due course attended the preview, and cried for three days.
âIâd always imagined that anybody in pictures automatically became glamorous,â she recalled, looking very glammy in a 1917 evening gown and hair-do for the picture. âBut I wasnât.â
So she cried for three days, one day more than she cried when a reviewer covering the Gumm act described Judy as a leather-lunged singer who sang âStormy Weatherâ and inspired in the listener a fervent hope that the thunder would drown her out.
Then there was the time the Gumms, motoring from stand to stand, settled down at the Chicago Century of Progress exposition and, by dint of warbling and stepping and hoarding the proceeds for weeks, bought a complete new set of costumes; four outfits for each of the three girls, four âchangesâ for their mother-accompanist. They headed west for Hollywood and the Chinese, their new wardrobe in a trunk strapped to the rear bumper. Somewhere outside St. Joseph, Mo., the trunk â not the other one containing âjunkâ â was lifted. The act got to Hollywood and bought four sweater-and-skirt sets.
But Judy is a glam-gal now. In this picture she has eleven costumes, nine evening gowns, eight suits and five coats. She has 19 different hair-doâs. Fun, Judy?
âOf course I like it. But why did I complain before? It used to be I could run into the wardrobe department, try on a gingham frock, and that was that. Now itâs hours of fitting. And two hours earlier in make-up. And I have to guard against picking up new freckles, and I canât go bowling â no broken finger nails for me until the pictureâs over. I guess I never really appreciated those pigtail parts.â