Lorna Luft
- Actress
- Writer
- Producer
The daughter of Judy Garland and
producer Sidney Luft, and the half-sister of
Liza Minnelli, Lorna Luft was born in 1952
in Santa Monica, California. According to her autobiography, "Me and My
Shadows" (1998), she and her younger brother
Joey Luft lived an idyllic childhood in Bel
Air, oblivious to any problems that may have arisen regarding her
mother's ongoing drug addiction and her parents' marriage. By the time
she was 12, however, her parents were divorced, and she was forced to
face her mother's serious drug problem head-on. But she stuck with her
mother, because she knew that Garland truly loved her children when not
under the influence of the drugs. She became her mother's care-giver,
administering the medication she needed to function, carefully
monitoring the amount she took, and dealing with her whenever her
behavior got out of control. Eventually, however, she couldn't take it
anymore and had a mental breakdown. As painful as it was for her, she
and her brother left her mother and went to live with their father.
Several months later, Garland overdosed and died. Lorna was crushed and
guilty, having a hard time coming to terms with the fact that her
mother's death was inevitable, and would have happened had she been
there or not. Lorna soon followed in her mother and sister's footsteps
to a show business career. She became a professional singer, though
never quite reaching the success her mother and sister had in that
field. She also appeared on Broadway in "Promises, Promises" and
"Snoopy", in a summer stock production of "Grease" and in a national
tour of "Guys and Dolls". She hasn't made many films. The ones she has
made include Grease 2 (1982), the
disastrous sequel to the film version of "Grease", and the beach party
film
Where the Boys Are (1984),
as well as small appearances in Studio 54 (1998) and
My Giant (1998). In 1985, she took a
supporting role in the sitcom
Trapper John, M.D. (1979)
as a nurse, but a year and a half later, the show ended its seven-year
run. In the 70's and
80's, she also experienced a drug addiction to cocaine, but is now drug-free. She claims she has had to
face her sister Liza's drug addictions, as well, and helped to get her
into the Betty Ford
Center once. She was married to rocker
Jake Hooker, who later became her
manager, but despite two children, the marriage was not happy. They are
now divorced, and she lives in California with her children and her
second husband, musician Colin Freeman. Currently (1999), plans are in
full swing for a miniseries to be made from her book. She will serve as
executive producer on the project.