E. Pitts, KAHILUA-KONA: Judy Garland was an American pop culture icon who knew how to put on a show and belt out a tune. Her modern counterpart, Angela Ingersoll, wants to bring Garland back on stage the only way she knows how â by channeling Garlandâs singing voice and presence into a new concert for Garland fans on the Big Island.
âThe only thing better than listening to a great classic record that we love is hearing music that we know, and love, live,â Ingersoll said. âThereâs nothing like live music. So to be able to create a live music experience for music that people feel so nostalgic about is a great honor.â
Ingersoll is bringing the concert Get Happy: Angela Ingersoll Sings Judy Garland to the Big Island at the Kahilu Theatre in Waimea. The show, which Ingersoll has performed in cities including Los Angeles and in her native Chicago, was turned into a PBS special last year and was nominated for two Emmy awards, including one for Ingersollâs performance. Ingersoll will be conveying her inner Garland this weekend by singing some of her most famous tracks, including âOver the Rainbowâ and âGet Happy.â
âWhat can beat âOver the Rainbow?ââ Ingersoll said. âItâs the greatest song written in the 20th century, and I think itâs the greatest pop song ever.â
The message Ingersoll finds in âOver the Rainbowâ is the reason she holds it so close to her heart. Itâs also one of the more popular Garland songs she sings at her concerts. âI think the songs that people all know the words to, like âOver the Rainbow,â are a way for us all to see each other as a little more human,â Ingersoll said.
Besides âOver the Rainbow,â Ingersoll lists the song âThe Man That Got Awayâ as her personal favorite to perform. âI feel thatâs the song most deeply ingrained in my heart,â Ingersoll said. âItâs like a tidal wave comes out of my heart when I sing that, and itâs a very easy song for me to sing. I donât feel strained whatsoever. A very powerful wave of emotion flows through me.â
Ingersoll has been compared to Garland, through both physical appearance and through her singing voice, since she started performing at the age of 5. Get Happy was created by Ingersoll in 2015. She wanted to create a new way to honor the singer and actress she admired so much. She called the project a risk that paid off in the end.
âAll of my favorite artists whose biographies I read all say eventually you have to start creating your own work,â Ingersoll said. âUnless you want to stand in line and wait for permission the rest of your life, you eventually have to create your own work and declare to the world what is in your heart. And thatâs really how these Judy Garland concerts came about. I dared to say I could do her legacy justice.â
For Get Happy, Ingersoll wants to capture Garlandâs spirit instead of just impersonating her. Even with her likeness, Ingersoll doesnât want to pretend she is someone she is not. âI donât think at all of myself as an impersonator who is trying to fool anyone into thinking that Iâm Judy Garland,â Ingersoll said. âItâs not a fake, hokey thing like that. I am my own artist who is her artistic descendant. And I honor her by continuing to tell her stories with compassion and heart so that they feel alive right now.â
Garland became a Hollywood star in the late 1930s with her breakout performance as Dorothy in The Wizard of Oz, and followed that success with appearances in many more notable films and musicals in the 1940s, â50s and â60s. Despite an active career as an A-list star, Garlandâs personal life was filled with struggles with mental health, alcoholism and drug addiction. Ingersoll wants to change the less than stellar image some modern Americans have of the actress.
âI donât think her legacy should be silly. I donât think her legacy should be one that is overwrought as a caricature, as a larger than life person that was bombastic,â Ingersoll said. âI want her legacy to be one full of compassion, joy and honesty; seeing her as the powerful artist that she was.â