Liza Minnelli followed her parents into the entertainment arena at the tender age of 2, co-starring with her mother in the 1949 film “In the Good Old Summertime.” In 1965, she won a Tony Award for her performance in “Flora, the Red Menace,” becoming the youngest-ever actress to win a Tony for a musical role; it was the first of fourTonys she would earn. She is the only singer in history to sell out Carnegie Hall for three consecutive weeks. Her hit songs include "Liza (With a "Z")," "Theme from New York, New York," "Cabaret," "Walking Papers," "Quiet Thing," "Old Friends," "Maybe This Time," "Little Do They Know," "I (Who Have Nothing)," "God Bless the Child." Her movie credits include 1972’s “Cabaret,” for which she won an Academy Award; “New York, New York,” co-starring Robert De Niro; and the “Arthur” films with Dudley Moore.
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