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What’s a girl gotta do to get an IN Los Angeles cover
these days? Bring along her gal pal Liza Minnelli, that’s
what!
By
Miss Coco Peru &
Liza Minnelli
Photography by
John
Skalicky
OK, so here’s the thing: I wanted the cover of IN
Los Angeles to help promote my new show opening at the Renberg
Theatre this month, and word got back to me that if I wanted
the cover I had to get a celebrity to interview me. Now,
I have been an openly gay performer for years, I have won
awards, I’ve appeared in gay films, I’ve done
TV, I filmed a comedy special for LOGO, I’ve done hundreds
of benefits, and still I can’t get the cover of a gay
magazine on my own merits?!? Did I mention my new show is
called Ugly Coco?
I thought, “OK IN Los Angeles, you want a celebrity?
I’ll get you a celebrity. How’s Liza Minnelli
for you?” So, while in New York preparing the music
for my new show, I got together with my old gal pal Liza
in her uptown Eastside apartment.
Coco: The last time we saw each other was in Marbella, Spain,
where you were performing.
Liza: Don’t you wish we were there this second?
Coco: Yes, I miss it terribly. It was a treat to see you
there, because I was able to call friends and say, “I’m
in Spain…on the Mediterranean…seeing Liza Minnelli!” It
was delicious. You know, Rafael and I got married in Spain
last year. Well this year, my sister-in-law said I’m
officially Spanish, because not only do Rafael and I own
a place there, I burnt a pan of olive oil and almost set
my kitchen on fire.
Liza: Oh, honey!
Coco: So Liza, we met each other about 13 years ago.
Liza: I think it was a little more than that. I was your
fan immediately. I loved your work.
Coco: I’ve written about you in my new show!
Liza: Oh, have you?
Coco: All very sweet and loving things.
Liza: Oh, thank you.
Coco: I’ve never been one to drop names, but sometimes
in this business people don’t find value in what I
do because they see it as “just drag.” I want
people to know that if it wasn’t for drag, I would’ve
never met you!
Liza: But you’re one of a kind. It’s very hard
to be the first of anything, and right now you’re the
only one of your kind. There’s an underlying belief
in the value of human life that you give me when I watch
you. It’s miraculous! I’ve been thinking about
it, because it’s been so long and I love you so much.
Every time I see you I hear something that I relate to. So
does everyone in the audience. Everyone can relate to your
humanity. And your funny, wacky point of view on things suddenly
makes it all alright.
Coco: That was my goal when I first started, but people
said, “You’re crazy! You’re never going
to work again.” I thought, “I need to do this
to make the point that it doesn’t matter what you’re
wearing, it’s the human story behind the costume that
makes it relatable.” I’m including you in my
show, because when I was growing up in the Bronx, I’d
go to the local library and take out Cabaret and The Act
and sing and dance. Then, years later, I was at an award
show where you were a presenter. It was the first time I
saw you “live,” and I was so excited. “God,
I remember listening to this woman in my bedroom, and here
she is on the stage in front of me.” My mother was
mad at me because I didn’t introduce myself to you!
I said, “Ma! She was on stage giving an award!” Then
I said, “You know what, Ma? Someday I’ll meet
Liza Minnelli, not because I’m trying to meet her,
but because she wants to meet me.”
Liza: We met because I found you. You didn’t come
to me.
Coco: And it was lovely! I think there’s value in
telling that story, especially for young people. I get e-mails
from kids all over the country saying, “If you had
the balls to do this…” It inspires them.
Liza: Exactly! You’ve got to somehow get it across
to them. They have to believe in themselves to rise above
what people are doing, which seems to be about just putting
everything and everyone down. Anybody can do that.
Coco: I saw you in Vegas—what show
did you do for all of those...?
Liza: Oh, the “gypsy” show! It’s a tradition
that Sammy Davis, Jr. and I started. In those days you did
a third show just for the kids on the Strip. The tradition
had gone, but I brought it back, and it was so much fun!
Coco: It was fun. Again, it was one of those nights where
I thought, “I’m lucky to be me!” I was
sitting right in the front row. I brought two friends, and
when you walked out, I turned to them and said, “Do
you smell her perfume?”
Liza: Ha! I love it!
Coco: Oh, and because I forgot when we were in Spain, my
mother, Helen, asked me again to thank you for inviting her
to see you in Palm Beach.
Liza: Yes, I met her; she’s lovely.
Coco: My mom got a lot of points around the pool at her
condo for that! She told me, “I go to that event every
year and always sit way up in the rafters looking down at
all the glamorous people. But this year, I was in the middle
of them!”
Liza: How wonderful!
Coco: It was even more wonderful to remind her, “Remember
when you were mad at me because I didn’t introduce
myself to Liza Minnelli?”
Liza: See? “You never know,” said Sally Bowles.
Coco: I’ve always told people that you’ve always
treated me like a fellow artist.
Liza: But you are! There’s nobody like you. If people
go to see you expecting a drag show, they’re not going
to get that. But if they go to see a really funny, talented
performer, that’s what they’ll get. To me, your
drag is like a Ron Lewis dance show. I first saw it in Las
Vegas when I was 19, and they were topless. I thought, “Omigod,
they have no bras on!” But eight bars later, I forgot
because the choreography was so great. You do the same thing.
The audience starts with, “Cute outfit! I wonder how…” And
then they start to listen. I really love that.
Coco: Thank you! Remember, years ago, I told you I didn’t
know how to sing harmony? You said, “I’ll teach
you!” I said, “Liza, Jonathan Larson, who wrote
Rent, couldn’t teach me and said he never could.” But
you said you could. We sat on a couch singing for more than
an hour, and you said, “You can’t sing harmony.”
(Both laugh)
Liza: The thing with harmony is, I have to learn it like
I’m re-learning the song, like it’s the main
line.
Coco: Well, I do a solo show, so I pretty much always have
the main line. You may not remember, but in one show I talked
about pretending to be Jeannie from I Dream of Jeannie, and
how, after playing it for hours, my parents would say, “Alright,
either Jeannie finds a new game or Jeannie’s going
to bed.” But I didn’t care, because…they
called me Jeannie! (Both laugh)
Liza: That’s what it’s about! All of this world
should hear your stories. You can’t stop telling them.
I mean it.
Coco: Thank you, Liza!
I left Liza’s apartment that afternoon, and as I walked
toward the elevator I could hear her warming up her voice
for a rehearsal, and I still couldn’t help but think,
even after all these years, “Oh, my God! That was Liza
Minnelli!” And as I rode that elevator back down to
reality I thought, “OK IN, now can I get the f--king
cover?”
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