Why is there an apostrophe? What exactly was it of hers that was at the Palace?
Broadway Legend Joined: 9/13/04
I assume they mean that Liza is at the Palace, kitten.
Without the apostrophe, I'd fully expect Liza Goddard to be appearing alongside her!
Broadway Legend Joined: 12/31/69
I assumed they meant that this was Liza's "at the Palace" recording, as opposed to Judy's "at the Palace" recording....
that makes sense joe. If they meant "Liza is at the Palace", they could have just said "Liza at the Palace".
I thought it was an ad for a new greasy spoon by the Palace.
labia.
liza's labia.
think about it. think hard about it.
now think swollen and glistening.
now back to hard.
liza's labia.
liza's.
labia.
Broadway Legend Joined: 12/31/69
Thinking about Liza'a Labia is what made David Gest "turn."
think about it. joe. warm and pulsing and dripping wet. it's calling you.
joe...
joe...
mine did too, Reg.
What a mental picture....
Moving on . . .
PJ was it you or your cousin who thought the title of the album "Judy and Liza Live at the London Palladium" meant that they reside there?
Broadway Legend Joined: 12/31/69
Papa, it was my thinking about Liza'a Labia while watching "Baryshnikov on Broadway" in 1980 that made me suddenly appreciate the bulge in Mikhail's dance belt. I've never looked back.
the labia remember, joe.
and they've been waiting.
oh how they've been waiting.
This is more attention than Liza's vagina ever got from any of her husbands . . .
Hey I'm a woman and I"m grossed out!
Poor Liza's lost her labia at the Palace.
Quite a few Queens have lost their labia at the Palace, but I digress.......
Can we go back to stagemanager2's greasy spoon before I vomit?
Updated On: 1/27/09 at 05:16 PM
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