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This was a write-up done in August 2003
in the
Venice
Vanguard Newlsletter
The Maggarts ... Venice's Performing Family
Move over Lennons! A new family of Venice entertainers
is making their mark. Venice is home to two generations
of Maggarts ... family members blessed with the special
talents that give pleasure to so many. Patriarch Brandon
has enjoyed a forty+ year career in stage, film and television
and now his children ... Spencer, Garett, Maude and Fiona
... are taking their own place in the limelight.
Character actor Olin Holland was visiting a friend in Carthage
Tennessee and saw Brandon in a school play. "He praised
me way too much," says Brandon, but it got him started.
He won an operatic scholarship to the University of Tennessee
and a Grace Moore Award (named after a 20's and 30's actress
and singer who was born in Tennessee and died at the age
of 46 in a plane crash) brought him to study in New York.
Brandon performed in New York for 25 years mainly on stage
with some television and film work. His featured role in
"Applause" garnered a Tony nomination. He stayed
with the show through its three leading ladies ... Lauren
Bacall, Anne Baxter and Arlene Dahl. He appeared in films
such as "The World According to Garp", "Dressed
to Kill" and the cult film "Christmas Evil".
In addition, he was in the original cast of "Sesame
Street", "New Faces of 68" with Madelyn Kahn
and Robert Klein, performed and wrote songs and sketches
for Upstairs at the Downstairs and played the famous Latin
Quarter with stripper Sherry Britton. These are only a few
of his many, many early credits.
It was in 1983 while Brandon was doing a play with Georgia
Engel, a farce called "Nurse Jane Goes to Hawaii",
that the casting director's parents discovered both of them
for Hollywood television. Brandon, along with Georgia, was
cast in "Jennifer Slept Here" featuring Ann Jillian
as Jennifer. The show didn't last long but, "I did
quite well and went on to other TV work," he says.
His next series was "Brothers" on Showtime. "It
was very cutting edge at the time," he says. The show
was about three brothers, the youngest who was gay. "It
was not welcomed in a lot of cities," he adds. During
this time Brandon also performed in "South Pacific"
at the Pantages with Howard Keel and Jane Powell and in
"Lorelei" at the Shubert with Carol Channing.
When Brandon first moved to Los Angeles he stayed at the
Magic Hotel next to the Magic Castle in Hollywood and then
at the Oakwood in Burbank. "That's where all the divorced
people lived," he says. However, this presented a problem.
It has been a tradition that his children visit him every
summer. "I kept complaining," he says. "I
had all these people coming out. I'd have to drive to the
airport and then back and then they'd all want to go to
the beach. It seemed like all I was doing was driving to
the airport and the beach." Then he thought to himself,
"Wait a minute. I think I'll find a house between the
airport and the beach."
A friend told Brandon about Venice and the boardwalk. "I
fell it love with it," he says. "When I'd get
home from the studio I'd go and look at the sunset and think
'I live here'." In the morning he would meditate on
the beach. "That's how I got to meet people,"
he adds. Brandon bought his home in 1985 from Randy Gardner,
Olympic skating partner of Tai Babilonia. "I've been
living in the same house since then," he says.
In the ensuing years Brandon has carved out a successful
career as a character actor. He has appeared in top TV shows
including "ER", "Murphy Brown", "Chicago
Hope", "Married ... With Children", "LA
Law" and "Ellen". More recently, a lot of
his attention has been spent being supportive of the careers
of his four children who are in show business. He is enormously
proud and fiercely protective of them.
... Spencer
Spencer, aka Brandon Jr., is mainly interested in writing
screenplays. He also just made a short film, based on a
personal relationship, that he wrote and directed and acted
in along with family members and friends. He has played
a nurturing role to his younger sister Maude. "He has
been a terrific big brother to everybody," says Brandon.
... Garett
You've seen Garett if you've watched "The Sentinel"
formerly on UPN and now on the SciFi Channel. He is one
of two leading characters in the series playing Blair Sandburg,
a college professor expert in tribal cultures who teams
up with Detective Jim Ellison both to monitor the detective's
supersensitive abilities and to assist in solving crimes.
I've seen the show and I can attest that Garett is a wonderful
actor. He was discovered when the show's producers saw him
working at the Sidewalk Café at his night job
so he could audition during the day.
Garett has also guest starred on "ER" and "Frasier"
and was a featured performer on "Days of Our Lives"
and "Brothers", his father's series in addition
to hosting "House of Blues" on TBS.
The public has recognized a certain quality in Garett.
He was voted into 8th place in People Magazine online poll
"The 97 Most Intriguing People of 1997", 19th
place in People Magazine online poll "Third Annual
50 Most Beautiful People in the World" in May of 1998
and 1st place along with Sarah Michelle Gellar in UPN's
online poll "Who Do You Imagine To Be The Ultimate
Love Boat Couple" in May of 1998.
** We have to digress for a minute ...** Brandon's two
youngest daughters have a different mother than the oldest
children. Brandon met Diane McAfee, an actress and singer,
when they were both appearing in "Applause". While
Brandon was the first in his family to get into show business,
it was a passion for the women on Diane's side. Diane's
grandmother was "a frustrated performer inside,"
says great granddaughter Maude. She would tell her parents
that she was going to the movies and then take ballet lessons
instead. "It wasn't respectable for a girl to be in
the ballet then," adds Maude. "They thought it
was what the cheap girls did so she never got to be a dancer
which is what she wanted to be." Then when her daughter
(Diane's mother and Maude's grandmother) came along she
put her in all the dance classes she could. Millicent Green,
later Millicent Hope and then Millicent McAfee when she
married, left school in the 10th grade to join the George
White Scandals at the age of 15. In addition to ballet,
she did vaudeville and was a singer. She met her husband
while they were both performing with the Johnny Hamp Band,
she singing and he playing the saxophone. Later Millicent
ran a dancing school for 25 years. Diane sang in Broadway
choruses and nightclubs. She was featured in "Superman",
"Flora the Red Menace" and was the original Eve
Harrington in "Applause" but had to bow out due
to extenuating circumstances. Both parent's vocal and acting
abilities have been passed on to their daughters. Brandon's
side of the family also assisted in their names. His grandmother's
name was Maude Apple. Amber Maggart became Maude Maggart
to fit the image of her music and Fiona Apple Maggart became
Fiona Apple based on the recommendation of Sony, her recording
studio.
... Maude
I've had two opportunities to see Maude perform and I've
been mesmerized each time. Not only does she have a beautiful
voice, there is a sophistication and poise that belies her
young age.
Brandon took his young daughters to the Sunday night soirées
at the Venice home of Marshall Barer (who wrote "Once
Upon a Mattress") in the late 80's and early 90's.
It was here that Fiona, at the age of 9, would perform her
music and Maude was first introduced to Andrea Marcovicci
and Michael Feinstein, the great cabaret performers. The
unusual life and times of Marshall Barer as told by Brandon
and Miriam More will be for a future issue. "He was
quite a character," says Brandon.
It took a while before Maude settled on cabaret as her
singing style. Again, when she was young, her father took
her to the Gardenia in Hollywood owned by Tom Rolla who
appeared with Brandon in "Applause". Andrea sang
every Saturday night at midnight for several years. Maude
got a chance to do her own set there on Monday nights for
a while and besides getting good experience, she received
a very positive response from the audience. Later on, Maude
was paired with Michael Feinstein in a non-stage version
of a musical written by Marshall and Hugh Martin who wrote
"Meet Me in St. Louis." A friendship developed
and Michael invited Maude in 2001 to perform as a guest
artist for the Christmas run at his nightclub at The Regency
in New York.
Maude's career is getting off the ground. She has the talent
and the mentoring of two cabaret greats. Her first CD has
been produced with a newspaper clipping of her grandmother
from George White's Scandals on the front. Her web site,
www.MaudeMaggart.com ,will be up and running soon. Check
it out to hear her beautiful voice for yourself. Or, if
you're in San Francisco be sure to catch her at the Plush
Room in October. She will be guesting with Andrea and then
remain there for a week on her own.
'... Fiona
Maude remembers the times at Marshall's when "this
tiny blonde girl would start playing songs and singing these
amazing lyrics. Everyone was very impressed." That
was her younger sister Fiona who would make her mark at
an extraordinarily early age writing all her own songs ...
both music and words. "It's more important for her
to do the songs," says Brandon. "She writes a
song because she has to. It's the way she expresses herself.
She considers herself mainly the songs' writer, but she
sings too. It's a wonderful mixture of the two." Her
first album "Tidal", made when she was just 18
years old went triple platinum and she won "Best New
Artist" at the MTV Video Music Awards in 1997. Her
second album also went platinum. "I don't think she
likes to associate the _expression of her art with the business
of it ... things like album sales or awards," says
Maude. "She appreciates them but I don't think she
ever reads reviews. She likes to keep out of that so she
doesn't have anything influencing her _expression."
As a matter of fact, Fiona's two platinum record awards
are hanging in her father's home along with his wonderful
artwork. Literally floor to ceiling and one area actually
two and a half stories high is covered with Brandon's paintings
plus photographs of family and friends and memorabilia of
his and his children's careers on other walls. "I get
on jags of painting," says Brandon. They are storyboards
of jokes and some are dirty jokes he tells me. "I try
to capture the narrative in one frame, or one canvas,"
he says. "If you looked at it you would recognize the
story." One of the pieces (not a dirty one) that Brandon
explains to me is not a joke, but it's humorous. It's the
first act curtain of "Jumbo" the Broadway musical
with Jimmy Durante. He's going across the stage with the
elephant and they're foreclosing on the circus. The guy
from the bank and the police officer say, 'Hey, where do
you think you're going with that elephant?', and Durante
says, 'What elephant?' "At the time, I read in Judith
Crist's column," says Brandon, "that the scene
received the longest laugh in show business history."
Brandon will neither sell nor show his paintings. It's too
bad because they are really beautiful even if you don't
know the story behind them.
Brandon painted all the artwork except for one piece that
he had commissioned to honor the memory of Justine, his
second oldest daughter who was killed in a car crash. Her
sisters, Julienne and Jennifer, are not in show business
and live on the East Coast. They continue the tradition
of visiting their father every summer, now with their own
children. "I'm so happy to have the beach here,"
says Brandon. "I don't have to drive them around. There's
the door. There's the beach. They go everyday. There's a
lot to see in Venice." The first night dinner and usually
the last are at the Sidewalk Café. "When
the tourists leave it becomes a neighborhood place,"
says Brandon. The adjacent bookstore is a favorite too.
"We love and support Small World Books," he adds.
"I'm glad to pay a little more to keep the bookstore
in the neighborhood." The Collage at the corner of
Windward and Pacific Avenues has also become a favorite
eating spot.
Brandon enjoys the Friday morning Farmers Market. Maude
appreciates the character of Venice. "If you drive
outside of Venice it's almost void of character," she
says. "Venice is a neighborhood. You know a lot of
people." She also likes that she can walk around at
night and feel safe. "We love Venice," father
and daughter say in unison.
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