Lotte Lenya, Marlene Dietrich, Edith Piaf, Madeline Kahn, Bianca Del Rio, Kiki Le Bon Bon, Ooh La la Max in Love, Breakfast at Tiffany's, Hedwig, Drag in all it's lovely forms
Luna Tart has been singing for a long time. She was in cabaret's before your mother was born. She picks up her little ukulele and sings very sad songs.
Reviewed
Feb 9, 2007 Austin360.com
By Joey Seiler
Breaking the mold was Laura Freeman's "Luna Tart Died (of a Broken
Heart)." Accompanying herself on a ukulele, Freeman seemed plucked out of
a 1920s cabaret. With a beautiful jazz voice and a perfect sense of timing to
balance comedy and poignancy, Freeman brought Tart back to life with
heart
Feb 9, 2007 Austin Chronicle
By Hannah Kenah
When Luna Tart walked on
stage in low blue light, she changed the room. This piece was a bright
theatrical island rising from the expanse of less formal performance. Laura
Freeman's "Luna Tart Died of a Broken Heart" is a simultaneous
composition of magnificence and desperation. This character was so thoroughly
complete that she felt familiar. With every brilliant song she plucked on her
tiny ukulele, she evoked entire worlds. Luna Tart drags a vast and curious
history behind herself, like the train of a stained, sequined dress. Laura Freeman's
work was gorgeous.