The Wizard of Oz: Difference between revisions
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* [http://www.thejudyroom.com/oz/index.html/ The Judy Room Spotlight on The Wizard of Oz] |
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* {{The Wizard of Oz 1939 Movie Online [http://www.thewizardofozonline.net]}} |
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* {{Books for MGM Movie fans [http://www.rareozbooks.com/judy-garland.html]}} |
* {{Books for MGM Movie fans [http://www.rareozbooks.com/judy-garland.html]}} |
Revision as of 01:50, 16 September 2009
The Wizard of Oz | |
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File:Wizard oz movieposter.jpg | |
Directed by | Victor Fleming Uncredited: Mervyn LeRoy Richard Thorpe King Vidor |
Written by | Novel: L. Frank Baum Screenplay: Noel Langley Florence Ryerson Edgar Allan Woolf |
Produced by | Mervyn LeRoy Arthur Freed (associate producer) |
Starring | Judy Garland Frank Morgan Ray Bolger Bert Lahr Jack Haley Billie Burke Margaret Hamilton Charley Grapewin |
Cinematography | Harold Rosson |
Edited by | Blanche Sewell |
Music by | Herbert Stothart Songs: Harold Arlen E. Y. Harburg |
Distributed by | Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer DVD Release: Warner Home Video |
Release date | August 15, 1939 |
Running time | 103 min. |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $2,777,000 |
Box office | $16,538,431 |
The Wizard of Oz is a 1939 American musical-fantasy film mainly directed by Victor Fleming and based on the 1900 children’s novel The Wonderful Wizard of Oz by L. Frank Baum.[1] The film stars Judy Garland, Ray Bolger, Jack Haley, Bert Lahr, and Frank Morgan, with Billie Burke, Margaret Hamilton, Charles Grapewin, Clara Blandick, and the Singer Midgets as the Munchkins.
The film follows 14-year old farmgirl Dorothy Gale (Judy Garland) who lives on a Kansas farm with her Aunt Em and Uncle Henry, but dreams of a better place "somewhere over the rainbow." After being struck unconscious during a tornado by a window which has come loose from its frame, Dorothy dreams that she, her dog Toto, and the farmhouse are transported to the magical Land of Oz. There, the Good Witch of the North, Glinda (Billie Burke), advises Dorothy to follow the yellow brick road to the Emerald City and meet the Wizard of Oz, who can return her to Kansas. During her journey, she meets a Scarecrow (Ray Bolger), a Tin Man (Jack Haley), and a Cowardly Lion (Bert Lahr), who join her, hoping to receive what they lack themselves (a brain, a heart, and courage, respectively). All of this is done while also trying to avoid the Wicked Witch of the West (Margaret Hamilton) and her attempt to get her sister's ruby slippers from Dorothy, who received them from Glinda.
Initially, The Wizard of Oz was not considered a commercial success in relation to its enormous budget, although it made a small profit and received largely favorable reviews. The impact it had upon release was reportedly responsible for the release of two other fantasy films in Technicolor the following year - The Blue Bird and The Thief of Bagdad. The songs from The Wizard of Oz became widely popular, with "Over the Rainbow" receiving the Academy Award for Best Original Song, and the film itself garnering several Academy Award nominations, including Best Picture.
The film was first telecast in 1956, but not repeated until 1959. But from 1959 to 1991, The Wizard of Oz was an annual television tradition in the United States, and through these showings, it has become one of the most famous films ever made.[2] It is still shown on television; although, beginning in 1991, it began to be telecast more often than simply once a year. The film received much more attention after its annual television screenings were so warmly embraced and has since become one of the most beloved films of all time. The Library of Congress names The Wizard of Oz as the most-watched film in history.[3] It is often ranked among the top ten best movies of all-time in various critics' and popular polls, and it has provided many indelible quotes to the American cultural consciousness. Its signature song, "Over the Rainbow," sung by Judy Garland, has been voted the greatest movie song of all time by the American Film Institute.[4]
Plot
Orphaned twelve-year-old Dorothy Gale (Judy Garland) lives a simple life in rural Kansas with her Aunt Em (Clara Blandick), Uncle Henry (Charles Grapewin) and three colorful farm hands, Hickory, Hunk and Zeke. Shortly before the movie begins, the irascible townswoman, Miss Almira Gulch (Margaret Hamilton) is bitten by Dorothy's dog, Toto. Dorothy is upset that Miss Gulch hit Toto over the back of the head with a rake, but her aunt and uncle, as well as the farmhands, are too busy to listen. Miss Gulch shows up with a court order and takes Toto away to be destroyed. Toto escapes and returns to Dorothy, who is momentarily elated. When she realizes that Miss Gulch will soon return, she decides to take Toto and run away. On their journey, Dorothy encounters a fortune teller named Professor Marvel (Frank Morgan). He is a kind and lovable man who guesses that Dorothy is running away and feels unappreciated at home, and he tricks her into believing Aunt Em is ill, so that she (Dorothy) will return home. People are still guessing as to why he tricked her. Some say it was to keep her from making a big mistake, and some say it was so the Professor didn't have a kid around. As Dorothy leaves, there begin to appear signs of an oncoming storm. She rushes back to the farm's house just ahead of a sudden tornado. There, she takes shelter inside the house, where she is knocked unconscious by a loose window frame.
A confused Dorothy seems to awaken a few minutes later to discover the house has been caught up in the twister. Moments later, the twister drops the house back onto solid ground. Opening the door and stepping into full three-strip Technicolor, Dorothy finds herself in a village and parkland of unearthly beauty. Glinda, the Good Witch of the North (Billie Burke), arrives magically via bubble. She informs Dorothy that she is in Munchkinland and that she has killed the ruby-slippered Wicked Witch of the East by "dropping a house" on her.
Encouraged by Glinda, the timid Munchkins come out of hiding to celebrate the demise of the witch, while singing "Ding-Dong! The Witch Is Dead" and proclaiming Dorothy as their national heroine. The Wicked Witch of the West (also played by Margaret Hamilton), makes a startling appearance claiming the powerful ruby slippers. Glinda magically transfers the slippers from the dead witch onto Dorothy's feet and reminds the Witch of the West that her power is ineffectual in Munchkinland. The witch vows revenge on Dorothy before leaving the same way she arrived. Glinda advises Dorothy to seek the help of the mysterious Wizard of Oz in the Emerald City in her quest to return home to Kansas. Glinda explains that Dorothy can find Emerald City by following the yellow brick road. She also advises Dorothy that she must never remove the slippers or she will be at the mercy of the Wicked Witch of the West.
On her way to the city, Dorothy meets a Scarecrow (Ray Bolger) with no brain, a Tin Man (Jack Haley) with no heart, and a Cowardly Lion (Bert Lahr) (these are played by the same actors as the farm hands back in Kansas). The three decide to accompany Dorothy to the Wizard in hopes of obtaining their desires. Along the way, they behave in various ways which demonstrate that they already have the qualities they think they lack: the Scarecrow has several good ideas, the Tin Man is kind and sympathetic, and the Lion is ready to face danger even though he is terrified. The group reaches Emerald City, where they are greeted kindly. The group talks to the Wizard of Oz - a disembodied and imposing head with a booming voice - who says that he will consider granting their wishes if they can bring him the broomstick of the Wicked Witch.
On their way to the witch's castle, they are attacked by a gang of flying monkeys. These carry Dorothy and Toto away and deliver her to the witch. The Witch demands that Dorothy hand over the ruby slippers. After the witch threatens to drown Toto in the river, Dorothy agrees to give her the shoes; but, a shower of sparks prevents their removal. The witch says that the shoes cannot be removed unless Dorothy dies. While the witch is distracted, Toto takes the opportunity to escape. The witch then locks Dorothy in the chamber and leaves to consider how to kill Dorothy without damaging the shoes' magic. Toto finds Dorothy's friends and leads them to the castle. Once inside, they free Dorothy and attempt an escape. The witch and her Winkie soldiers corner the group on a parapet, where the witch sets the Scarecrow's arm on fire. To douse the flames, Dorothy throws water on them, while accidentally splashing water on the horrified witch, causing her to melt. To the group's surprise, the soldiers are delighted. Their captain (Mitchell Lewis) gives Dorothy the broomstick in gratitude as the heroes begin their journey back to the Emerald City.
Upon their return to Emerald City, Toto exposes the great and powerful wizard as a fraud; they find an ordinary man hiding behind a curtain operating a giant console which contains a group of buttons and levers. They are outraged at the deception, but the wizard solves their problems through common sense and a little double talk rather than magic. He explains that they already had what they had been searching for all along and only need things such as medals and diplomas to confirm that someone else recognizes it.
The wizard explains that he, too, was born in Kansas, and his presence in Oz was the result of an escaped hot air balloon. He promises to take Dorothy home in the same balloon, leaving the Scarecrow, Tin Man, and Lion in charge of Emerald City. Just before takeoff, Toto, sees a cat and jumps out of the balloon's basket. Dorothy jumps out to catch him, and the wizard, unable to control the balloon, leaves without her. She is resigned to spend the rest of her life in Oz until Glinda appears and tells her that she has always had the power to return home, through the power of the ruby slippers. Glinda explains that she did not tell Dorothy at first because she needed to find out for herself that "The next time I go looking for my heart's desire, I won't look any further than my own backyard. If it's not there, then I never really lost it to begin with."
Dorothy says a tearful goodbye to the friends she has met in Oz, and then follows Glinda's instructions to get home, which consist of closing her eyes, tapping her heels together 3 times, and chanting "There's no place like home." Back in sepia tone, she awakens in her bedroom in Kansas (still chanting "There's no place like home," in her sleep) surrounded by family and friends and tells them of her journey. Everyone laughs and tells her it was all a dream, except Uncle Henry, who says sympathetically "Of course we believe you, Dorothy". Toto appears and jumps onto the bed. A happy Dorothy, still convinced the journey was real, hugs Toto and says one last time, "There's no place like home."
Differences from the original novel
For the most part, the movie follows the novel only in a very general way, though several phrases (e.g. "I am Dorothy, the Small and Meek"; and "Oh no, my dear, I'm a very good man; I'm just a very bad Wizard") are taken almost directly from the book. Many details are omitted or altered, while many of the perils that Dorothy encountered in the novel are not even mentioned in the movie. The Good Witch of the North (who has no name in the book) and Glinda, the Good Witch of the South, are merged into one character. To take advantage of the new vivid Technicolor process, Dorothy's silver shoes were changed to ruby slippers for the movie.[5][6] Due to time constraints and the fact that some special effects were simply not possible in 1939, a number of incidents from the book, including the China County and the Hammerheads, were cut. The novel also never depicts Dorothy as a damsel in distress to be rescued by her friends, but rather the reverse, with Dorothy, a figure heavily influenced by the feminism of Matilda Joslyn Gage,[citation needed] rescuing her friends. Nevertheless, the film was far more faithful to Baum's original book than many earlier scripts (see below) or film versions - there were silent versions in 1910 and 1925 (which Baum himself made, one rewriting it that Dorothy was the long lost princess of Oz), and a seven-minute animated cartoon in 1933. The 1939 movie interprets the Oz experience as a dream, in which many of the characters that Dorothy meets represent the people from her home life (such as Miss Gulch, Professor Marvel, and the farmhands, none of which appear in the book). Oz is meant to be a real place in L. Frank Baum's original novel, one to which Dorothy would return in the author's later Oz books, and which would later provide a refuge for Aunt Em and Uncle Henry when unable to pay the mortgage on the new house that was built after the old one really was carried away by the tornado.
Cast
- Judy Garland as Dorothy Gale
- Frank Morgan as The Wizard/Professor Marvel/Doorman/Cabbie/Guard
- Ray Bolger as Hunk/The Scarecrow
- Bert Lahr as Zeke/Cowardly Lion
- Jack Haley as Hickory/Tin Man
- Billie Burke as Glinda the Good Witch of the North
- Margaret Hamilton as Miss Almira Gulch/Wicked Witch of the West
- Charles Grapewin as Uncle Henry
- Clara Blandick as Auntie Em
- Terry the Dog as Toto
- The Singer Midgets as the Munchkins
- Pat Walshe as Chistery Nikko
In the film credits, all actors with dual and/or multiple roles are listed only as playing their Kansas characters, not as their Oz characters. The dog Toto is listed as having been played by Toto, not by Terry. "Chistery Nikko" (Pat Walshe's character) is the leader of the Winged Monkeys, although he is never called by that name in the film's dialogue.
Production
Color and sepia
All of the Oz sequences were filmed in three-strip Technicolor. The opening and closing credits, as well as the Kansas sequences, were both filmed in black and white and colored in a sepia tone. Publicity for the film mentioned the Technicolor but not the black-and-white or sepia, thus making it sound as if the entire film had been made in color.
Sometimes color and sepia would be juxtaposed in the film within seconds of each other. At one point, Dorothy sees her Aunt Em on the Wicked Witch of the West's crystal ball; she is then replaced by a vision of the Witch. Aunt Em appears only in sepia-toned black-and-white, while the Witch appears in the crystal ball in full Technicolor.
Development and pre-production
Development of the film started when the success of Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs showed that films adapted from children's stories and fantasy films could be successful.[7] In January 1938, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer bought the rights to the hugely popular novel from Samuel Goldwyn. The film's script was adapted by Noel Langley, Florence Ryerson, and Edgar Allan Woolf. Several people assisted with the adaptation without official credit: Irving Brecher, William H. Cannon, Herbert Fields, Arthur Freed, E. Y. Harburg, Samuel Hoffenstein, John Lee Mahin, Herman J. Mankiewicz, Jack Mintz, Ogden Nash, Sid Silvers, Richard Thorpe, George Cukor, and King Vidor. In addition, Jack Haley and Bert Lahr are known to have written some of their own dialogue for the Kansas sequence.
The script went through a number of revisions before the final shooting. The original producers thought that a 1939 audience was too sophisticated to accept Oz as a straight-ahead fantasy; therefore, it was reconceived as a lengthy, elaborate dream. Because of a perceived need to attract a youthful audience through appealing to modern fads and styles, the script originally featured a scene with a series of musical contests. A spoiled, selfish princess in Oz had outlawed all forms of music except classical and operetta, and went up against Dorothy in a singing contest in which Dorothy's swing style enchanted listeners and won the grand prize. This part was initially written for Betty Jaynes.[8] The plan was later dropped.
Another scene, which was removed before final script approval and never filmed, was a concluding scene back in Kansas after Dorothy's return. Hunk (the Kansan counterpart to the Scarecrow) is leaving for agricultural college, and extracts a promise from Dorothy to write to him. The implication of the scene is that romance will eventually develop between the two, which also may have been intended as an explanation for Dorothy's partiality for the Scarecrow over her other two companions.[9]
The final draft of the script was completed on October 8, 1938 (following numerous rewrites).[10]
Casting
Mervyn LeRoy had always insisted that he wanted to cast Judy Garland to play Dorothy from the start. However, evidence suggests that negotiations took place early in pre-production for Shirley Temple to play the part of Dorothy, on loan out from 20th Century Fox. A persistent rumor also existed that Fox was in turn promised Clark Gable and Jean Harlow as a loan from MGM. The tale is almost certainly untrue, as Harlow died in 1937, before MGM had even purchased the rights to the story. Despite this, the story appears in many film biographies (including Temple's own autobiography). The documentary The Wonderful Wizard of Oz: The Making of a Movie Classic states that Mervyn LeRoy was under pressure to cast Temple, then the most popular child star; but at an unofficial audition, LeRoy listened to her sing and decided that an actress with a different style was needed. Newsreel footage is included in which Temple wisecracks "There's no place like home," suggesting that she was being considered for the part at that time.[11] A possibility is that this consideration did indeed take place, but that Gable and Harlow were not part of the proposed deal.
Actress Deanna Durbin, who was under contract to Universal, was also considered for the part of Dorothy. Durbin, at the time, far exceeded Garland in film experience and fan base, and the two had co-starred in a 1936 two-reeler called Every Sunday. The film was most notable for exhibiting Durbin's operatic style of singing against Garland's jazzier style. Durbin was possibly passed over once it was decided to bring on Betty Jaynes, also an operatic singer, to rival Garland's jazz in the aforementioned discarded subplot of the film.
LeRoy and company also considered actress Bonita Granville yet passed on her due to the fact that she had never made a musical. [citation needed]
Casting The Wizard of Oz was problematic, with actors shifting roles repeatedly at the beginning of filming. One of the primary changes was in the roles of the Tin Man and the Scarecrow. Ray Bolger was originally cast as the Tin Man, and Buddy Ebsen (later famous for his role as Jed Clampett on the popular 1960s TV show The Beverly Hillbillies) was to play the Scarecrow.[10] Bolger, unhappy with being assigned the role of the Tin Man, convinced producer Mervyn LeRoy to recast him in the role of the Scarecrow. Ebsen did not object to the change; he recorded all of his songs, went through all the rehearsals as the Tin Man, and started filming with the rest of the cast.[12] However, nine days after filming began, Ebsen suffered a reaction to the aluminum powder makeup he wore as the Tin Man; the powder had coated his lungs from his breathing it in as it was applied daily. By that point in critical condition, Ebsen had to be hospitalized and left the project. MGM did not publicize the reasons for Ebsen's departure until decades later in a documentary about the movie, and even his replacement, Jack Haley, did not initially know the reason.
The makeup used for Jack Haley was quietly changed to an aluminum paste makeup; although it did not have the same dire effect on Haley, he did at one point suffer from an unpleasant reaction to it. Despite his near-death experience with the makeup, Ebsen outlived all the principal players, although his film career was damaged by the incident. Because of his illness, followed by his subsequent service in the Coast Guard, his career did not fully recover until the 1950s, when he began a string of popular film and TV series appearances that would continue into the 1980s. Although his lungs had presumably recovered from the effects of the powder makeup, he eventually died of complications from pneumonia on July 6, 2003 at the age of ninety-five.[13]
The book The World of Entertainment (1975) by Hugh Fordin, created with the full cooperation of uncredited associate producer Arthur Freed before his death, is said to suggest[citation needed] that Victor Fleming fired the actor when he took over as director. In a later interview (included on the 2005 DVD release of Wizard of Oz), Ebsen recalled that the studio heads initially did not believe he was ill. No footage of Ebsen as the Tin Man has ever been released — only photographs taken during filming and test photos of different makeup styles remain.
Gale Sondergaard was originally cast as the Wicked Witch. She became unhappy with the role when the witch's persona shifted from sly and glamorous (thought to emulate the wicked queen in Disney's Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs) into the familiar "ugly hag." She turned down the role and was replaced on October 10, 1938 by Margaret Hamilton. Sondergaard said in an interview for a bonus feature on the DVD that she had no regrets about turning down the part, and would play a glamorous villain in Fox's version of Maurice Maeterlinck's The Blue Bird in 1940. Margaret Hamilton plays a remarkably similar role in the Judy Garland film Babes in Arms released that same year. She is a busybody social worker who wants to remove Judy Garland's character from the custody of her parents, much as Almira Gulch wants to remove Toto from the Gale family.
On July 25, 1938, Bert Lahr was signed and cast as the Cowardly Lion; Charles Grapewin was cast as Uncle Henry on August 12.
Frank Morgan was cast as the Wizard on September 22. Morgan's casting led to one of the many tales connected with the production of the film. According to Aljean Harmetz, when the wardrobe department was looking for a coat for Frank Morgan, they decided that they wanted a once elegant coat that had "gone to seed". They went to a second-hand shop and purchased a whole rack of coats, from which Morgan, the head of the wardrobe department, and director Victor Fleming chose one they thought gave off the perfect appearance of shabby gentility. One day, while he was on set wearing the coat, Morgan turned out one of the pockets and discovered a label indicating that the coat had once belonged to Oz author L. Frank Baum. Mary Mayer, a unit publicist for the film, contacted the tailor and Baum's widow, who both verified that the coat had once belonged to the writer of the original "Wizard of Oz" books. After filming was completed, the coat was presented to Mrs. Baum. Baum biographer Michael Patrick Hearn disbelieves the story, it having been refuted by members of the Baum family, who never saw the coat or knew of the story, as well as by Margaret Hamilton, who considered it a concocted studio rumor.[14]
Filming
Filming of Oz began under the direction of Norman Taurog in September 1938. Taurog's only involvement on the picture was the filming of a few early test scenes. For unknown reasons, however, Taurog was replaced with Richard Thorpe, who commenced filming on October 13, 1938 on the MGM Studios lot in Culver City, California. Thorpe initially shot about two weeks of footage involving Dorothy's first encounter with the Scarecrow as well as a number of sequences in the Wicked Witch's castle. However, the sudden medical departure of Buddy Ebsen caused the film to shut down while a new actor was found to fill the part. LeRoy had taken this time to review the already shot footage and felt that Thorpe seemed to be rushing the picture along, creating a negative impact in the actors' performances. Thus LeRoy decided to have Thorpe replaced.
George Cukor temporarily took over. Initially, the studio made Garland wear a blond wig and heavy, "baby-doll" makeup, and she played Dorothy in an exaggerated fashion. Cukor changed Judy Garland's and Margaret Hamilton's makeup and costumes and told Garland to "be herself". This meant that all scenes Garland and Hamilton had already completed were discarded and refilmed. Cukor did not actually shoot any scenes for the film, and, because of his prior commitment to direct Gone with the Wind, he left on November 3, 1938, at which time Victor Fleming assumed the directorial responsibility.
Ironically, on February 12, 1939, Fleming replaced Cukor in directing Gone with the Wind. The next day, King Vidor would be assigned as director to finish the filming of The Wizard of Oz (mainly the sepia Kansas sequences, including Judy Garland's singing of "Over the Rainbow"). In later years, when the film became firmly established as a classic, King Vidor chose not to take public credit for his contribution until after the death of his friend Fleming.
Filming was a long and cumbersome process that ran for over six months, from October 1938 to March 1939. Most of the actors worked six days a week and had to arrive at the studio as early as four and five in the morning, to be fitted with makeup and costumes, and would not leave until seven or eight at night. Cumbersome makeup and costumes were compounded by the fact that the early Technicolor process required a significant amount of lighting to be used, which would usually heat the set to over a hundred degrees. According to Ray Bolger, most of the Oz principals were banned from eating in the studio's commissary due to their costumes. Margaret Hamilton's makeup could not be ingested and so she practically lived on a liquid diet during filming. Jack Haley's aluminum paste makeup caused the actor to receive a severe eye infection.
Filming could also prove to be chaotic at times. This was most evident when trying to put together the Munchkinland sequences. MGM talent scouts searched the country far and wide to come up with over a hundred little people that would make up the citizens of Munchkinland. According to Munchkin actor Jerry Maren, each little person was paid over $125 a week for their performances. Munchkin Meinhardt Raabe, who played the coroner, revealed in the 1990 documentary The Making of the Wizard of Oz that the MGM costume and wardrobe department, under the direction of designer Adrian, had to design over one hundred costumes for the Munchkin sequences. They then had to photograph and catalog each Munchkin in his or her costume so that they could correctly apply the same costume and makeup each day of production. For years many exaggerated rumors existed revolving around the wild behavior of many of the Munchkin actors. One of the most famous rumors claimed that the completed film shows an actor who played one of the Munchkins committing suicide by hanging in the background of one scene. This has been shown to be false; the object in question is actually a wild crane used to populate the forest scene.[15]
Filming also proved to be dangerous at times. Margaret Hamilton was severely burned in the Munchkinland scene. There was a little elevator that was supposed to take her down and then the fire erupted, but the timing was off. Her costume make up had to be completely removed before her face could be treated. When she returned from the hospital, Hamilton refused to do the scene where she flies on a broomstick billowing smoke, so the directors chose to have a stand-in, Betty Danko, perform the scene instead. Danko was also severely injured doing the scene after a malfunction occurred during filming.
Principal photography concluded with the Kansas sequences on March 16, 1939; nonetheless reshoots and pick-up shots were filmed throughout April, May, and into June. At this point the film began a long arduous post-production. Herbert Stothart had to compose the film's score, while A. Arnold Gillespie had to perfect the various special effects that the film required, including many of the rear projection shots. The MGM art department also had to create the various matte paintings that were to supply the background of many of the scenes. One significant innovation for the film was the use of "stencil printing" which was used for the film transition to Technicolor. Each frame was to be hand-tinted to maintain the sepia tone. However, because this was too expensive and labor intensive, it was abandoned and MGM used a simpler and less expensive variation of the process. Instead, the inside of the farm house was painted sepia, and when Dorothy opens the door it is in fact not she but her stand-in wearing a sepia gingham dress. Once the camera moves through the door we see Dorothy in her bright blue dress.[citation needed]
Test screenings of the film began on June 5, 1939.[16] Oz initially was running nearly two hours long. LeRoy and Fleming knew that at least a quarter of an hour of the film needed to be deleted to get the film down to a manageable running time, the average film in 1939 running just about 90 minutes. Three sneak previews in Santa Barbara, Pomona, and San Luis Obispo, California helped guide LeRoy and Fleming in the cutting. Among the many cuts was The Jitterbug number, the Scarecrow's elaborate dance sequence following If I Only Had A Brain, a reprise of Over the Rainbow and Ding Dong the Witch Is Dead, and a number of smaller dialogue sequences.
One song that was almost permanently deleted was "Over the Rainbow". MGM had felt that it made the Kansas sequence too long, as well as being too far over the heads of the children for whom it was intended. The studio also thought that it was degrading for Judy Garland to sing in a barnyard. Producer Mervyn LeRoy, uncredited associate producer Arthur Freed, and director Victor Fleming fought for its inclusion and eventually won. The song went on to win the Academy Award for Best Song of the Year. In 2004, the song was ranked #1 by the American Film Institute on the 100 Greatest Songs in American Films list.
After the preview in San Luis Obispo in early July, The Wizard of Oz was officially released in August 1939 at its current 101-minute running time.
Release
Theatrical
The Wizard of Oz premiered at the Strand Theatre in Oconomowoc, Wisconsin on August 12, 1939,[3] and Grauman's Chinese Theatre in Hollywood on August 15, 1939. The New York City premiere at Loew's Capitol Theater on August 17, 1939 was followed by a live performance with Judy Garland and her frequent film co-star Mickey Rooney. They would continue to perform there after each screening for a week, extended in Rooney's case for a second week and in Garland's to three. The movie opened nationally on August 25, 1939.
The film grossed approximately $3 million against production/distribution costs of $2.8 million in its initial release. It did not show what MGM considered a large profit until a 1949 re-release earned an additional $1.5 million.
Beginning with the 1949 reissue, and continuing until the film's 50th Anniversary VHS and laserdisc release in 1989, the opening Kansas sequences were printed and shown in ordinary black-and-white, not sepia tone, and so TV viewers saw them in black-and-white for more than thirty years. This was done despite the fact that sepia tone had been specifically chosen for the picture to help mask the switch to Technicolor. The actual switch occurs before the door is opened from the transported house onto the Land of Oz. In the sepia prints, one doesn't notice any color until that door is opened, because the door itself is a shade of brown which matches the sepia tone. In black-and-white, one cannot help but notice the switch to color before the door is opened, which was precisely what the film's producers wanted to avoid. For the film's 50th anniversary restoration, the sepia tone was brought back to the opening Kansas scenes, and beginning in 1990, the film was shown on CBS television nationally as originally released in 1939. It was also very common for TV viewers to turn off their color modes in their transmission during showing of a black & white show or movie. This was because unusual colors would be transmitted during the showing of such films in some cases. Though the opening Kansas scenes in The Wizard of Oz was meant to be shown in sepia, and though the sepia was restored to the film in 1989 for the film's 50th anniversary VHS and laserdisc reissue, a few local CBS affiliates still showed the sepia portion of the film while TV viewers turned off their color modes. [citation needed] Most of these were small market affiliates that ran some syndicated black & white shows. TV viewers were used to turning the color modes off during black & white programming. One CBS affiliate, WGNX, ran the opening Kansas scenes in black-and-white in its 1996 showing because this station was an independent station that ran a moderate amount of black-and-white films before becoming a CBS affiliate.
1955 saw the release of a widescreen 1.85:1 aspect ratio version, with portions of the top and the bottom of the film removed via soft mattes to produce the effect. The re-release trailer falsely claimed "every scene" from Baum's novel that was in the film, including "the rescue of Dorothy", though there is no such incident in the novel.
The MGM "Children's Matinees" series re-released the film twice, in 1970 and 1971.[17]
The film was re-released again in U.S. theaters by Warner Bros. Pictures on November 6, 1998. The version was a new remastered print which contained the Warner Bros. '75th Anniversary' logo at the beginning and restoration and sound remixing credits at the end.
In 1999, the film had a theatrical re-release in Australia, in honor of the film's 60th Anniversary.
On September 23, 2009, the film will be re-released in select theaters for a one-night only event in honor of the film's 70th Anniversary. This event will also mark the first time the film will be shown in High-Defintion.
Television airings
The film was first shown on television November 3, 1956 on CBS, as the last installment of the Ford Star Jubilee. It was shown in color (posters still exist advertising the broadcast, and they specifically say in color and black-and-white), but because most television sets then were not color sets, few members of the TV audience saw it that way. An estimated 45 million people watched the broadcast. However, it was not rerun until three years later. On December 13, 1959 the film was shown (again on CBS) as a two-hour Christmas season special, and at an earlier time, to an even larger audience (commercial breaks were much shorter then, enabling the film to run in a two-hour time slot without being cut). Encouraged by the response, CBS decided to make it an annual tradition, showing it every December from 1959 through 1962. The film was not shown in December 1963 as might have been expected, perhaps due to the proximity of the John F. Kennedy assassination, which occurred on November 22 of that year and plunged the U.S. into a period of mourning. Others say that there was no room on the schedule, due to the fact that by then there were other Christmas specials on television, though not nearly as many as there would be in later years (A Charlie Brown Christmas, How the Grinch Stole Christmas!, and Frosty the Snowman, all first shown on CBS in the 1960s, were still more than two years away).
Still, the film was shown very early in 1964, and the showings were therefore still only roughly a year apart. The January 1964 broadcast marked the end of the Christmas season showings, but The Wizard of Oz was nevertheless still televised only once a year for nearly three decades. In the late 1960s, the film was bought for annual TV showings by NBC, but by 1976, it had reverted to CBS. CBS no longer retains the rights; they are now in the hands of Turner Entertainment, and the film is now shown several times a year (rather than annually) on or just before several notable holidays - Easter, the Fourth of July, Thanksgiving, and/or Christmas. Turner Classic Movies cable channel, TNT, and the TBS Superstation now often show the film during the same week "in rotation".[18]
Video
The Wizard of Oz became the first videocassette released by MGM/CBS Home Video in 1980; all current home video releases are by Warner Home Video (via current rights holder Turner Entertainment). The first laserdisc release of The Wizard of Oz was in 1983, with two versions of a second, (one from Turner, and one from The Criterion Collection with a commentary track) for the 50th Anniversary release in 1989, a third in 1991, a fourth in 1995, and a fifth and final laserdisc release on September 11, 1996.[19] The first DVD release of the film was on March 26, 1997, and contained no special features or supplements. It was re-released for its 60th Anniversary on October 19, 1999, with its soundtrack presented in a new 5.1 surround sound mix. The monochrome-to-color transition was more smoothly accomplished by digitally keeping the inside of the house in monochrome while Dorothy and the reveal of Munchkinland are in color. The DVD also contained an extensive behind-the-scenes documentary: The Wonderful Wizard of Oz: The Making of a Movie Classic, produced in 1990 and hosted by Angela Lansbury, which was originally featured in the 1991 "Ultimate Oz" laserdisc box set release. Despite being a one-disc release, outtakes, the deleted "Jitterbug" musical number, clips of pre-1939 Oz adaptations, trailers, newsreels, and a portrait gallery were also included, as well as two radio programs of the era publicizing the film. In 2005, two new DVD editions were released, both featuring a newly restored version of the film with audio commentary and an isolated music and effects track. One of the two DVD releases was a "Two-Disc Special Edition", featuring production documentaries, trailers, various outtakes, newsreels, radio shows, and still galleries. The other set, a "Three-Disc Collector's Edition", included these features as well as the digitally restored 80th anniversary edition of the 1925 feature-length silent film version of The Wizard of Oz, other silent Oz movies, and a 1933 animated short version. Warner has also stated that The Wizard of Oz will be released on Blu-ray Disc on September 29, 2009 for the film's 70th anniversary in a four-disc "Ultimate Collector's Edition", including new bonus features about Victor Fleming and the surviving Munchkins, the telefilm The Dreamer of Oz: The L. Frank Baum Story and the miniseries MGM: When the Lion Roars. A DVD version will also be released as a Two-Disc Special Edition and a Five-Disc Ultimate Collector's Edition.
Legacy
All of the film's stars except Frank Morgan, who died in 1949, lived long enough to see and enjoy at least some of the film's legendary reputation after it came to television starting in 1956. The last of the major players to die was Ray Bolger, in 1987. The day after his death, an editorial cartoon referenced the cultural impact of this film, portraying the Scarecrow running along the Yellow Brick Road to catch up with the other characters, as they all danced off into the sunset.
Neither director Victor Fleming, nor music arranger Herbert Stothart, screenwriter Edgar Allan Woolf, film editor Blanche Sewell, nor actor Charles Grapewin (who played Dorothy's Uncle Henry) lived to see the film become an icon of cinema and a television tradition. By a curious coincidence, Fleming, Stothart, Sewell, and Morgan all died in the same year - 1949, which was also the year of the film's successful first re-release; Woolf had died the year before and Grapewin died in February 1956, nine months before the film's television premiere. Costume designer Adrian died in September 1959, only three months before the highly successful second telecast of the film, the one that would persuade CBS to make it an annual tradition. The film's principal art director Cedric Gibbons died in July 1960, after the 1959 telecast, but months before the next TV showing on December 11, 1960.[20]
Music
The Wizard of Oz is widely noted for its musical selections and soundtrack. Music and lyrics were by Harold Arlen and E.Y. "Yip" Harburg, who won the Academy Awards for Best Music, Song for "Over the Rainbow". In addition, Herbert Stothart, who composed the instrumental underscore, won the Academy Award for Best Original Score.
The song "The Jitterbug", written in a swing style, was intended for the sequence in which the four are journeying to the castle of the Wicked Witch of the West. Due to time constraints, the song was cut from the final theatrical version. The film footage for the song has been lost, although silent home film footage of rehearsals for the number has survived. The sound recording for the song, however, is intact and was included in the 2-CD Rhino Records deluxe edition of the film soundtrack, as well as on the VHS and DVD editions of the film. A reference to "The Jitterbug" remains in the film; the Witch remarks to her flying monkeys that they should have no trouble apprehending Dorothy and her friends because "I've sent a little insect on ahead to take the fight out of them."
Another musical number that was cut before release occurred right after the Wicked Witch of the West was melted and before Dorothy and her friends returned to the Wizard. This was a reprise of "Ding! Dong! The Witch is Dead" with the lyrics altered to "Hail! Hail! The Witch is Dead!". This started with the Witch's guard saying "Hail to Dorothy! The Wicked Witch is dead!" and dissolved to a huge celebration of the citizens of Emerald City singing the song as they accompany Dorothy and her friends to see the Wizard. Today, the film of this scene is also presumed lost, and only a few stills survive along with a few seconds of footage used on several reissue trailers. The entire audio still exists and is included on the 2-CD Rhino Record deluxe edition of the film soundtrack.[21]
The songs were recorded in a studio before filming. Several of the recordings were completed while Buddy Ebsen was still with the cast. Therefore, while Ebsen had to be dropped from the cast due to illness from the aluminum powder makeup, his singing voice remained in the soundtrack.[citation needed] In the group vocals of "We're Off to See the Wizard," his voice is easy to detect. Jack Haley spoke with a distinct Boston accent and thus did not pronounce the r in wizard. By contrast, Ebsen was a Midwesterner, like Judy Garland, and thus pronounced it. Of course, Haley rerecorded Ebsen's solo parts later.
Songlist
- "Over the Rainbow" - Judy Garland
- Munchkinland Sequence:
- "Come Out, Come Out..." - Lorraine Bridges and The Munchkins
- "It Really Was No Miracle" - Judy Garland, Billy Bletcher, and The Munchkins
- "We Thank You Very Sweetly" - Frank Cucksey, Joseph Koziel, and Billie Burke
- "Ding Dong the Witch Is Dead" - The Munchkins
- "As Mayor of the Munchkin City" - Billy Bletcher, Pinto Colveg, and JD Jewkes
- "As Coroner, I Must Aver" - Meinhardt Raabe and Billy Bletcher
- "Ding Dong the Witch Is Dead" (Reprise) - The Munchkins
- "The Lullaby League" - Lorraine Bridges, Betty Rome, and Carol Tevis
- "The Lollipop Guild" - Jerry Maren, Billy Bletcher, and Pinto Colvig
- "We Welcome You to Munchkinland" - The Munchkins
- "Follow the Yellow Brick Road/You're Off to See the Wizard" - Judy Garland and The Munchkins
- "If I Only Had a Brain" - Ray Bolger and Judy Garland
- "We're Off to See the Wizard" - Judy Garland and Ray Bolger
- "If I Only Had a Heart" - Jack Haley and Adriana Caselotti
- "We're Off to See the Wizard" (Reprise 1) - Judy Garland, Ray Bolger, and Jack Haley
- "If I Only Had the Nerve" - Bert Lahr, Jack Haley, Ray Bolger, and Judy Garland
- "We're Off to See the Wizard" (Reprise 2) - Judy Garland, Ray Bolger, Jack Haley, and Bert Lahr
- "Optimistic Voices" - MGM Studio Chorus
- "The Merry Old Land of Oz" - Frank Morgan, Judy Garland, Ray Bolger, Jack Haley, and Bert Lahr
- "If I Were King of the Forest" - Bert Lahr, Judy Garland, Ray Bolger, and Jack Haley
Adaptations to Other Media
The Wizard of Oz was dramatized as a one-hour radio play on the December 25, 1950 broadcast of Lux Radio Theater, with Judy Garland reprising her earlier role.
Cultural impact
Regarding the original Baum storybook, it has been said: "The Wonderful Wizard of Oz is America's greatest and best-loved home grown fairytale. The first totally American fantasy for children, it is one of the most-read children's books . . . and despite its many particularly American attributes, including a wizard from Omaha, The Wonderful Wizard of Oz has universal appeal."[22] The television showings of the film have taken its fame to a level far above what it had been in the pre-TV and early TV era. It has become almost literally a national institution, a cultural icon recognized by millions.
The film also has been deemed "culturally significant" by the United States Library of Congress, which selected it for preservation in the National Film Registry in 1989. In June 2007, the film was listed on UNESCO's Memory of the World Register.[23] The scene in which the Wicked Witch captures Dorothy and threatens her in the castle placed at number 86 on Bravo's 100 Scariest Movie Moments.[24] In 1977, Aljean Harmetz wrote The Making of The Wizard of Oz, a detailed description of the creation of the film based on interviews and research; it was updated in 1989.[25]
Sequels and reinterpretations
A cartoon, Journey Back to Oz, starring Liza Minnelli, daughter of Judy Garland, as Dorothy, was produced beginning in 1964 to commemorate the original film's 25th anniversary. The unfinished film lost financing early on and was not finished until 1972. It was released in the USA in 1974. In the movie, Dorothy is the victim of another minor head injury incurred during another Kansas tornado. She wakes to find herself back in Oz. There, she is reunited with her old friends, the Scarecrow, the Tinman, and the Lion, but none of them have time to spend with her or the desire to fight yet another wicked witch (played by Ethel Merman). She befriends the kindly Pumpkinhead, played by the voice of Bewitched star Paul Lynde, and a horse named Woodenhead Pinto Stallion III. Drama ensues, resulting in both the witch's death and that of Pumpkinhead, her creation. However, a single tear that proves her love for her friend, saves Pumpkinhead. Soon, Dorothy wakes to find herself back in Kansas with her aunt and uncle.
Disney made a sequel Return to Oz in 1985. Based mostly on the books Ozma of Oz and The Marvelous Land of Oz, it fared poorly with critics and in the box office, although it has since gone on to become a cult classic.
For the film's 56th anniversary, a stage show was based upon the 1939 film and the book by L. Frank Baum. It toured from 1995-2008, except for 2004.
In 1995 Gregory Maguire published the book Wicked: The Life and Times of the Wicked Witch of the West, which was later on adapted into a Broadway musical, Wicked, a back story to The Wizard of Oz that describes what happened before Dorothy dropped into Oz and how the Wicked Witch became known as wicked.
LGBT culture
The Wizard of Oz has been identified as being of great importance to LGBT (lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender) fans. One reason for this is Judy Garland's starring role; Garland would go on to be a gay icon, and later in her career acknowledged the gay fans of her rendition of "Somewhere over the Rainbow" from the film. [26]
Numerous analyses of the film and its impact on LGBT-identified persons have been made. Creekmur and Doty, in their introduction to Out in Culture, write that the films gay resonance and interpretations depend on camp.[27] According to the Jungian writer Robert Hopcke, the dreary reality of Kansas implies the presence of homophobia and transphobia for gay viewers, and is contrasted with the colorful and accepting land of Oz.[26] When shown in gay venues, it is "transformed into a rite celebrating acceptance and community". "[26]
LGBT sociologists and authors (so-called Queer theorists) highlight a feeling of kinship felt by LGBT people for the misfit heroes (and villains) of the film,[26] and attribute the feeling of identification to the hidden or double lives of the characters, drawing parallels to the problems faced by LGBT people in real life: "It's emotionally confused and oppressed teenage heroine longs for a world in which her inner desires can be expressed freely and fully. Dorothy finds this world in a technicolor land 'over the rainbow' inhabitied by a sissy lion, an artifical man who cannot stop crying, and a butch femme-couple of witches".[27]
Controversy and urban legends
An urban legend claims that, in the film, a Munchkin can be seen completing suicide (hanging by the neck from behind a prop tree and swinging back and forth) far away (left) in the background, while the Tin Woodsman, Dorothy, and Scarecrow are singing "We're off to see the wizard, the wonderful Wizard of Oz!" and skipping down the yellow brick road into the distance; it is a bird borrowed from the Los Angeles Zoo, most likely a crane or an emu, that was one of several birds placed on the indoor set to give it a more realistic feel. [28][29][30][31][32][33]
Another popular urban legend states that Miss Gulch swears during the scene early in the film where Toto is taken away, telling Aunt Em she'll "bring a damn suit that'll take your whole farm!"; the line in question is actually "...bring a damage suit".
The pairing of the 1973 Pink Floyd music album The Dark Side of the Moon with the visual portion of the film produces moments where the film and the album appear to correspond with each other in a music video-like experience. This juxtaposition has been called Dark Side of the Rainbow.[34]
Awards and honors
According to The Observer, the film has the greatest soundtrack of all time.[35] The film was nominated for several Academy Awards upon its release, including Best Picture and Academy Award for Best Visual Effects. It lost the award in the Best Picture category to Gone with the Wind (another MGM release), but won in the category of Best Song (Over The Rainbow) and Academy Award for Best Original Music Score. Although the Best Song award went to E.Y. Harburg and Harold Arlen, the Best Original Score Award went to, not the songwriters, but Herbert Stothart, who composed the background score. Judy Garland received a special Academy Juvenile Award that year, for "Best Performances by a Juvenile" (this meant that the award was also for her role in the film version of Babes in Arms). The Wizard of Oz did not receive an Oscar for its now-famous special effects - that award went to the 1939 film version of The Rains Came, for its monsoon sequence. Additional nominations were for Cedric Gibbons and William A. Horning for Art Direction and to Hal Rosson for Cinematography (color).
In current reviews, The Wizard of Oz is still praised by critics. On the film's Rotten Tomatoes listing, 100% of critics give the film positive reviews, based on 65 reviews.[36]
In June 2008, AFI revealed its "Ten top Ten"—the best ten American films in ten genres—after polling over 1,500 people from the creative community. The Wizard of Oz was acknowledged as the best film in the fantasy genre.[37][38]
American Film Institute recognition
- 1998 AFI's 100 Years…100 Movies #6
- 2001 AFI's 100 Years…100 Thrills #43
- 2003 AFI's 100 Years…100 Heroes and Villains:
- Wicked Witch of the West, villain #4
- 2004 AFI's 100 Years…100 Songs:
- "Over the Rainbow" #1
- "Ding Dong the Witch is Dead," #82
- 2005, AFI's 100 Years…100 Movie Quotes:
- "Toto, I have a feeling we're not in Kansas anymore" #4
- "There's no place like home" #23
- "I'll get you, my pretty, and your little dog, too" #99
- 2006 AFI's 100 Years of Musicals #3
- 2006 AFI's 100 Years…100 Cheers #26
- 2007 AFI's 100 Years…100 Movies (10th Anniversary Edition) #10
- 2008 AFI's 10 Top 10 #1 Fantasy film
Other noted honors
- 1999 Rolling Stone's 100 Maverick Movies ranked #20.[39]
- 1999 Entertainment Weekly's 100 Greatest Films ranked #32.[40]
- 2000 The Village Voice's 100 Best Films of the 20th Century ranked #14.[41]
- 2002 Sight & Sound's Greatest Film Poll of Directors ranked #41.[42]
- 2005 Total Film's 100 Greatest Films #83.[43]
- 2007 Total Film's 23 Weirdest Films ranked #1.[44]
See also
- The Wizard of Oz on television
- The Wizard of Oz stage show
- "Over the Rainbow"
- The Wonderful Wizard of Oz
- Dark Side of the Rainbow
- Wicked, the book and the musical
References
Bibliography
- Memories of a Munchkin: An Illustrated Walk Down the Yellow Brick Road by Meinhardt Raabe and Daniel Kinske (Back Stage Books, 2005)
- Ruby Slippers of Oz, The by Rhys Thomas (Tale Weaver, 1989)
- Wizardry of Oz, The: The Artistry And Magic of The 1939 MGM Classic - Revised and Expanded by Jay Scarfone and William Stillman (Applause Books, 2004)
- The Munchkins of Oz by Stephen Cox (Cumberland House, 1996)
- Northern Downpour, a Panic At the Disco song from the 2008 album Pretty. Odd. (lyrics- 'You clicked your heels and wished for me')
Notes
- ^ Fricke, John (1989). The Wizard of Oz: The Official 50th Anniversary Pictorial History. New York: Warner Books. ISBN 0446514462.
- ^ Fricke; Scarfone; and Stillman. The Wizard of Oz: The Official 50th Anniversary Pictorial History. Warner Books, 1989.
- ^ a b "Beloved movie's premiere was far from L.A. limelight". Wisconsin State Journal. 2009-08-12.
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(help) - ^ Smithsonian Institution (2006). "Treasures of American History". National Museum of American History - Smithsonian Institution. Retrieved September 10 2007.
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ignored (help) - ^ Jahangir, Rumeana. "Secrets of the Wizard of Oz". BBC. Retrieved 18 March 2009.
- ^ Rhodes, Jesse (January 2009), "There's No Place Like Home", Smithsonian, vol. 39, no. 10, p. 25
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This short article also speaks to the donation of a pair to the Smithsonian and to auctions of pairs. - ^ Fricke, John (1986). The Wizard of Oz: The Official 50th Anniversary Pictorial History. New York, NY: Warner Books, Inc. p. 18. ISBN 0-446-51446-2.
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suggested) (help) - ^ Fordin, Hugh (1976). World of Entertainment. City: Avon Books (Mm). ISBN 9780380007547.
- ^ ""Hollywood Reporter, Oct. 20, 2005"".
- ^ a b Warner Bros. "Wizard of Oz Timeline". Warnerbros.com. Retrieved September 10 2007.
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ignored (help) - ^ The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, the Making of a Movie Classic. CBS Television, 1990, narrated by Angela Lansbury. Coproduced by John Fricke and Aljean Harmetz.
- ^ Fricke, John, and Scarfone and William Stillman. The Wizard of Oz: The Official 50th Anniversary Pictorial History, Warner Books, 1989
- ^ newsfromme.com (2003). "Oz Stuff". povonline. Retrieved September 10 2007.
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ignored (help) - ^ Hearn, Michael Patrick. Keynote address. The International Wizard of Oz Club Centennial convention. Indiana University, August 2000.
- ^ http://www.snopes.com/movies/films/ozsuicide.asp Hanging Munchkin
- ^ Jim's "Wizard of Oz" Website Directory. ""The Wizard of Oz"... A Movie Timeline". geocities.com. Retrieved September 10 2007.
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ignored (help)[dead link] - ^ http://www.kiddiematinee.com/w-woz.html
- ^ The Wizard of Oz (1939) - TV schedule
- ^ http://www.lddb.com/search.php?search=wizard+of+oz&sort=title
- ^ Brainerd (Minnesota, USA) Daily Dispatch, Dec. 9, 1960, accessed through newspaperarchive.com on March 12, 2009
- ^ The Wizard Of Oz: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack - The Deluxe Edition, 2-CD set, original recording remastered, Rhino Records # 71964 (July 18, 1995)
- ^ "The Wizard of Oz: An American Fairy Tale".
- ^ "UNESCO chooses The Wizard of Oz as USA's Memory of the World". UNESCO. Retrieved 2008-03-21.[dead link]
- ^ Bravotv.com. "The 100 Scariest Movie Moments". Bravotv.com. Retrieved September jrngurgnjdtt hhrtr r hbhthrth10 2007.
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ignored (help) - ^ ISBN 0-7868-8352-9
- ^ a b c d Caonner & Sparks (1998), p. 349Conner, Randy P. (1998). Cassell's Encyclopedia of Queer Myth, Symbol and Spirit. UK: Cassell. ISBN 0304704237.
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suggested) (help) - ^ a b Green (1997), p. 404Green, Thomas A. (1997). Folklore: an encyclopedia of beliefs, customs, tales, music, and art. ABC-CLIO. ISBN 9780874369861.
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(help) - ^ Doolittle, Leslie (29 October 1996). "Really Most Sincerely, Still a Munchkin". The Orlando Sentinel.
{{cite news}}
:|access-date=
requires|url=
(help) - ^ article: "Wizard of Oz" Munchkin Suicide: Hanging Munchkin.
- ^ "The "Hanged Man"". Retrieved 2009-06-04.
- ^ "What's the myth of the hanging Munchkin?". Retrieved 2009-06-04.
{{cite web}}
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(help) - ^ Fine, Marshall (26 April 1990). "Defusing the Rumor of 'Oz'". Gannett News Service.
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:|access-date=
requires|url=
(help) - ^ Malcolm, Paul (20 December 1996). "L. Frank Baum's Silent Film Collection". LA Weekly. p. 90.
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:|access-date=
requires|url=
(help) - ^ "DSOTR". Retrieved 2009-06-04.
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(help) - ^ The Observer Music Monthly (2007). "The 50 Greatest Film Soundtracks". Guardian Unlimited. Retrieved September 10 2007.
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ignored (help) - ^ "The Wizard of Oz garners full approval at Rotten Tomatoes". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 2008-03-21.
- ^ American Film Institute (2008-06-17). "AFI Crowns Top 10 Films in 10 Classic Genres". ComingSoon.net. Retrieved 2008-06-18.
- ^ "Top 10 Fantasy". American Film Institute. Retrieved 2008-06-18.
- ^ http://www.filmsite.org/rstone.html
- ^ http://www.filmsite.org/ew100.html
- ^ http://www.filmsite.org/villvoice.html
- ^ http://www.bfi.org.uk/sightandsound/topten/poll/directors-long.html
- ^ http://www.totalfilm.com/movie_news/who_is_the_greatest
- ^ http://www.listsofbests.com/list/30267
External links
- Official website
- The Wizard of Oz at the TCM Movie Database
- The Wizard of Oz at IMDb
- The Wizard of Oz at AllMovie
- The Wizard of Oz at Box Office Mojo
- The Wizard of Oz at Rotten Tomatoes
- The Judy Room Spotlight on The Wizard of Oz
- {{The Wizard of Oz 1939 Movie Online [1]}}
- {{Books for MGM Movie fans [2]}}
- Articles with dead external links from December 2008
- The Wizard of Oz (1939 film)
- 1939 films
- American films
- English-language films
- Films directed by Victor Fleming
- Films directed by King Vidor
- Films set in Kansas
- Kansas in fiction
- Films set in the 1880s
- Coming-of-age films
- Musical fantasy films
- Children's fantasy films
- Films shot in Technicolor
- Films based on fantasy novels
- Films based on children's books
- Memory of the World Register
- Best Song Academy Award winners
- Oz in stage and film productions
- United States National Film Registry films
- MGM films