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Dorothy Gale, a Kansas farm girl, lives with her Auntie Em and Uncle Henry.
When Almira Gulch, who owns half the county, brings a sheriff's order to
take Dorothy's little dog Toto away to have the dog destroyed, because Toto
bit Miss Gulch's leg, Auntie Em and Uncle Henry refuse to go against the
law, and they give the dog to Miss Gulch. However, as Miss Gulch rides
away on her bicycle with Toto in her basket, the dog escapes and returns
home. Realizing that Miss Gulch will come back, Dorothy runs away with
Toto.
They come to the wagon of the egotistical, but
kindly Professor Marvel, a fortune-teller and balloonist, who tricks Dorothy
into believing that her aunt has had an attack because she ran away.
Dorothy rushes home greatly concerned, but a cyclone's approach causes her
difficulty, and by the time she gets to the farm, Auntie Em, Uncle Henry and
the three farmhands have entered the storm cellar. Inside her room,
Dorothy is hit on the head by a window and knocked unconscious. When
she revives, she sees through the window that the house has risen up inside
the cyclone. When she sees Miss Gulch, traveling in mid-air on her
bicycle, transform into a witch on a broomstick, Dorothy averts her eyes.
The house comes to rest in Munchkinland, a
colorful section of the Land of Oz inhabited by little people, and lands on
top of the Wicked Witch of the East. Knowing that the dead witch's
ruby slippers contain magic, Glinda, the Good Witch of the North, through
her powers, has them placed on Dorothy's feet before the dead witch's
sister, the Wicked Witch of the West, can retrieve them. The Wicked
Witch vows revenge. Glinda then suggests that the wonderful Wizard of
Oz can help Dorothy get back to Kansas and instructs her to take the yellow
brick road to the distant Emerald City, where the Wizard resides.
Along the way, Dorothy meets a friendly
scarecrow who laments that he is failure because he has no brain, an
emotional tin man, who longingly describes the romantic life he would lead
if he only had a heart, and a seemingly ferocious lion who actually lacks
courage. Dorothy suggests that they all go with her to ask the Wizard
for his help. With help along the way from Glinda to battle a spell of
the Wicked Witch, the four friends reach the Emerald City, where in the
great hall of the Wizard, they see a terrifying apparition that identifies
itself as "Oz" and lambastes Dorothy's companions for their deficiencies.
When the lion faints from fright, Dorothy rebukes the Wizard for scaring
him, and the Wizard agrees to grant their requests if they will first prove
themselves worthy by bringing him the broomstick of the Witch of the West.
As they pass through a haunted forest on their
way to the witch's castle, the witch sends an army of winged monkeys, who
capture Dorothy and Toto. In her castle, when the witch threatens to
have Toto drowned, Dorothy offers the slippers in exchange for her dog, but
the witch cannot remove them, and she remembers that the slippers will not
come off as long as Dorothy is alive. As the witch ponders the proper
way to kill Dorothy, Toto escapes. The dog leads Dorothy's friends to
the castle, where they rescue her, but the witch's guards soon surround
them. After the witch sadistically says that Dorothy will see her
friends and dog die before her, she ignites the Scarecrow's arm.
Dorothy tosses a bucket of water to put out the fire, and when some water
splashes in the witch's face, she melts. The guards and monkeys,
relieved that the witch is dead, hail Dorothy and give her the broomstick.
_NRFPT02_small.jpg) Upon their return to Oz, the Wizard orders
Dorothy and her friends to come back the next day. As they argue, Toto
snoops behind a curtain and pulls it back to reveal a man manipulating
levers and speaking into a microphone, who then admits to the group that he
is really the "powerful" Wizard. Greatly disappointed and angry at the
sham, Dorothy calls him a bad man, but he retorts that, while he is a bad
wizard, he is a good man. He then awards the Scarecrow a diploma, the
Lion a medal and the Tin Man a testimonial, and states that where he comes
from, these things are given to men who have no more brains, courage or
heart than they have.
Confessing that he is a balloonist and a Kansas
man himself, the Wizard offers to take Dorothy back in his balloon.
However, as they prepare to leave, Toto leaps from the balloon to chase a
cat and, after Dorothy goes to retrieve the dog, the balloon takes off
without them. Glinda then comforts Dorothy and reveals that she has
always had the power to return home, but that she had to learn it for
herself. Dorothy says that she has learned never to go further than
her own backyard to look for her heart's desire. After Dorothy
tearfully kisses and hugs her friends, Glinda tells her to click the heels
of the slippers three times with her eyes closed and to think to herself,
"There's no place like home." This she does, and she awakens to find Uncle
Henry and Auntie Em at her bedside.
Professor Marvel, having heard that Dorothy was
badly injured, comes by, and she begins to tell about her journey, which
Auntie Em calls a bad dream. The farmhands come in, and Dorothy remembers
them as her three friends in Oz and the professor as the Wizard. When
Toto climbs on the bed, Dorothy says she loves them all and that she will
never leave again, and she affirms to her aunt that there is no place like
home.
Notes
The following dedication appears in the opening credits: “For nearly
forty years this story has given faithful service to the Young in Heart; and
Time has been powerless to put its kindly philosophy out of fashion.
To those of you who have been faithful to it in return...and to the Young in
Heart...we dedicate this picture.” The Wizard of Oz is perhaps
the most famous and best loved fantasy film ever made. It was based on one
of the most popular children's book ever written, The Wonderful Wizard of
Oz, which, Life noted in an article about the film, differed from
most other such “fables” in that it contained “1) a modern U.S. heroine and
2) absence of any really horrifying ogres, monstrosities or bewitchments.”
The novel sold over a million copies, and many other “Oz” books followed.
Prior to this film, a number of other films and plays based on The
Wonderful Wizard of Oz or other “Oz” books had been produced (see end of
note for detailed listings). Much modern source material has been
written about the production of this film, including at least four
English-language books (see Bibliography for more information). Unless
otherwise noted, the following information was gathered from modern sources.
HR news items from September and October
1933 relate that after the success of Paramount's
Alice in Wonderland, MGM became interested in
producing a film based on The Wonderful Wizard of Oz and was
considering it as a starring vehicle for
Stan Laurel and
Oliver Hardy. However, by the end of September 1933, Samuel
Goldwyn purchased the screen and book rights for $40,000 as a vehicle for
Eddie Cantor. LAEx on 27 September 1933 reported that
W.C. Fields was being considered for the role of “The Wizard,” and that
Helen Hayes or
Mary Pickford would play “Dorothy.” In June 1934, HR
reported that Goldwyn had dropped plans to produce the film in that year's
schedule. The news item noted that Cantor refused to consider it,
stating that the story was not “his type.”
_NRFPT04_small.jpg) No reports of further interest in a film version
of the book have been located in the trade press until February 17, 1938,
when DV reported, “Due probably to the success of Snow White and
the Seven Dwarfs (which opened in December 1937), The Wizard of Oz
has suddenly become a hot story property for which Samuel Goldwyn is
reported to have received bids from five major companies within the past
three days.” A February 19, 1938 NYT news item noted that
Twentieth Century-Fox wanted to acquire the screen rights to the book to use
it for a
Shirley Temple film.
Modern sources state that in the fall of 1937,
prior to the premiere of Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, MGM had
become interested in buying the property. While some modern sources state
that producer Mervyn LeRoy broached the idea to studio head Louis B. Mayer,
others contend that it was songwriter and soon-to-be producer Arthur Freed
who convinced Mayer to purchase the book. The film became LeRoy's
first production following his move from Warner Bros. to MGM. While LeRoy
did not officially begin at MGM until February 1938, modern sources state
that he had discussed making The Wizard of Oz with Mayer earlier.
Other modern sources state similarly that although Freed did not become
LeRoy's assistant on the film until Feb 1938, as reported in DV, he
spoke with Mayer about filming The Wizard of Oz in the fall of 1937.
A prospective cast list for the film dated January 1931, 1938 in the Arthur
Freed Collection at the USC Cinema Television Library attests to the fact
that Freed and MGM were seriously considering the project at that time.
DV , in reporting on February 24, 1938 that MGM had acquired the
property, stated that
Judy Garland would play the role of “Dorothy,” and that Mervyn LeRoy
would produce. Modern sources state that Mayer refused LeRoy's request
to direct in addition to producing.
A number of uncredited writers worked on the
project in addition to Noel Langley, Florence Ryerson and Edgar Allan Woolf,
who received screen credit. It appears that Irv Brecher and Herman
Mankiewicz were the first writers involved, as their names are listed in
notes to a meeting dated February 23, 1938 in the Freed Collection. A
studio assignment sheet indicates that Mankiewicz began working on the film
on February 28, 1938. (Two days earlier, LeRoy's assistant, William Cannon,
had submitted a short outline, which was not used.) Brecher began in
the first week in March. Although modern sources state that Brecher
was pulled off the project almost immediately, an HR news item dated
May 11, 1938 reports that at that time, Robert Pirosh and George Seaton were
collaborating with Brecher on the script. In March 1938, Mankiewicz,
Nash and Langley were all developing the story; however, none of them knew
that anyone else was also working on the script. Other writers during
the early stages of development included Ogden Nash, whose four-page
suggested outline, dated April 16, 1938, is in the Freed Collection; and
Herbert Fields, who according to a HR news item dated April 21, 1938,
had been engaged to work with Langley.
A lengthy memo dated April 25, 1938 in the Freed
Collection gives credence to the view that Freed deserves credit for a
number of ideas concerning the focus of the film. In the memo, Freed
expressed dismay that none of the work submitted up to that point conveyed
the idea that, “When we get to Oz, there must be a solid and dramatic drive
of Dorothy's adventures and purposes that will keep the audience rooting for
her.” He wrote in explanation : “In Kansas it is our problem to set up
the story of Dorothy, who finds herself with a heart full of love eager to
give it, but through circumstances and personalities, can apparently find
none in return. In this dilemma of childish frustration, she is hit on
the head in a real cyclone and through her unconscious self, she finds
escape in her dream of Oz. There she is motivated by her generosity to
help everyone first before her little orphan heart cries out for what she
wants most of all (the love of Aunt Em)—which represents to her the love of
a mother she never knew.
_NRFPT06_small.jpg) Too much stress cannot be placed on the
soundness of the sentimental and emotional foundation of this story because
it is only against such a canvas the novelty and comedy and music of our
venture can ever mean anything.” (In contrast, in the novel, the brief
opening in Kansas conveys virtually nothing of “Dorothy's” emotional and
psychological longings.) Freed went on to emphasize the importance of
music “as an adjunct and accent to the emotional side of the story because
the masses can feel music.” Using as an example the song “Someday My Prince
Will Come” from Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs , Freed wrote that
the song motivated the love story in that film and proposed that in The
Wizard of Oz they use a musical sequence in the farm scenes to “plant”
the emotional connection. (The song “Over the Rainbow” was used in the
final film for this purpose.) In addition, Freed suggested that the
“Wicked Witch” be made more of an antagonist to “Dorothy,” and that
“Dorothy” be put “in some spot in Oz with her companions utterly crestfallen
and lost with a complete feeling of despair.” Concluding the memo,
Freed expressed his intention that “when the picture is over, besides our
laughs and our novelty we (will) have had a real assault upon our hearts.”
After Freed's memo, Langley continued to work on
the film and completed what he thought would be the final script before he
was taken off the project in June 1938. In addition, Samuel
Hoffenstein submitted a two-page outline early that month. Ryerson and Woolf
began work at about the time that Langley left, and continued through July
1938. According to notes in the Freed Collection, on July 6, Freed
stated that he felt the new script by Ryerson and Woolf was too wordy and
suggested that they reassign Langley to get “a rhythm through the whole
script in one flavor of writing.” Modern sources state that when
Langley read Ryerson and Woolf's final script, he demanded to have his name
taken off the picture. However, because songwriter E.Y. Harburg preferred
Langley's version, Freed supported a move to reassign Langley. In
August 1938, Langley rewrote the Ryerson and Woolf script, reincorporating
much of his previous work. In addition to the writers mentioned above,
additional contributions came from Harburg himself, Jack Mintz, who wrote
some gags, Sid Silvers, who worked as a writer on the set with the first
director, Richard Thorpe, and John Lee Mahin, who worked during production
with director Victor Fleming.
Modern sources have gone into great detail in
ascertaining the contributions of the various writers to the final film.
According to these sources, a number of ideas originated from a 1925 film
version of the novel and earlier stage presentations, including having
farmhands in the Kansas sequence appear as characters in the Oz scenes.
The sources further relate that the idea to shoot the Oz scenes in color and
the Kansas scenes in black-and-white originated before the first script was
finished by Mankiewicz; that Langley came up with the idea to make the Oz
sequences a dream, a situation that is not in the original book; that the
early scripts written by Mankiewicz and Langley before June 1938 included
many characters not in the final film; that Ryerson and Woolf were
responsible for putting the focus of the film on “Dorothy's” desire to
return home and the “Wicked Witch's” desire for the slippers as the prime
motivations and removed the attempt, in Langley's script, of the “Wicked
Witch” to capture the Emerald City; that Ryerson and Woolf came up with the
idea to have the actor playing the “Wizard” appear in a number of other
guises, including one in Kansas; that these writers devised the “There's no
place like Home” ending motif; and that the diploma, watch and testimonial
given to the “Scarecrow,” “Tin Woodman” and “Cowardly Lion,” was Harburg's
idea, which he created when it seemed likely that
W.C. Fields would play the role of the “Wizard."
In March 1938, HR reported that the music
for the film would be “pre-scored throughout for the first time in picture
history. It is the method used in making animated cartoons, but has
never been done for live music.” Unlike most Hollywood musicals of the
time, the songs in The Wizard of Oz were conceived as an integral
part of the script. Harburg and composer Harold Arlen were hired in May 1938
to write the songs. Handwritten notes in the Freed Collection, dated
February 23, 1938, list Jerome Kern and Nacio Herb Brown as possibilities
for composers, along with Arlen, Herbert Stothart and Roger Edens, who did
work on the film, and, as possible lyricists, Ira Gershwin and Dorothy
Fields, along with Harburg. On April 18,, HR reported that
lyricist Al Dubin had “paired” with Brown to write the score. Modern
sources state that Freed finally chose Harburg and Arlen on the basis of
their song “In the Shade of the New Apple Tree,” which was in their recent
Broadway musical Hooray for What! (Modern sources also state
that the tune of “If I Only Had a Brain/Heart/the Nerve” was taken from the
song “I'm Hanging on to You,” in Hooray for What!)
_NRFPT08_small.jpg) Although most of the songs that Harburg and
Arlen wrote for the film were included in the final film, a number of songs
or parts of songs were deleted before the premiere. According to
studio records, MPAA/PCA records and modern sources, a reprise of “Ding Dong
the Witch Is Dead” that was to occur after the witch's demise was cut, as
was much of the song “Lions and Tigers and Bears,” and part of “We're Out of
the Woods.” In addition, the complete number of “The Jitter Bug,”
which reportedly took five weeks to shoot and cost $80,000, was cut.
Modern sources state that “Over the Rainbow” was almost cut from the film
after a preview. LeRoy, in his autobiography, states that a number of
MGM executives tried to convince Mayer to cut the song, but that he, LeRoy,
along with Freed, Harburg and Arlen argued to keep the song, and that after
ten minutes, Mayer allowed it to stay. Other modern sources state that
the song was actually cut a number of times during the preview period, and
that Freed threatened to quit the picture if the song was cut from the final
film before Mayer ruled that the song would remain.
In the prospective cast list dated January 31,
1938 in the Freed Collection, the following suggestions are noted:
Judy Garland as “An Orphan in Kansas who sings jazz,”
Ray Bolger as “The Tin Woodman,”
Buddy Ebsen as “The Scare Crow,” Frank Morgan as “The Wizard of Oz,”
Fanny Brice and Edna Mae Oliver as witches, Betty Jaynes as “The
Princess of Oz, who sings opera” and Kenny Baker as “The Prince.” As
with other matters, sources disagree concerning who was responsible for
choosing Garland to play the lead role of “Dorothy Gale.” In his
autobiography, LeRoy states that the studio “brass” wanted
Shirley Temple, but that he had seen Garland in the 1936 Twentieth
Century-Fox film Pigskin Parade and, feeling “she had the quality I
wanted for Dorothy,” convinced Mayer, after some time and effort, to cast
her in the role. Other sources, however, state that Freed actually
chose The Wizard of Oz as a property to showcase Garland, but that
LeRoy wanted Temple instead. Mayer then, according to this view,
contacted Twentieth Century-Fox studio head Darryl Zanuck to get Temple on
loan, and Roger Edens, the MGM vocal coach, auditioned her. Edens
judged Temple's singing abilities to be too limited for the role, and,
according to these sources, gossip columns then reported that LeRoy wanted
to use
Deanna Durbin. However, Freed finally convinced Mayer to give the
role to Garland. Some modern sources have stated that Twentieth
Century-Fox refused to loan Temple. In her autobiography, Temple
states that when Mayer asked for Zanuck to loan Temple, Zanuck offered to
buy the property so that he could produce it with Temple starring.
Mayer, Temple states, refused and offered to loan
Clark Gable and
Jean Harlow to Twentieth Century-Fox in return for the loan of Temple
for this film and for a film in which she would co-star with Gable.
Temple concludes that this deal was not consummated, as Harlow died on June
7, 1937. No other sources, however, report any interest by MGM in
The Wizard of Oz at this early date.
In his autobiography, LeRoy states that his
first choice to play “The Wizard” was
Ed Wynn, but that Wynn refused the offer because he felt the role was
too small.
Wallace Beery attempted to get the role, but LeRoy next tried to
interest
W.C. Fields; however, he also turned it down. An HR news
item from August 10, 1938 states that at the time, Fields was no longer a
candidate and that Frank Morgan, Hugh Herbert and Victor Moore were being
considered; however, a September 9, 1938 HR news item states that MGM
was then negotiating with Fields for the role and had offered him $150,000.
Modern sources state that Fields may have turned down the role because of a
conflict in schedule with the writing and production of
You Can't Cheat an Honest Man. Modern sources
state that Robert Benchley was then mentioned as a possibility and that
Charles Winninger was tested for the role before it went to Morgan.
For his role of “Professor Marvel,” Morgan, with director Victor Fleming and
a wardrobe man, choose an old coat obtained from a second-hand store that
turned out to have the name “L. Frank Baum” sewn inside. It was
determined that the coat had actually belonged to the author of the novel.
_NRFPT10_small.jpg) Although
Buddy Ebsen was first assigned the role of “The Scarecrow” and
Ray Bolger that of “The Tin Woodman,” Bolger convinced the studio to let
him have the role of “The Scarecrow.” Edna Mae Oliver had been the
first actress considered for the role of “The Wicked Witch,” and although
Margaret Hamilton was interviewed for that role on August 20, 1938,
HR announced that
Gale Sondergaard was to play the part. LeRoy, according to modern
sources, had wanted the role to be that of a “glamorous witch,” but he was
overruled by MGM officials, and Hamilton was hired.
Fanny Brice was originally considered for the role of “The Good Witch,”
which ultimately went to
Billie Burke. Tex Morrissey is listed on Freed's February 23, 1938
notes as a possibility to play the “Lion.” Modern sources state that
it was Harburg who suggested
Bert Lahr for the role. May Robson was first selected for the role
of “Auntie Em,” then Sarah Padden was tested for it, and Harlan Briggs was
announced for the role of “Uncle Henry” before Clara Blandick and Charley
Grapewin, respectively, got those roles. The parts for Kenny Baker and
Betty Jaynes, mentioned in the January 31, 1938 memo in the Freed
Collection, were eventually written out of the script, as were parts for The
Five Little Fiddlers, who were mentioned in the February 23, 1938 notes.
On July 16, 1938, HR announced that
Norman Taurog would direct the film. On August 12,, HR again
announced Taurog's selection; however, on September 7, they reported that
the previous day, Richard Thorpe was named to direct in place of Taurog so
that Taurog could start preparation for The Adventures of Huckleberry
Finn. The news item also stated that rehearsals for musical numbers had
begun the day before with Garland, Bolger and Ebsen under the supervision of
dance director Bobby Connelly. On September 30, recording of the songs
with full orchestral accompaniment began under the direction of Herbert
Stothart. DV reported on October 7 that Thorpe, his assistant
director Al Shenberg and production manager Joe Cooke would leave the next
day to hunt through Southern California for Kansas farm locales. The
next day, HR stated that the company would shoot the musical numbers
first and then would travel to Kansas to shoot the “dramatic scenes.”
It is not known if location shooting in Kansas was ever seriously considered
by the studio. On October 13, actual filming began, with Bolger and
Garland performing what HR called the “Scarecrow Song” (which, most
likely, was “If I Only Had a Brain”). On October 24, production was
suspended, according to HR, and on October 26, it was announced that
George Cukor was “relieving” Thorpe of the “directorial reins,” because of
Thorpe's “serious illness.” Modern sources relate that LeRoy, unhappy
with the rushes, had Thorpe taken off the picture and sent to Palm Springs,
so that reporters could not interview him, and released the false story
about Thorpe's illness. In addition to the “Scarecrow Song,” HR
reported that Thorpe had filmed the escape sequence at the “Witch's” castle
using a special camera boom 80 feet in length, which followed the action
diagonally a distance of 150 feet, said to be the longest boom shot made in
color. Modern sources state that Thorpe shot other scenes in the
“Witch's” castle between “Dorothy” and the “Wicked Witch.” In a modern
interview, Carl Spitz, the trainer of “Terry,” who played the dog “Toto,”
commented that Thorpe's footage favored the dog over Garland, and that all
Thorpe's footage was reshot later on.
On November 1, 1938, HR reported that
Cukor had been recalled from MGM by David O. Selznick to prepare for
Gone With the Wind, and that Victor Fleming had been
assigned to direct The Wizard of Oz. (Cukor had been planning
to direct
Gone With the Wind since 1936.) Two days later, HR
reported that Thorpe had been assigned to direct The Adventures of
Huckleberry Finn, which was to begin in ten days. Although HR ,
when they first announced that Cukor would direct The Wizard of Oz,
stated that he would reshoot a couple of days before beginning on new
material, modern sources state that Cukor only oversaw a number of tests
concerning Garland and Bolger. Cukor, who modern sources state did not
like the book and had only agreed to act as an interim director, was
responsible for changing Garland's acting style from that of a fairy tale
character to a realistic country girl. Under his direction, her blonde
wig was discarded, her costume simplified and a good deal of her makeup
removed.
On November 8, shortly after Fleming took over,
HR announced that
Jack Haley was replacing
Buddy Ebsen in the role of the “Tin Woodman” because Ebsen was “forced
out late last week because of pneumonia.” In fact, in late October,
Ebsen became extremely ill, most probably from an allergic reaction to
makeup specially designed for his character. His lungs became coated
by aluminum powder, and he experienced trouble breathing one evening.
After a hospital stay and recuperation lasting six weeks, Ebsen recovered,
but had lost the role to Haley. An HR news item dated October
15, describing the makeup process designed for Ebsen's character by Jack
Dawn, reported that his features were first treated with a waxlike
preparation, then dusted with pulverized silver and burnished with a soft
cloth. Haley, who was lent by Twentieth Century-Fox to replace Ebsen,
was not told about Ebsen's illness, and for Haley's makeup, the aluminum
dust was made into a paste and painted on his face.
_NRFPT12_small.jpg) The other major accident during production
occurred, according to an inter-office communication, on December 28, 1938
when
Margaret Hamilton suffered first-degree burns on her face and
second-degree burns on her hand. During a take of her exit as the
“Wicked Witch” amid fire and smoke in the “Munchkinland” scene, Hamilton was
severely scorched by flames before she was able to disappear on a hidden
elevator. Hamilton was not able to continue work until the second week
of February 1939.
On February 15, 1939, HR announced that
Fleming would take over direction of
Gone With the Wind from Cukor, who had begun the film.
(Please see the
Gone With the Wind entry above for complete information
concerning the change of directors.) King Vidor was named as a
probable replacement for Fleming on The Wizard of Oz “to carry on
pickup shots left unfinished by Fleming,” and on February 17, HR
announced that Fleming had completed the Technicolor sequences of the film.
Vidor directed the black-and-white scenes on the farm, including the song
“Over the Rainbow,” the cyclone scenes, and the scenes with “Professor
Marvel.”
The onscreen credits list “The Singer Midgets”
as playing “The Munchkins.” As early as February 1938, according to
information in the Freed Collection, the studio planned to use the Singer
Midgets, a vaudeville troupe of German and Austrian dwarfs formed and run by
Leo Singer. By May 1938, Singer apparently had been contacted by the
studio, as an inter-office communication from Freed to LeRoy in the Freed
Collection states that Singer had suggested also using dwarf animals in the
film. (This suggestion was not used.) Modern sources state that
Singer was hired soon after to find 200 dwarfs for the production. As
his own troupe had only eighteen dwarfs, he traveled the country and hired
many of the rest of the dwarfs who appeared in the film. However, some
signed with the studio independently of Singer. Henry Kramer
reportedly brought in forty dwarfs, and the troupe of Harvey Williams and
His Little People brought in eleven.
A DV news item dated August 17, 1938
stated that 134 dwarfs had been signed and that the studio was searching for
more. By the end of filming of the “Munchkins'“ scenes, news items and
studio publicity reported that 116 dwarfs were in the film; however, modern
sources contend that there were between 122 and 124 “little people” and up
to one dozen children. The following list of actors playing
“Munchkins” is taken from modern sources: Charles Becker (Mayor),
Meinhardt Raabe (Coroner), Little Billy Rhodes (Barrister),
Matthew Raia and Billy Curtis (City fathers), Nita Krebs, Olga
Nardone and Yvonne Moray (The Lullaby League), Harry Doll, Jerry
Maren and Jackie Gerlich (The Lollipop Guild), Freddy Ritter and
Mickey Carroll (Fiddlers), Karl Kosiczky, Kayo Erickson and Clarence
C. Howerton (Trumpeters), Margaret Pellegrini and Karl Kosiczky (Sleepy
Heads), George Ministeri (Coach driver and villager), W. H.
O'Docharty (Man at back of coach), Frank Cucksey (Man who presents
“Dorothy” with flowers), Johnny Winters (Commander of the Navy),
Victor Wetter (Captain of the Army), Prince Denis (Sergeant at
arms), Willi Koestner, Jakob Hofbauer, Gus Wayne, Harry Monty, Murray
Wood, Garland Slatten, Lewis Croft, August Clarence Swensen, Elmer St. Aubin
and Nicholas Page (Soldiers), Gladys W. Allison, John Ballas, Franz
Balluck, Josefine Balluck, John Bambury, Freda Besky, Henry Boers, Theodore
Boers, Christie Buresh, Eddie Buresh, Lida Buresh, Betty Cain, Colonel
Casper, Nona Cooper, Tommy Cottonaro, Elizabeth Coulter, Eugene S. David,
Jr. Eulie H. David, Daisy Doll, Gracie Doll, Tiny Doll, Major Doyle, Ruth
Duccini, Fern Formica, Addie E. Frank, Thaisa L. Gardner, William A. Giblin,
Jack Glicken, Carolyn E. Granger, Joseph Herbst, Helen M. Hoy, Marguerite A.
Hoy, James R. Hulse, Robert Kanter, Charles E. Kelley, Jessie E. Kelley,
Joan Kenmore, Shirley Ann Kennedy, Frank Kikel, Bernhard Klima, Emma
Koestner, Mitzi Koestner, Adam Edwin Kozicki, Joe Koziel, Dolly Kramer, Emil
Kranzler, Johnny Leal, Jeane LeBarbera, Hilda Lange, Ann Rice Leslie,
Charles Ludwig, Dominick Magro, Carlos Manzo, Howard Marco, Harry Martin,
Bela Matina, Lajos Matina, Matthew Matina, Walter Miller, Priscilla
Montgomery, Nels Nelson, Franklin H. O'Baugh, Frank Packard, Johnny Pizo,
Leon Polinsky, Margaret C. H. Nickloy, Hildred C. Olson, Leona M. Parks,
Lillian Porter, Margaret Raia, Hazel Resmondo, Gertrude H. Rice, Hazel Rice,
Sandor Roka, Jimmy Rosen, Charles F. Royale, Helen J. Royale, Stella A.
Royale, Albert Ruddinger, Valerie Shepard, Elsie R. Shultz, Charles Silvern,
Ruth E. Smith, Elmer Spangler, Carl Stephan, Alta M. Stevens, George Suchsie,
Charlotte Sullivan, Betty Tanner, Arnold Vierling, Viola White, Grace G.
Williams, Harvey B. Williams, Marie Winters, Gladys V. Wolff (Villagers).
Of the above, Gladys W. Allison, Elmer St. Aubin, Johnny Pizo and Ruth E.
Smith were dwarfs, and Betty Cain, Joan Kenmore, Shirley Ann Kennedy,
Priscilla Montgomery, Valerie Shepard and Viola White were children.
Studio records list the names of various actors
who dubbed the voices of “The Munchkins”. A
DV news item dated January 3, 1939, after filming of the “Munchkins'“
scenes had ended, stated that 88 of the “Munchkins” were to go on a
promotional tour to Chicago and Miami, ending at the New York World's Fair,
where a “Munchkin Village” was to be constructed from the set of “Munchkinland.”
It is not known if the tour or the Fair exhibition actually took place.
A few of the actors playing “Munchkins” also performed as “Winged Monkeys.”
According to a modern interview with Ray Bolger, the actors playing the
“Winged Monkeys” struck so that they would be paid for each time they were
called to perform. An HR news item noted that Pat Walshe, who
played “Nikko,” the leader of the “Monkeys,” was a veteran animal
impersonator from vaudeville. A number of the people connected with
the production have commented disparagingly in modern sources concerning the
behavior of the actors playing the “Munchkins”; however, modern sources
contend that incidents of fights, drunkenness and lewdness suggested in
these comments were comparatively low in number.
In the February 23, 1938 memo in the Freed
Collection, which mentions perspective cast and crew, Norman Bel Geddes,
Vincente Minnelli and Albert Johnson are listed for scenery and costumes,
and Hugo Ballin for drawings. While a DV news item dated August
8, 1938 notes that Ballin was about to make a series of “fantastic drawings”
for the production, no further information regarding his participation has
been located. Bel Geddes, Minnelli and Johnson do not appear to have
actually worked on the film. Publicity for the film noted that a
special sensitized film stock, which allowed double exposures at 60 frames
per second, was used. In the scene where “Dorothy” opens her door to “Munchkinland,”
the frames were handcolored to allow a smooth transition from
black-and-white to color. Double exposure in color films, according to
publicity reports, had never been accomplished before. A quarter-mile
cable tunnel under the studio was used to record the echo of “The Wizard's”
voice. The wings of a giant condor were borrowed from a museum for the
production, and a mathematician of renown, O.O. Ceccarini, was hired to
devise an appropriate noise to represent the center of the cyclone.
After a national advertizing magazine campaign,
which cost $250,000, the film had a scarcely publicized world premiere at
Oconomowoc, Wisconsin on August 12, 1939. What was billed as the
official premiere took place at Grauman's Chinese Theatre in Hollywood on
August 15. Garland and
Mickey Rooney had begun a publicity tour in Eastern cities on August 9,
and appeared onstage in New York at the East Coast premiere on August 17.
Most reviewers gave the film high praise, although some, notably Time,
The New Yorker, The New York Herald Tribune and The New
Republic, expressed dissatisfaction with the film.
The film won Academy Awards for Music - Original
Score (Herbert Stothart) and Music - Song (“Over the Rainbow,” Harold Arlen,
music, E. Y. Harburg, lyrics), and
Judy Garland received a special miniature “Oscar” for her “outstanding
performance” as a juvenile performer. In addition, the film received
nominations for Best Picture, Art Direction (Cedric Gibbons, William A.
Horning) and Special Effects (A. Arnold Gillespie, Douglas Shearer).
In 2007, The Wizard of Oz was ranked 10th on AFI's 100 Years...100
Movies - 10th Anniversary Edition list of the greatest American films,
moving down from the 6th position it occupied on AFI's 1997 list. The
picture was also ranked 3rd of AFI's Greatest Movie Musicals list.
After minor changes had been made in the script,
the PCA stated that the script met the requirements of the Production Code,
according to correspondence in the MPAA/PCA Collection at the AMPAS Library,
although they warned that “care should be taken to avoid an effect which is
too frightening to children.” The film was passed by the British Board
of Film Censors in November 1939 with an adult permit, “because the Witch
and grotesque moving trees and various hideous figures would undoubtedly
frighten children.” Some shots were deleted for showings in Denmark,
and in Sweden, the censors “deleted the alleged terrifying shots of the
Wizard in the Throne-room. Also shots of the witch and flying monkeys,
and Miss Gulch's disagreeable face in the crystal.”
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MGM records state that the film cost $2,777,000
to produce, and that it grossed $3,017,000 in its first release.
However, because of distribution and advertising costs, the film actually
lost about a million dollars at the time and did not produce a profit until
its re-release in 1948-49.
On December 25, 1950,
Judy Garland starred in a broadcast of the story over Lux Radio
Theater. The film was first shown on television on November 3,
1956 by CBS, which subsequently broadcast it through 1967. The
following year, NBC-TV purchased the rights, and they broadcast the film
from 1968 through 1975. (A minute of footage was deleted by NBC to
make room for commercial interruptions.) The film was re-issued
theatrically in 1970. In 1976, CBS reacquired the rights for
broadcast. (In the 1980s, CBS cut further shots from the film for
additional commercial time. However, in 1985, they restored the cut
shots through video time compression, whereby various frames of film were
removed to allow a running time of less than 100 minutes.) By 1983,
the film had made under $6,000,000 from theatrical showings, and $13,000,000
from television broadcasts. TV Guide reported in March 1989
that 473 million households had viewed the film by that date. After
Turner Entertainment acquired the MGM film library, CBS negotiated a deal
whereby they extended their license to broadcast the film until 1997-98 in
exchange for giving up the television rights to
Gone With the Wind. In 1989, MGM/UA Home Video released the
fiftieth anniversary video, which included at the end a film clip of The
Scarecrow's extended dance to “If I Only Had a Brain,” as choreographed by
Busby Berkeley, which was cut from the final film; a recording of
Buddy Ebsen singing “If I Only Had a Heart,” accompanied by photographs
of Ebsen in costume; and the soundtrack to the deleted “Jitterbug,”
sequence, accompanied by stills and film shot by Harold Arlen during a dress
rehearsal.
An ad appearing in HR on August 21, 1939
thanks “all the Wizards who made The Wizard of Oz possible.”
The list includes many uncredited persons, some of whose specific
contributions to the film have not been identified, including the head of
the studio's camera department John Arnold, editors Margaret Booth and Tom
Held, Malcolm Brown, Ulrich Busch, George Cave, Charles Chic, Frances
Edwards, Nat Finston, Chips Gaither, Ernie Grooney, Jane Harrison, Sam
Kress, Beth Langston, Donna Mason, Betty Masure, Norbert Miles, Ray O'Brien,
Webb Overlander, W.E. Pohl, Barron Polan, Roy Raymsey, Gerald F. Rocket,
Jack Rohan and Lee Stanfield. Modern sources list the following
additional credits: Fill-in dance dir Albertina Rasch; Color
technician Henry Imus; Sketch artist Jack Martin Smith; Scenic
art department George Gibson; Sculpture department Henry Greutert;
Makeup William Tuttle, Jack Young; Ward department Vera
Mordaunt, John Scura, Marie Wharton, Mrs. Cluett; Seamstress Marian
Parker; Dresser Marie Rose; Props Jack McMaster, Hal Millar,
Franklin Milton, Billy H. Scott; Unit publicist Mary Mayer;
Stand-in and stunt double for
Margaret Hamilton Betty Danko; Stand-ins Stafford
Campbell, Bobbie Koshay, Aline Goodwin; Asst dog trainer Jack
Weatherwax; Cast: Harry Monty, Sid Dawson, Buster Brody and
Harry Cogg (Winged Monkeys). In addition, Fred Detmers may have
been a Technicolor consultant.
A number of other films and plays have been
based on The Wonderful Wizard of Oz or other “Oz” books by L. Frank
Baum. In 1902, a stage version of the book opened in Chicago. A
great success, the play, which reached Broadway on January 21, 1903,
featured David C. Montgomery as the “Tin Woodman” and Fred Stone as “The
Scarecrow” and toured the country. In 1908, author Baum produced a
stage show entitled Fairylogue and Radio-Plays that included filmed
scenes with characters from the Oz books, and in 1914 Baum formed the Oz
Film Manufacturing Co., which produced four feature films, three of which
were based on Oz books. The 1925 Chadwick production, also entitled
The Wizard of Oz, contained a plot quite different from the novel.
That film was directed by Larry Semon, who also starred as “The Scarecrow,”
and featured Dorothy Dwan as “Dorothy” and
Oliver Hardy as “The Tin Woodsman”. A short entitled Scarecrow of Oz
starring The Meglin Kiddies was produced in 1931, and beginning in September
1933, NBC broadcast a radio series derived from the books. In 1975,
the stage musical The Wiz, based on Baum's books, written by William
F. Brown and Charlie Smalls, and with an all-Black cast, opened on Broadway.
It was made into a film in 1978, which was directed by Sidney Lumet and
starred Diana Ross. In 1981, Orion Pictures produced Under the
Rainbow, a fictionalized account of rumored antics of the actors playing
“Munchkins” in The Wizard of Oz; that film was directed by Steve Rash
and starred Chevy Chase and Carrie Fisher. The 1985 film Return to
Oz, which was directed by Walter Murch and starred Fairuza Balk, was
also based on Baum's books. In 1987, the Royal Shakespeare Company
performed a stage version of the 1939 film in London, complete with the
film's songs. That version played in the United States and Canada in
1988 and 1989. |