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The Wizard Of Oz (1939)
The Wizard of Oz (1939) is everybody's cherished favorite,
perennial fantasy film musical from MGM during its golden years.
For many seasons, it was featured regularly on network TV as a
prime time event (its first two showings were on CBS television
on November 3, 1956 and in December, 1959) and then annually for
Thanksgiving, Christmas and/or Easter time. It soon became a
classic institution, and a rite of passage for everyone, and
probably has been seen by more people than any other motion
picture over multiple decades. Initially, however, the film was
not commercially successful (at $3 million), but it was
critically acclaimed.
All of its images (the Yellow Brick Road, the Kansas twister),
characters (e.g., Auntie Em, Toto, Dorothy, the Wicked Witch),
dialogue (e.g., "Lions and tigers and bears, oh my!", "We're not
in Kansas anymore," "Follow the Yellow Brick Road," or the
film's final line: "There's no place like home"), and music
("Over the Rainbow") have become indelibly remembered, and the
classic film has been honored with dozens of books, TV shows,
references in other films, and even by pop groups (singer Elton
John with his Goodbye, Yellow Brick Road album, or Pink Floyd's
1973 album Dark Side of the Moon).
The film's plot is easily condensed: lonely and sad Kansas
farmgirl Dorothy dreams of a better place, without torment
against her dog Toto from a hateful neighbor spinster, so she
plans to run away. During a fierce tornado, she is struck on the
head and transported to a land 'beyond the rainbow' where she
meets magical characters from her Kansas life transformed within
her unconscious dream state. After travels down a Yellow Brick
Road to the Land of Oz, and the defeat of the Wicked Witch of
the West, Dorothy and her friends are rewarded by the Wizard of
Oz with their hearts' desires - and Dorothy is enabled to return
home to Kansas.
Dual Roles
Many of the film's characters play two roles - one in Kansas and
their counterparts in the Land of Oz, the locale of the young
heroine's troubled dreams.
Kansas Role Oz Role(s) Actor/Actress
Hunk Scarecrow Ray Bolger
Hickory Tin Man Jack Haley
Zeke Cowardly Lion Bert Lahr
Miss Almira Gulch Wicked Witch of the West Margaret Hamilton
Professor Marvel Emerald City Doorman/Cabbie/The Wizard's
Guard/The Wizard of Oz Frank Morgan
The popular film was brilliantly adapted from L. Frank Baum's
venerated children's book The Wonderful Wizard of Oz (written in
1899 and published in 1900) by three credited writers Noel
Langley, Florence Ryerson, and E.A. Woolf, and a team of many
uncredited scriptwriters (including Arthur Freed, Herman
Mankiewicz, Sid Silvers, and Ogden Nash). The first line of the
book follows: "Dorothy lived in the midst of the great Kansas
prairies, with Uncle Henry, who was a farmer, and Aunt Em, who
was the farmer's wife." The Wizard of Oz was first performed as
an on-stage musical in 1902-03 in Chicago and New York. It
premiered at the Grand Opera House in Chicago on June 16, 1902,
and made stars of vaudeville team members David Montgomery (the
Tin Woodman) and Fred Stone (the Scarecrow). On January 21,
1903, the show opened on Broadway at the Majestic Theatre in New
York. The show was so popular (the production tallied over 290
performances and was the longest running show of the decade)
that it toured the country in road shows lasting until 1911.
The book was made into silent films in 1908 and in 1910 (as the
short film The Wonderful Wizard of Oz with 9 year old Bebe
Daniels as Dorothy), again in 1914 (as His Majesty, the
Scarecrow of Oz - the only one directed and produced by Baum
himself), 1921, and in 1925 (with comedian Oliver Hardy of
Laurel and Hardy fame portraying the Tin Woodsman) as a
full-length silent film from Chadwick Pictures. Other versions
(and several instances of film homage) include:
a Canadian black and white feature The Wizard of Oz (1933) with
no dialogue, and with some color animations
a short animated version in 1938
another animated version for ABC-TV broadcast titled Off to See
the Wizard (1967)
Sidney Lumet's The Wiz (1978) - Universal's Afro-American film
of the Broadway musical with New York City substituting for Oz,
and singer Diana Ross in the lead role; also with Michael
Jackson as the Scarecrow
Under the Rainbow (1981) - see below
an animated Japanese version, Ozu no Mahotsukai (1982) by
director Takayama Fumihiko
Disney's live-action, non-musical fantasy Return to Oz (1985)
with Fairuza Balk as Dorothy
the Royal Shakespeare Company's 1987 stage production
David Lynch's Wild at Heart (1990), filled with Oz references
Jan de Bont's blockbuster Twister (1996) made numerous Wizard of
Oz references (i.e., Dorothy is the name of the tornado device
that measures the wind speeds in a tornado, and a tornado-blown
cow was similar to the one in Dorothy's concussion-dream)
Robert Zemeckis Contact (1997) contains multiple Oz references,
including the radio signal of "Over the Rainbow" and a hot air
balloon with "THIS WAY TO OZ" imprinted on it
in action master John Woo's film Face/Off (1997), "Over the
Rainbow" plays during a climactic, slow motion, bloodbath
sequence
Stephen Schwartz' Broadway musical, opening in late 2003,
entitled Wicked (based on Gregory Maguire's 1995 novel Wicked:
The Life and Times of the Wicked Witch of the West), that tells
the back story of Glinda the Good Witch and the Wicked Witch of
the West (Elphaba: derived from the name of the author L. F(rank)
B(aum), L-F-B = Elphaba)
Because Buddy Ebsen (later noted for being cast as Jed Clampett
in TV's The Beverly Hillbillies) was removed from the production
as the original Tin Man because of an adverse allergic reaction
to silver dust make-up, Jack Haley replaced him. [Haley was the
father of producer Jack Haley, Jr., who was once married to Judy
Garland's daughter Liza Minnelli for five years from 1974-78.]
Fox's Shirley Temple was considered for the Garland role, as was
W.C. Fields for the role of the Wizard, and Gale Sondergaard as
the Wicked Witch. Ray Bolger was originally cast as the Tin
Woodsman, but changed his mind to play the Scarecrow - in
recognition of his childhood idol Fred Stone (who had originated
the stage role in the early 1900s), and because he claimed a
pre-existing verbal agreement. There was a near-fatal burning
accident on the set involving Margaret Hamilton. Two scenes, the
Scarecrow's (Ray Bolger) dance, and the jitterbug dance were
edited out of the final film - as was Ebsen's singing of "If I
Only Had A Heart." [The magic world of OZ was named after the
alphabetical letters O - Z on the bottom drawer of Baum's file
cabinet.]
There were a total of four directors who collaborated in the
making of the film: first, Richard Thorpe (for two weeks) and
then George Cukor (for two or three days). Victor Fleming (the
credited director) was involved for four months, but was hired
away by David O. Selznick to direct Gone With the Wind (1939).
An uncredited King Vidor finished the production in ten more
days, which consisted mostly of completing the film's opening
and closing sepia sequences in the Kansas scenes. The back-story
behind the chaos and confusion created by the many Munchkin
extras was strangely and improbably documented in director Steve
Rash's Under the Rainbow (1981), a tasteless comedy set in 1938
during the filming of Oz, that starred Chevy Chase, Carrie
Fisher, and Eve Arden.
The film perfectly integrated the musical numbers (songs by
Harold Arlen and E.Y. ('Yip') Harburg) with the action of the
plot - enhancing and advancing the suspenseful narrative. The
scenes in bleak Kansas were shot in drab sepia tone, with
brilliant, vibrant, 3-strip Technicolor used for the fantasy
scenes in the journey to Oz. The special effects, by Arnold
Gillespie, included the cyclone sequence, the flying winged
monkeys, the Emerald City views, the poppyfield, and the message
written by the witch in the sky: "Surrender Dorothy."
An interesting sidenote: the plot of The Wizard of Oz has often
been used, rightly or wrongly, as a Parable on Populism in the
Gilded Age, to explain the political situation at the time of
its writing, including the 1896 Presidential election, and the
turn-of-the-century Populist movement. Here are a few of the
allegorical connections, most of which were originally
recognized by Henry M. Littlefield, and published in the
American Quarterly in 1967:
the Scarecrow - the wise, but naive western farmers
the Tin Woodman - the dehumanized, Eastern factory workers
the Wicked Witch of the East - the Eastern industrialists and
bankers who controlled the people (the Munchkins)
the Good Witch of the North - New England, a stronghold of
Populists
the Good Witch of the South - the South, another Populist area
the Wizard - President Grover Cleveland, or Republican
Presidential candidate William McKinley
the Cowardly Lion - Democratic-Populist Presidential candidate
William Jennings Bryan
Dorothy - a young Mary Lease; or the good-natured American
people
Dorothy's silver shoes - represents the 'silver standard' (acc.
to the Populists, "the free and unlimited coinage of silver")
Toto - the 'teetotaling' Prohibitionists (or Temperance Party),
an important part of the 'silverite' coalition
the Yellow Brick road - the 'gold standard' - paved with gold,
but leads nowhere
the land of Oz - oz. is the standard abbreviation for ounce, in
accordance with the other symbolism
Emerald City - Washington, D.C., with a greenish color
associated with greenbacks
the Poppy field - the threat of anti-imperialism
The beloved film in Hollywood's most classic year was nominated
for six Academy Awards, including Best Picture (producer Mervyn
LeRoy), Best Color Cinematography (Hal Rosson), Best Interior
Decoration (Cedric Gibbons, William A. Horning), Best Special
Effects, Best Song ("Over the Rainbow" by Harold Arlen and
lyrics by E.Y. Harburg) and Best Original Score (Herbert
Stothart), and won only two Oscars - for its dual musical
nominations. [It was competing against the domineering multiple
Oscar winner, Gone With the Wind (1939).] Garland's star-making
role was also presented with a Special Award for her
"outstanding performance as a screen juvenile."
Established 20th Century Fox star Shirley Temple and Universal's
Deanna Durbin were both considered to play the lead role of
Dorothy, but because of their unavailability (Temple was refused
permission from Fox to work for MGM), the 1939 film version
starred Judy Garland as the Kansas farmgirl. Garland had just
completed the successful hit films Love Finds Andy Hardy (1938)
and Babes in Arms (1939) with Mickey Rooney.
The opening title of the film introduces the fantasy tale:
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.
In an expressionistic, sepia-toned (beige) opening, young
adopted orphan Dorothy Gale (16 year old star Judy Garland,
whose real name was Frances Gumm) hurries down a flat, dusty
Kansas country road with fences on either side, accompanied by
her small black terrier dog Toto. [Teenaged Judy Garland was far
too old for the part of young Dorothy in Baum's storybook - so
her breasts had to be bound to flatten them and make her appear
younger. She wears a blue-and-white gingham pinafore, and sports
pigtails.] Obviously being chased or pursued, Dorothy is
breathlessly concerned about the welfare of her pet:
She isn't coming yet. Toto - did she hurt you? She tried to,
didn't she? Come on, we'll go tell Uncle Henry and Auntie Em!
Apprehensively, Dorothy rushes into the bustling family farm and
flings open the gate where her guardians - matriarchal Auntie Em
(Emily) (Clara Blandick) and kindly Uncle Henry (Charles
Grapewin) are counting eggs/chicks - their source of income -
and worrying about their broken down chicken incubator. [They
bluntly ignore their real 'chick' - Dorothy herself.] She
attempts to tell them about their nasty neighbor, the dreaded
Miss Almira Gulch (Margaret Hamilton):
Dorothy: Just listen to what Miss Gulch did to Toto. She --
Auntie Em: Dorothy, please. We're trying to count.
Dorothy: Oh, but Aunt Em, she...
Uncle Henry: (gently admonishing) Don't bother us now, honey.
This old incubator's goin' bad and we're likely to lose some of
our chicks.
The upset young girl isn't taken seriously by her aunt and uncle
- the adults are too busy with saving some newly-hatched chicks
to be bothered and listen to her foolish concerns. Dorothy tries
to convince them that Miss Gulch hit Toto on the back with a
rake because he got into her garden and chased her "nasty old
cat." "He doesn't do it every day - just once or twice a week
and he can't catch her old cat anyway," she explains. The cranky
neighbor is threatening to have her little dog taken by the
sheriff and put to sleep.
Dorothy takes her problem over to the farm's hired helpers who
are fixing a wagon in the farmyard - maybe they will listen.
Tall and slender hired man Hunk (Ray Bolger), quickly
characterized as lacking brains and intelligence (foreshadowing
his other role as the brains-lacking Scarecrow), off-handedly
counsels Dorothy, prophetically, to use her brain - and not walk
home near Mrs. Gulch's house to avoid trouble:
Hunk: Now look it, Dorothy. You ain't usin' your head about Miss
Gulch. Think you didn't have any brains at all!
Dorothy: I have so got brains.
Hunk: Well, why don't you use 'em? When you come home, don't go
by Miss Gulch's place. Then Toto won't get in her garden, and
you won't get in no trouble, see?
Dorothy: Oh, Hunk. You just won't listen, that's all.
Hunk: Well, your head ain't made of straw, you know.
Farm worker Zeke (Bert Lahr) is herding the hogs into a fenced
enclosure. As Zeke feeds the pigs and Dorothy tight-rope walks
precariously across a pig-pen fence top, he prophetically
advises the distraught girl to have courage (foreshadowing
future scenes of his own bravery and cowardice as the Cowardly
Lion):
Zeke (to the pigs): Say, get in there before I make a dime bank
outta ya! (To Dorothy) Are you gonna let that ol' Gulch heifer
try and buffalo ya? She ain't nothin' to be afraid of. Have a
little courage, that's all.
Dorothy: I'm not afraid of her.
Zeke: Well, the next time she squawks, walk right up to her and
spit in her eye. That's what I'd do.
Dorothy topples off the fence railing into the pig sty, causing
Zeke to frantically haul her out from the squealing pigs and
rescue her from being trampled - and then faint with fright at
his own bravery . After being rescued, Dorothy realizes: "Why
Zeke, you're just as scared as I am!" Hunk teases Zeke: "What's
the matter? Gonna let a little ol' pig make a coward out of ya?"
The third hired hand, Hickory (Jack Haley), who has been
preoccupied with "tinkering" on a metal contraption joins the
commotion. [He is building a tornado-stopping device in an
attempt to become famous - something that was cut from the
script.] Auntie Em is disturbed by the "three shiftless
farmhands" and their "jabber-wapping when there's work to be
done," but Hickory, who desires social status and respect boasts
(foreshadowing a future scene in which, as the Tin Man, he is
frozen with rust like a statue): "But someday, they're gonna
erect a statue to me in this town." She jokes with him: "Well,
don't start posing for it now."
After giving everyone some freshly baked crullers [fat-fried
sweet cakes], Dorothy's harried Aunt rebuffs her and sternly
chides her for causing trouble - suggesting that she find a
place where she won't get into anyone's way:
Now Dorothy, will you stop imagining things. You always get
yourself into a fret over nothing. Now you just help us out
today and find yourself a place where you won't get into any
trouble.
This cues up a forlorn and crestfallen Dorothy for the singing
of her beloved, haunting and plaintive, but immortal song "Over
the Rainbow." Dreaming, yearning and wistfully longing for a
trouble-free, fascinating, far-away world beyond her home-land
where happiness can be found - where bluebirds fly and there are
colorful rainbows. [In Baum's book, Kansas was "gray" and drab -
appropriately accentuated by the sepia-toned opening that is
faithful to the source material.] In the barnyard, she strolls
from a bale of hay (on which she leans back), to an old wheel
(that she pulls), to a discarded piece of farm machinery (on
which she and Toto sit), while singing about leaving her home:
(Speaking) Some place where there isn't any trouble
(To Toto) Do you suppose there is such a place, Toto? There must
be.
It's not a place you can get to by a boat or a train,
It's far, far away, behind the moon, beyond the rain.
(Singing) Somewhere over the rainbow, way up high
There's a land that I've heard of, once in a lullaby
Somewhere over the rainbow, skies are blue
And the dreams that you dare to dream
Really do come true
Some day I'll wish upon a star
And wake up where the clouds are far behind me
Where troubles melt like lemon drops
Away above the chimney tops
That's where you'll find me
Somewhere over the rainbow, blue birds fly
Birds fly over the rainbow
Why then, oh why, can't I?
Songbirds sing as shafts of sunlight pierce through the clouds.
If happy little bluebirds fly beyond the rainbow
Why, oh why, can't I?
Just then, in a memorable image accompanied with ominous music,
Dorothy's fantasies are shattered by the appearance of a
stern-faced, ugly Miss Gulch riding her creaky bicycle down the
country road toward the farm. After leaning her bicycle against
the fence, she speaks to Henry to complain about Dorothy
(actually about Dorothy's dog):
Miss Gulch: I want to see you and your wife right away about
Dorothy.
Henry: Dorothy? Well, what has Dorothy done?
Miss Gulch: What's she done? I'm all but lame from the bite on
my leg.
Henry: You mean she bit ya?
Miss Gulch: No, her dog.
Henry: Oh, she bit her dog, eh?
In the living room, the exasperated, unpleasant and sour Miss
Gulch presents Dorothy's guardians with an ultimatum. She has a
court order to take Toto away as Dorothy clutches her dog
protectively in her arms: "That dog's a menace to the community.
I'm taking him to the sheriff and make sure he's destroyed."
Dorothy begs for reconsideration: "Destroyed? Toto? Oh you
can't. You mustn't. Auntie Em, Uncle Henry, you won't let her,
will ya?...Please, Aunt Em. Toto didn't mean to. He didn't know
he was doing anything wrong. I'm the one that ought to be
punished. I let him go in her garden. You can send me to bed
without supper." Dorothy identifies with her dog - and
volunteers to take Toto's place for punishment. The hated, nasty
woman threatens further action (to take the whole farm if she
doesn't get the dog), although Auntie Em insinuates that Toto is
harmless to almost everyone:
Miss Gulch: If you don't hand over that dog, I'll bring a damage
suit that will take your whole farm. There's a law protectin'
folks against dogs that bite.
Auntie Em: How would it be if she keeps him tied up? He's really
gentle, with gentle people, that is.
Miss Gulch: Well, that's for the sheriff to decide.
Miss Gulch presents a sheriff's order allowing her to take Toto,
and Dorothy's helpless guardians, after protesting with only
token resistance, are forced to comply with the law and give up
the dog: "And we can't go against the law, Dorothy. I'm afraid
poor Toto will have to go." As Uncle Henry stuffs Toto into the
wicker basket to be put on the back of the woman's bicycle,
Dorothy prophetically screams: "No, no, I won't let you take
him. You go away, well I'll bite you myself...You wicked old
witch! " After Dorothy turns away to her room, sobbing, Auntie
Em criticizes Miss Gulch for her misguided influence and
strength in the community - but then withholds her anger due to
her "Christian" charity:
Almira Gulch! Just because you own half the county doesn't mean
you have the power to run the rest of us. For twenty-three
years, I've been dying to tell you what I thought of you. And
now, well, being a Christian woman, I can't say it.
A little way down the country road as Miss Gulch pedals away,
the redoubtable Toto pokes his head out of her wicker basket and
escapes from her clutches - he jumps out as she rides off
unaware. He scurries back to the farm and jumps into the window
of Dorothy's bedroom [with poppy-flower wallpaper] to be
embraced and hugged tightly (where Dorothy lies crying next to
her bed). Fearing that Miss Gulch will return to claim Toto, and
realizing how inadequate and weak the adult figures (parent
substitutes) are in her life, Dorothy immediately decides to
take control of her own destiny. She determines that she will
run away from home with Toto:
They'll be coming back for you any minute. We've got to get
away. We've got to run away.
Without hesitation, she swiftly packs her suitcase and they
trudge down the lonely country dirt road together to find a
better world away from the farm. On their way after crossing a
wooden bridge, the runaways encounter a horse-drawn carnival
wagon broken down in an embankment, inscribed on the side with
big letters: "Professor MARVEL, Acclaimed by The Crowned Heads
of Europe, Let Him Read Your Past, Present & Future in His
Crystal, Also Juggling and Sleight of Hand."
Prophetically also, white-haired Professor Marvel (Frank
Morgan), dressed in formal clothes and wearing a black
neckerchief around his collar is a genial, but fraudulent,
down-and-out fortune teller and carnival showman. Playing his
accustomed role as a kindly fortune teller, he makes several
guesses about what she is doing by analyzing her appearance,
while roasting a hot dog/sausage on a long stick over an open
fire at his campsite. He miraculously divines/'guesses' her
plight and objectives by noting her little suitcase:
The Professor: You're traveling in disguise, no, that's not
right, I...you're going on a visit? No, I'm wrong, that's, uh,
you're, uh, you're running away.
Dorothy: How did you guess?
The Professor: Professor Marvel never guesses, he knows. Now why
are you running away? No, no, no, don't tell me. Uh, they don't
understand you at home, they don't appreciate you. You want to
see other lands, big cities, big mountains, big oceans!
Dorothy: Why, it's just like you could read what was inside of
me.
While Professor Marvel is not looking, Toto impolitely eats his
hot dog, but is quickly forgiven by the medicine man.
Dorothy wishes to join him on his adventures: "Why can't we go
with you and see all the Crowned Heads of Europe?" To find an
answer to her request, he consults his crystal ball inside the
wagon: "I never do anything without consulting my crystal
first." He leads Dorothy inside the wagon where a crystal ball
rests on a low table. To promote his magic, he removes his
broad-brimmed black hat and places a silken turban on his head:
This is the same, genuine magic authentic crystal used by the
priests of Isis and Osiris in the days of the Pharaohs of Egypt,
in which Cleopatra first saw the approach of Julius Caesar and
Marc Antony. And so on and so on.
After she is instructed to close her eyes so she can be "better
in tune with the infinite," he rummages through her basket and
finds a photo of her with her kindly Aunt next to the farm's
white picket fence. Cleverly, he reports a painful vision of a
house, a picket fence, a barn, a weathervane of a running horse,
and a care-worn farm woman wearing a polka-dot dress. He reports
that the woman is crying:
The Professor: Her name is Emily.
Dorothy: That's right. What's she doing?
The Professor: Well I, uh, I can't quite see. Why she's crying.
Someone has hurt her. Someone has just about broken her heart.
Dorothy: Me?
The Professor: Well, it's uh, someone she loves very much.
Someone she's been very kind to. Someone she's taken care of in
sickness.
Dorothy: I had the measles once and she stayed right by me every
minute. What's she doing now?
The Professor: ...What's this? Well, she's, she's putting her
hand on her heart. Oh, she's, she's dropping down on the bed.
In a very subtle manner, Professor Marvel forces Dorothy to fear
both losing and hurting her Auntie Em. He persuades Dorothy to
return home, playing on her sense of loyalty and concern toward
her family. Understandably, Dorothy is worried about her absence
from the farm and its effect upon her sick Aunt. She jumps up
and is willing to return home immediately, as a fierce storm
brews and looms on the horizon: "I have to get to her right
away." She turns back to thank the Professor before hurrying up
to the road to get home: "Goodbye, Professor Marvel, and thanks
a lot." Marvel is concerned about the safety of his horse and
the young girl: "Better get under cover, Sylvester, there's a
storm blowin' up, a whopper! Just speakin' the vernacular of the
peasantry. Poor little kid. I hope she get's home all right."
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