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  2. Traditional Baum scholars had always been hostile to the idea that The Wizard of Oz was anything more than a delightful children’s story, and they encouraged and cheered the apparent demise of the Baum/Populist connection. But as it turned out, the story was far from over.

    • True: The Makeup Made Actors Sick
    • False: An Actor Who Played A Munchkin Hanged Himself on Set
    • True: Someone Stepped on Toto
    • Probably False: Judy Garland Was Molested by Actors Playing Munchkins

    Buddy Ebsen was originally cast in the role of the Tin Woodman, a.k.a. the Tin Man, but he was essentially poisoned by the makeup, which was made of pure aluminum dust. Nine days after filming started he was hospitalized, sitting under an oxygen tent. When he was not getting better fast enough, the filmmakers hired Jack Haley to be the Tin Man inst...

    In a scene where Dorothy, the Scarecrow (Ray Bolger), and the Tin Man (Jack Haley) are skipping down the Yellow Brick Road, singing “we’re off to see the wizard, the wonderful Wizard of Oz,” some think the dark, moving figure hanging from a tree in the background is an actor who hanged himself on set. More likely, it’s one of the exotic birds that ...

    An actor playing one of the Wicked Witch of the West’s soldiers accidentally jumped on top of Dorothy’s Toto, Carl Spitz, the dog trainer on set, told Harmetz. The dog (a female Cairn terrier named Terry) sprained its foot, and Spitz had to get a canine double. Terry did recover and returned to the set a few weeks later.

    In a memoir by Judy Garland’s third husband, Sid Luft, published posthumously in 2017, he writes that, after bar-hopping in Culver City, the actors who played the munchkins “would make Judy’s life miserable by putting their hands under her dress.” Harmetz says it’s true that the actors would go drinking near the Culver City hotel where they stayed,...

  3. Historical Context of ‘The Wizard of Oz’. The Wizard of Oz is a classic children’s book written by L. Frank Baum and first published in 1900. The book tells the story of a young girl named Dorothy who is swept away from her home in Kansas by a tornado and transported to a magical land called Oz.

    • Is the Wizard of Oz based on a true story?1
    • Is the Wizard of Oz based on a true story?2
    • Is the Wizard of Oz based on a true story?3
    • Is the Wizard of Oz based on a true story?4
    • Is the Wizard of Oz based on a true story?5
    • L. Frank Baum framed the pencil he used to write the novel. L. Frank Baum—former chicken rancher, traveling salesman, and theater manager—had already published two successful children’s books when he started The Wonderful Wizard of Oz in 1898.
    • Baum struggled to find the right name for his book. The author had a hard time deciding on The Wonderful Wizard of Oz for his title. Initially, he called the book The City of Oz, then The Emerald City, but his publisher wasn’t a fan (some say because of a superstition among publishers that no book with a jewel in the title would sell well).
    • He said he got the name Oz from his filing cabinet. Three years after The Wonderful Wizard of Oz came out, Baum recalled how he came up with the name Oz: He was looking at the filing cabinet in his study.
    • Dorothy Gale may have been named after a niece who died. Dorothy Gale may have gotten her name from Dorothy Gage, the infant niece of Baum’s wife, Maud.
  4. However, by the late 20th century the 1939 film The Wizard of Oz had become more familiar than the book on which it was based. Summary. Dorothy is a young girl who lives in a one-room house in Kansas with the care-worn Uncle Henry and Aunt Em; the joy of her life is her dog, Toto.

    • Is the Wizard of Oz based on a true story?1
    • Is the Wizard of Oz based on a true story?2
    • Is the Wizard of Oz based on a true story?3
    • Is the Wizard of Oz based on a true story?4
    • Is the Wizard of Oz based on a true story?5
  5. Aug 7, 2024 · But what is the true meaning behind Victor Fleming’s The Wizard of Oz? Often celebrated as one of the greatest pieces of cinema, the film is based on L. Frank Baum’s 1900 children’s novel ...

  6. Sep 21, 2009 · The Wizard is not a real wizard, but a lost American balloonist who uses stage tricks—hanging a disembodied head by a wire, for example—to fool people into thinking he is powerful....