Friday, September 10, 2010

STRANGE FACTS ABOUT THE WIZARD OF OZ


One memory all of us seems to have is watching "The Wizard Of Oz" as a kid. Gathering on the couch with the family and waiting for those first notes of the opening music to start, sharing a bowl of popcorn and getting kernels in the couch cushions, pushing your feet under your mom to get them warm, ..the memories go on and on. But there are many interesting things you might not have known about one of the world's best-loved movies. Be ready to say "I never knew that!" quite a lot as you read the following fascinating facts and trivia!

CAST:

Dorothy
1- Judy Garland had a bad case of the giggles while filming the scene where she slaps the Cowardly Lion. Take after take, director Victor Fleming's patience wore thin. Taking Judy quietly to the side, and without saying a word he suddenly slapped her! She then returned to her place with the cast and did the scene in one take.

2- Judy Garland was a well-developed 16 yr. old when she was filming "The Wizard Of Oz". To disguise this fact, the costume department design a tight-fitting corset-type device to give her a more child-like figure.

7- The white blouse and blue/white checkered skirt Judy Garland's character wore in the movie wasn't white and blue..it was pink and blue. White doesn't film well. So what looked like white was actually a pale pink.

Wicked Witch
1- Margaret Hamilton received second- and third-degree burns when filming the sequence where she disappeared in a cloud of smoke after first meeting Dorothy. As she was dropping through the trap door, the timing was off and part of her costume caught fire. Her burns caused her to miss six weeks of filming.

2- When Margaret Hamilton returned to the set after recovering from her burns, she was to do the scene where she flies on the broomstick that spews smoke. She refused to do the shot, saying it was too dangerous. Stand-In Betty Danko did the shot instead, getting seriously injured in the stunt.

3- Before becoming an actress, Hamilton was a kindergarten teacher.

Scarecrow, Cowardly Lion & Tin Man
1- Bert Lahr's Cowardly Lion's costume weighed 90 lbs.

2- Part of Bert Lahr's make-up consisted of a brown paper bag. Not being able to eat while in make-up he had to have only soup and milkshakes for lunch and dinner when filming. This got old. One day he had enough of "liquid meals" and enraged the director by taking a full lunch, eating whatever he wanted. He then insisted all of his facial make-up be reapplied which was very time consuming. Lahr won the battle and had his make-up redone each day after eating.

3- Ray Bolger was a smoker. Twice while filming he was smoking during a break; cigarette ash fell onto some of the straw of his costume, catching him on fire!

4- Buddy Ebson (Jed Clampett of "The Beverly Hillbillies") was the original Tin Man. Due to a severe allergic reaction to the make-up, he was replaced with Ray Bolger.

5- Tin Man, Jack Haley had a slight problem with his stiff-limbed costume. It seems he would occasionally fall while in costume and would lay on his back like a turtle until someone could help him up!

Odds & Ends
1- When the movie script was being adapted from the book, the role of the Wizard was written with W.C. Fields in mind for the part.

2- For the shot of Dorothy's house falling out of the sky, a miniature house was positioned and dropped onto a painting of the sky that had been placed on the stage floor and filmed from above. It was then reversed to make it appear the house was falling towards the camera.

3- If you'll look closely at the wallpaper in Dorothy's bedroom wallpaper, you'll see the design is of poppies.

4- Louis B. Mayer, head of MGM is responsible for coming up with the the famous ruby red slippers. In the book, the slippers were silver.

5- Louis B. Mayer's motivation for doing"The Wizard of Oz" was to trump Walt Disney's award-winning movie "Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs".

6- Two white palomino ponies were painted with thicken Jell-O powder to get the beautiful effect for "The horse of a different color" shots as Dorothy and her friends are taken through the Emerald City. Shooting had to be done quickly because the horses would constantly try to lick their fur to get a sweet treat!

7- The shot where sparks and fire comes from the ruby slippers when the witch reaches for them was filmed by having apple juice spew from the slippers and then speeding up the film and adding some lighting effects.


L.Frank Baum (the author)
1- The name OZ came to author L. Frank Baum while looking at his file cabinets, organized A-N and O-Z.


2- When looking for a coat for Professor Marvel, the costumers found quite a few old jackets they felt might work while in old thrift stores. The coat worn throughout the movie was picked from these coats. It was during the filming a name tag was found within the coat. The name was "L.Frank Baum", the author of "The Wizard of Oz". It was confirmed by Baum's widow the coat was indeed his!

3- As a child, author L. Frank Baum had a recurring dream where he was being chased by a scarecrow.

Article courtesy of L.A. Stewart

17 comments:

  1. The coat worn by Professor Marvel is just to awesome!! What an amazing coincidence!! Watching WOO RIGHT NOW ON TCM!!!

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  2. Great facts on a timeless classic. This movie is far better than what it was originally made to out do, Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs hands down :)))

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  3. Great move! Just watched this with my 5 yr old and she loved it

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  4. A favorite! I wonder if Ray Bolger quit smoking after that. That is amazing about his coat!

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  5. I still love wizard of oz now just as much as I did when I was a young girl,I'm 44 now,magical.

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  6. Aw sat watching Wizard of Oz with our 5 year old grandson and he is enthralled. Better than any x-box game.

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  7. 74 years old and I still love to watch it again and again...

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  8. I grew up watching this favorite family Classic film ... Generation after generation this film stays young

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  9. catherine GarlingMay 22, 2015 at 8:18 AM

    You can't beat the old classics and modern re takes just don't do justice.

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  10. Never gets old. I loved watching this as a child. I am 18 now and watching it right now :-) crazy to think thatcthis movie is almost a hundred years old. Quite sad to think that all of these actors involved are dead.

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  11. Instantly transports you back to your childhood feelings; magical. 50 years old and still loving it.

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  12. I'm 71 and consider "The Wizard of Oz" and "Some Like It Hot" to be the most outstanding and enduring movies ever made. At my age, I've lost track of how many times I've watched Judy sing "Over the Rainbow", but I'm still enthralled with it. The fact she was only 16 years old is absolutely amazing. That voice, that poise! How can any 16 year old be that talented!?!

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  13. In response to comment # 4: According to Aljean Harmetz, author of "The Making of The Wizard of Oz", Buddy Ebsen was first cast as the scarecrow, but the part went to Ray Bolger-- who rallied to play that role. Buddy Ebsen was then offered the part of the Tin Man, but due to complications resulting from the makeup, Buddy Ebsen was then replaced by Jack Haley. (I never realized that Buddy Ebsen was originally chosen to play the scarecrow until I read Harmetz's book.)

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  14. One of the best All-time classics ever made. All the parts were perfectly cast and Judy Garland' voice was simply incredible.
    The only thing bothered me was that she about 4 years too old for the part. It always seemed strange to see asuch a mature teen play the part of a child.

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  15. I watched this every year never missed one!

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