Ruth Plumly Thompson: The Second Royal Historian
1920
- March 25 - Harry Neal and Mary (Niles) Baum's son, Harry Neal,
Jr., is born in Chicago. Following his parents 1927 divorce and his
father's remarriage, Harry will legally change his name to Henry Barron
Niles (c. 1941).
- July 10 - Baum's Glinda of Oz, written in the garden at
Ozcot, is published by Reilly & Lee, Chicago, with illustrations by
John R. Neill. In place of the usual author's note, the publishers
write that Baum has left this world to tell his stories to "the little
child-souls who lived here too long ago to read the Oz stories for
themselves." They assure young readers that at least one more Oz book
will be published from notes he left behind. Though some sources report
that Frank Jr. finished the manuscript, there is little evidence to
support the claim.
- Oct. 14 - Grandson Stanton Gage Baum is born to Robert Stanton
and Edna (Ducker) Baum at Pamona, Calif.
- William F. Lee travels to Philadelphia to ask 29-year-old
children's author Ruth Plumly Thompson to write the next Oz book. In
addition to her children's page for The Philadelphia Public Ledger,
Thompson's fantasy books and many short stories assure Lee that she
will be able to take over the series. The Baum family approves her
selection.
- Baum's Snuggle Tales are reissued by Reilly and Lee,
Chicago, as The Oz-Man Tales.
1921
- May 24 - Ruth Plumly Thompson's The Royal Book of Oz is
published by Reilly & Lee, Chicago with illustrations by John R.
Neill. This volume is credited to Baum, but is entirely Thompson's
work. John R. Neill's familiar illustrations help ease the transition
between authors.
- Sept. 7 - Frank Joslyn and Helen Snow Baum are divorced in Los
Angeles.
- Parker Brothers issue The Wonderful Game of Oz. The colorful
board game comes with pewter figures and includes a wide range of Oz
places and characters drawn from the successful series. It will remain
a top seller for nearly 20 years.
- Baum's song, "Susan Doozan," from the 1916 Uplifters Minstrels is
published by coopers Melody Shop, Los Angeles. Music is by Byron Gay.
- Thompson's last year working on the Philadelphia Public
Ledger.
- A series of 26 Oz film shorts are proposed but never produced by
Ray Smallwood.
1922
- Apr. 18 - Thompson's Kabumpo in Oz is published by Reilly
& Lee, Chicago, with illustrations by John R. Neill. A large
cardboard display pictures its elephant namesake. Her work is described
as "Founded on and continuing the famous Oz stories of L. Frank Baum,"
a descriptor that will be used by Thompson and future authors ("Royal
Historians") of Oz books.
Illustrator Neill writes the publisher congratulating them on "securing
an author of such superior qualifications" to continue the Oz series.
He describes Kabumpo in Oz as "one of the very best Oz books so
far."
- June 10 - Frances Gumm (Judy Garland) is born in Grand Rapids,
Minn., to Frank Avent and Ethel Marion Milne Gumm. As a young actress,
Garland will become the most famous Dorothy of stage or screen for her
work on the MGM classic film, The Wizard of Oz (1939).
- Sept. 30 - Thompson's The Princess of Cozytown is
published by P.F. Volland, Chicago, with illustrations by Janet Laura
Scott.
- Dec. 11 - Rachel R. Cosgrove born in Westernport, Md. As an
author, she will write The Hidden Valley of Oz (1951) and The
Wicked Witch of Oz (1993).
1923
- Jan. 22 - A second granddaughter, Judith Gage is born to Harry
Neal and Mary (Niles) Baum.
- July 25 - Thompson's The Cowardly Lion of Oz is published
by Reilly & Lee, Chicago, with illustrations by John R. Neill.
- Sept 29 - Kenneth Gage and Dorothy (Duce) Baum have a daughter,
Janet Hilda. This third granddaughter is born in Los Angeles.
1924
- July 9 - Thompson's Grampa in Oz is published by Reilly
& Lee, Chicago, with illustrations by John R. Neill.
- July 21 - A fourth Baum granddaughter is born. Florence Ducker
Baum is the daughter of Robert Stanton and Edna (Ducker) Baum. She is
born in Pamona, Calif.
- Reilly & Lee distributes a novelty leaflet to bookstores
entitled "The Scarecrow of Oz Answers Questions by Radio."
- Oz book publisher William F. Lee dies.
- A third edition of Baum's American Fairy Tales (1901) is
published by Bobbs-Merrill, Indianapolis. It contains 8 original
two-color plates by George Kerr.
- Thompson writes lyrics to four Oz songs in the hope that they
will be produced as records for children.
1925
- Frank J. Baum promotes products from his Oz Doll & Toy
Manufacturing Company.
- June 27 - The Chadwick Film Company's production of The
Wizard of Oz is released with publicity materials that include
posters, postcards, still photos and a copy of the book published by
Bobbs-Merrill, Indianapolis, with photos from the film as plates. The
production also is shown overseas. The screenplay is written by Frank
Baum Jr.
It stars Larry Semon as the Scarecrow, Dorothy Dwan as Dorothy and
Oliver Hardy as the Tin Woodman. The original organ score is by Rosa
Rio. Larry Semon, as one of the most popular and highest-
paid comedians of the day, receives star billing. He later marries
Dorothy Dawn. Oliver Hardy goes on to become a film legend when he
partners with Stan Laurel.
- July 1 - Thompson's The Lost King of Oz is published by
Reilly & Lee, Chicago, with illustrations by John R. Neill.
- July-Aug.-Sept. - A Baum short story, "The Yellow Ryl," is
published in two parts in A Child's Garden. The July issue
includes a biographical sketch of Baum by his widow, Maud. This
previously unpublished short story was mentioned in a contract in 1905.
- Oct. - An Oz book written by two children is published as a
series in A Children's Garden. Authors Virginia Wauchope (age
13) and Robert Wauchope (age 9) claim their story was given to them
through a Ouija board.
- Thompson's playlet, A Day in Oz, or Scraps from Oz,
is used to market the Oz books. The four songs she wrote in 1923 are
used in the production. Norman Sherred writes the music.
1926
- June 28 - Thompson's The Hungry Tiger of Oz is published
by Reilly & Lee, Chicago, with illustrations by John R. Neill. A
plywood counter display of the Scarecrow appears in bookstores to
promote the new story.
- July 2 - Thompson's The Curious Cruise of Captain Santa
is published by Reilly & Lee, Chicago, with illustrations by Neill.
- July 26 - Fred M. Meyer is born. A charter member of The
International Wizard of Oz Club, Inc., he serves as its secretary for
more than 30 years and builds one of the finest Oz collections known.
- WMAQ Chicago broadcasts The Land of Oz on their "Topsy
Turvey Time Man" radio program.
- First issue of the revived Ozmapolitan newspaper announces
the Ozmite Club. Members of the children's reading society receive a
small metal pin. Reilly & Lee distribute the paper through book
stores to promote interest in the Oz books.
1927
- Apr. 30 - Thompson's The Gnome King of Oz is published
by Reilly & Lee, Chicago, with illustrations by John R. Neill. A
plywood Patchwork Girl encourages bookstore customers to read the
latest Oz book.
- June - Harry Neal and Mary (Niles) Baum divorce.
- June 29 - Dick Martin born in Chicago. He later claims to
have been "born into Oz" as his mother had listened to Baum tell
stories as a girl, and his grandmother had taken china painting lessons
with Maud Baum. As an illustrator, author of both Oz fiction and Oz
research, and early Oz collector he will make invaluable contributions
to Oz.
- June 30 - Harry Neal Baum marries his second wife, Helen Bates.
- Jack Snow writes Maud Baum asking for help locating out-of-
print Baum books.
- Summer - Baum's Macatawa Cottage, The Sign of the Goose, is
destroyed by fire.
- Aug. 1 - An Oz map coloring contest sponsored by Reilly & Lee
closing.
1928
- May 25 - Thompson's The Giant Horse of Oz is published
by Reilly & Lee, Chicago, with illustrations by John R. Neill. A
new issue of The Ozmapolitan accompanies its publication. Also,
Samuel French Publishers, Chicago, issue a version of The Giant
Horse of Oz for the stage by Elizabeth Fuller Chapman.
- Jean Gros's French Marionettes production of The Magical Land
of Oz tours the country. Paper bookmarks of the Scarecrow and Tin
Woodman advertise the show. Written by Thompson, it is an adaptation of
Ozma of Oz with a 14-
piece puppet orchestra.
- Actor Larry Semon, the Scarecrow from the Chadwick production of The
Wizard of Oz (1925), dies.
- Junior League Play adaptations of The Wizard of Oz and The
Land of Oz are written by Elizabeth Fuller (Chapman) Goodspeed and
are published by Samuel French, Chicago. The scripts are used by a
Cleveland radio station. The surname Chapman appears on her Wizard,
and Goodspeed on Land, probably indicating a change in marital
status.
1929
- May 17 - Thompson's Jack Pumpkinhead of Oz is published
by Reilly & Lee, Chicago, with illustrations by John R. Neill.
- Sept. 16 - Thompson's The Wonder Book is published by
Reilly and Lee, Chicago, with illustrations by William Donahey and
others.
- Oct. 24 - New York NBC Radio stations regularly feature Oz books
in a read-aloud program.
- The first critical study of Baum's work, Utopia Americana
by Edward Wagenknecht, is published by the University of Washington,
Chapbooks, (Number 28).
- Fred Stone, famous from his stage performances of as the
Scarecrow of Oz, (1902) is critically injured in an airplane crash. He
had been attempting a stunt. In addition to many other broken bones,
his legs are crushed and he is told he'll never again dance. His good
friend Will Rogers offers to fill in for Fred in Three Cheers,
a stage show written for Fred and his daughter, Dorothy. Rogers is a
hit, and Stone works at therapy relentlessly until his proves his
doctors wrong and returns to the stage.
Late 1920's
- Ellen Van Volkenburg directs a marionette version of The
Wizard of Oz.
1930
- May 3 - Thompson's The Yellow Knight of Oz is published
by Reilly & Lee, Chicago, with illustrations by John R. Neill.
Like Baum, Ruth's mail from Oz fans arrives steadily. One example that
particularly amuses her reads: "Dear Ruth, Would you mind telling me
how old you are? I am afraid you and Mr. Neill must be in your middle
years. But never mind. When you are dead, like Mr. Baum, I am going to
write the Oz books myself. With love, Judy."
A more typical letter reads: "Dear Ruth, Oh when is that new Oz book
coming out? The kids around here have been chewing their nails and
holding their breaths waiting. We're about chewed out and winded.
Please, please, when is it coming to us? Yours, Terry Scott."
1931
- May 19 - Thompson's Pirates in Oz is published by Reilly
& Lee, Chicago, with illustrations by John R. Neill.
- Frank J. Baum writes four 15-minute Oz scripts for radio to
promote Tweety in Oz, a book he says he has written, though no
manuscript is ever found.
- A film short, The Scarecrow of Oz, is released by United
Productions. It is an Ethel Meglin Kiddies production featuring Zoe
Boyer and Maryreuth Boone.
1932
- May 6 - Thompson's The Purple Prince of Oz is published
by Reilly & Lee, Chicago, with illustrations by John R. Neill.
- May - "The Wonderland of Oz" comic page by Walt Spouse appears in
newspapers. The artist faithfully adapts both the text and
illustrations of The Land of Oz, Ozma of Oz, The Emerald City of
Oz, The Patchwork Girl of Oz and Tik-Tok of Oz from the
original books. It is syndicated by the C.C. Winningham Company of
Detroit.
- July 29 - Frank Joslyn Baum marries for the second time. His
wife, Rosine Agnes (Shafer) Brubeck has three children from a previous
marriage. Frank's new stepchildren are Patricia Ann (born Nov 7, 1921),
Thomas Edward (born May 18, 1924) and Donald Philip (born Oct. 1 1927).
- Publisher F. K. Reilly dies. Frank O'Donnell becomes the new
president of Reilly and Lee.
- The first foreign translation of The Wizard of Oz is
published. Le Magicien d'Ohz, is translated into French by
Marcelle Gauwin is published by Denoël & Steel with Denslow
illustrations.
- Reilly & Lee, Chicago, produces the Little Oz Books with
Jig Saw Oz Puzzles in boxed sets. The books are inexpensive
paper-bound abridgments of Baum's The Little Wizard Stories
(1914).
- Disney's second comic strip is revised as a comic book feature,
Bucky Bug comics, under the Silly Symphonies banner, opens with an
unnamed bug as a principal character. Readers are asked to vote for
their favorite name from a list of choices. The Woggle Bug, a central
Oz character first introduced in 1902, is one of the choices.
1933
- Feb. 25 - The Land of Oz (a.k.a. The Scarecrow of Oz,
1931), an Ethel Meglin Kiddies film is released.
- June 3 - Thompson's Ojo in Oz is published by Reilly
& Lee, Chicago, with illustrations by John R. Neill.
- July 12 - Maud Baum, Reilly & Lee and Young & Rubicam,
Inc., N.Y. sign a contract giving Young and Rubicam rights to "use on
the radio" all 14 Baum Oz titles and 13 Thompson titles plus future Oz
books while the contract is in existence. According to the terms,
promotional material also can be issued with extra compensation to be
agreed upon. The contract is renewable after 13 weeks. It is quickly
sold to NBC radio and programs sponsored by General Foods/Jell-O are
developed.
- Sept. 25 - Jell-O's Wizard of Oz radio show begins. The 15-
minute programs air three times a week for 13 weeks. They are based on
the first three Oz books. Ozzy store displays and booklets increase
awareness of the program. To receive reprinted soft cover copies of
Baum's The Little Wizard Stories (1913), listeners must send
Jell-O box tops and a dime to the program sponsor. The cast includes
Nancy Kelly, Dorothy; Bill Adams, Scarecrow; Jack Smart, Cowardly Lion
and Uncle Henry; Parker Fennelly, Tin Woodman; Junius Matthews, Toto
and other characters as more are introduced. Ben Graver is the
announcer and Donald Stauffer directs. Frank Novak writes the music and
conducts the four-piece band.
- Sept. 27 - The Los Angeles Examiner speculates that
Eddie Cantor soon will be the Scarecrow, W.C. Fields the Wizard and
either Helen Hayes (age 33) or Mary Pickford (age 40) will be Dorothy
in a Samuel Goldwyn film production of The Wizard of Oz.
- Oct. - After 443 daily episodes, "The Wonderland of Oz" comic
page ends.
- At the World's Fair in Chicago, giant Oz figures are erected at
Enchanted Island, an attraction designed especially for children. The
towering Tin Woodman and Scarecrow are pictured on post cards of the
festival attractions.
- Ted Eshbaugh's animated The Wizard of Oz produced in
Technicolor by J.R. Booth for Film Laboratories of Canada but only a
black and white version is released. Eshbaugh is the director. A color
version is eventually made available on video tape.
- The Land of Oz is translated into French by Marcel Gauwin.
Le Petit Roi d'Ohz is published by Denoël & Steel with Neill
illustrations.
- MGM wants to option the Oz books for animation but can not agree
with Frank Baum Jr. on terms.
- A female Cairn terrier puppy, Terry, is born to a bitch owned by
animal trainer Carl Spitz. Following a 1934 debut in Shirley Temple's
"Bright Eyes," Terry is cast in a series of feature films including the
1939 MGM Wizard of Oz where she appears as Toto.
1934
- Jan. 26 - Frank J. Baum assigns movie rights for The Wizard
of Oz to Samuel Goldwyn. Maud and Denslow's heirs share $60,000.
- Feb. 9 - The first Baum grandchild to marry, Joslyn Stanton Baum,
son of Frank Joslyn and Helen (Snow) Baum, marries Elizabeth Pollock.
- Mar. 23 - The last episode of the Jell-O Wizard of Oz radio show
is broadcast.
- April 17 - Frank J. Baum is granted copyright for a work entitled
Jimmy Bulber in Oz.
- Apr. 25 - Thompson's Speedy in Oz is published by Reilly
& Lee, Chicago with illustrations by John R. Neill.
- Sept. 2 - Frank Joslyn's second wife, Rosine Agnes (Shafer)
Brubeck Baum, dies.
- A "Land of Oz" children's section is included in Cincinnati's
Coney Island amusement park.
- The Wizard of Oz Waddle Book with die-cut "walking"
characters is published by Blue Ribbon Books, New York. The book
contains the unabridged text and Denslow's illustrations. Publishers
records indicate that 38,336 copies are sold.
1935
- Jan. - Frank J. Baum's The Laughing Dragon of Oz is
published by Whitman as a Big Little Book with illustrations by Milt
Youngren (copyright 1934). A second book, The Enchanted Princess of
Oz, is planned but publication is blocked by Reilly and Lee who
hold exclusive rights to Oz sequels.
- May 3 - Thompson's The Wishing Horse of Oz is published
by Reilly & Lee, Chicago, with illustrations by John R. Neill. This
is the last Reilly & Lee Oz book to be published with interior
color illustrations on inserted color plates.
- Sept. 27 - Judy Garland signs a contract with Metro-Goldwyn-
Mayer (MGM).
- Mary Buchanan's play of Ozma of Oz is published by Samuel French,
Chicago.
1936
- Apr. 24 - Thompson's Captain Salt in Oz is published by
Reilly & Lee, Chicago, with illustrations by John R. Neill.
- Hollywood speculation speaks of child actress Marcia Mae Jones as
a good candidate for Dorothy in Samuel Goldwyn's production of The
Wizard of Oz.
1937
- Apr. 17 - Thompson's Handy Mandy in Oz is published by
Reilly & Lee, Chicago, with illustrations by John R. Neill.
- April - MGM again expresses interest in the Oz books as an
animation property, but decides instead to purchase the rights to The
Captain and The Kids because they think it offers more appeal to
adults than the Oz stories.
- May 22 - Frank Alden Baum, second son of Frank Joslyn and Helen
(Snow) Baum, marries Hallie Jean Lincoln.
- Producer Arthur Freed wants to find a good film property for Judy
Garland. Agent Frank Orsatti tells him that Goldwyn has The Wizard
of Oz.
- Mary Buchanon writes a stage play version of Baum's Enchanted
Isle of Yew that is published by Samuel French, Chicago.
1938
- Jan. - The proposed cast for The Wizard of Oz includes
Judy Garland as Dorothy, "The orphan in Kansas who sings jazz;" Betty
Jaynes as "The Princess of Oz who sings opera;" Kenny Baker as "The
Prince;" Fanny Brice as Glinda; Edna Mae Oliver as the Wicked Witch of
the West; May Robson as Aunt Em.
Loew's president, Nicholas Schneck, is rumored to want a more proven
star than Judy Garland such as Deanna Durbin or Bonita Granville in the
role of Dorothy. Though no other name ever appears in print as under
consideration for the part of Dorothy, he may have tried to negotiate
for the use of Shirley Temple. The young star already was a fan of
Baum's Oz books. As an adult, Shirley recalled in her 1988
autobiography, (Child Star, McGraw-Hill, page 69) that she was
puzzled when her mother mentioned wanting her to play Dorothy someday.
Shirley wrote, "'How could I play Dorothy,' I replied. 'She's
real. What I'd like to do is visit her.'"
- Jan 31 - Ray Bolger is assigned to be the Tin Woodman in MGM's The
Wizard of Oz and Buddy Ebsen is assigned to play the Scarecrow.
Bolger is adamant that the roles be switched. Raised on the Oz books
since age 4, he always has wanted to play the role of the Scarecrow and
claims that since he'd first signed with the studio he's had a verbal
agreement to get the role if they ever filmed the story. He had seen
the original Scarecrow, Fred Stone, dance in Jack O'Lantern in
1917 and it had motivated him to dance. Confronted with Bolger's
unrelenting insistance, the roles are soon switched. Meanwhile, the
press is disappointed (but understanding) when 65-year old Fred Stone,
now a movie actor himself, is not given the Scarecrow's role.
- Feb. 3 - Mervyn LeRoy signs a contract to produce The Wizard
of Oz for MGM. He has loved the book since childhood and rereads
it, marking favorite passages he wants to film. He had dreamed of
producing the story since he first saw the stage show. Arthur Freed,
who had hoped to serve as producer, agrees to work with LeRoy.
- Feb. 18 - Samuel Goodwyn agrees to sell rights to The Wizard
of Oz to MGM.
- Feb. 24 - Variety announces MGM's purchase of the rights
to The Wizard of Oz and the casting of Garland as Dorothy. The
rights include not only the story, but also the right to use material
from any previous commercial dramatization.
- When Maud is asked by Mervyn LeRoy, producer, what she is
expecting in the film, she replies she expects they will "have Dorothy,
a wizard, a scarecrow, a tin woodman, a cowardly lion and maybe a witch
in it. Outside of that, I don't expect anything." In an March letter to
Ruth Plumply Thompson, Maud had been equally pessimistic: "I will never
believe The Wizard will be produced until I see it on the
screen - I'm from Missouri."
- Irving Breecher temporarily serves as screenwriter for MGM's The
Wizard of Oz.
- Feb. 28 - Herman Mankiewicz is assigned as screenwriter for MGM's
The Wizard of Oz. He works on the script though March 23.
Writer Ogden Nash is assigned to help him, although he makes no
contributions.
- Mar. 11 - Noel Langley becomes the screenwriter to MGM's The
Wizard of Oz. His earliest contributions include turning Dorothy's
adventure into a dream and including characters in Kansas to foreshadow
characters she meets in Oz.
- Mar. 15 - Casting for The Wizard of Oz is still
uncertain. Trade publications describe it only as featuring "Ray Bolger
and an all-star cast."
- Mar. 21 - Baum's grandson Joslyn Stanton and his wife Elizabeth
(Pollock) Baum have the family's first great-grandson. Roger Stanton
Baum is born in Los Angeles.
- Mar. 22 - Thompson's The Silver Princess in Oz is
published by Reilly & Lee, Chicago, with illustrations by John R.
Neill.
- Artist Walt McDougall (Queer Visitors From the Marvelous Land
of Oz, 1904-1905) dies. His death is a suicide.
- Langley turns in 43-page treatment for MGM's The Wizard of Oz.
- Apr. 5 - Langley's first script for MGM's The Wizard of Oz
completed.
- Trade press and industry experts are still debating several
aspects of the MGM production. For example, some want a real lion -
even MGM's own Leo - to be used instead of an actor in a lion costume.
- An all-midget musical movie is produced by Jed Buell staring a
number of the MGM Munchkinland cast. The Terror of Tinytown is
a Western filmed a the Lazy A Ranch 40 miles from Hollywood.
- May 7 - Lyricist Edgar Yipsel "Yip" Harburg and composer Harold
Arlen begin work on the musical score of MGM's The Wizard of Oz.
- May 31-June 1 - Writer Samuel Huffenstein works on the screenplay
for The Wizard of Oz, but makes no substantial contributions.
- June 2 - Samuel Goldwyn right to sell movie rights for MGM's The
Wizard of Oz is confirmed. He sells the rights to Arthur Freed at
Loew's Inc., the parent company of MGM for $75,000. This is the
official date on the contract; the check is dated June 8. Mervyn LeRoy
later says the deal "must go down alongside the Louisiana Purchase as
one of the biggest bargains of all times."
- June 4 - Langley's Wizard of Oz script is marked with
what he considers his last revisions. They include changing Dorothy's
silver shoes to ruby slippers.
- Florence Ryerson and Edgar Allan Woolf replace Langley as
screenwriters to MGM's The Wizard of Oz.
- June 13 -Ryerson and Woolf submit first script for MGM's The
Wizard of Oz. Their contributions include many elements that are
eventually cut from the script - such as a woodpecker thwarting
Dorothy's escape in the Wizard's balloon as the Munchkin Fire
Department comes to the rescue and a blackface boot black during the
Wash and Brush Up number - and make the character of the Wicked Witch
more sinister and obsessed with the Ruby Slippers. They develop then
cut an elaborate number involving Dorothy's escape from the Witch's
castle over a rainbow bridge (a special effect used with great success
in the stage production of The Tik Tok Man of Oz, 1913). They
designate Glinda as the Good Witch of the North, combining Baum's two
good witches into one. They also expand the Wizard's role; the actor
portraying the Wizard now appears in four other parts.
- July 25 - MGM announces that Bert Lahr will be the Cowardly Lion.
Harburg, who had worked with Lahr before, is particularly pleased with
the decision.
- July 30 - Langley returns as scriptwriter. Through March 3 he
will continue to work on the Wizard of Oz script. Yip Harburg
helps compromise the Ryerson/Woolf and Lanley scripts. Though
uncredited for his script work, Harburg is substantially responsible
for the scene in which the Wizard is revealed to be a humbug and
presents tokens to Dorothy's companions.
- Aug. 3 - Writer Jack Mintz is assigned to The Wizard of Oz.
- Aug. 12 - MGM announces that Charles "Charley" Grapewin will be
Dorothy's Uncle Henry in The Wizard of Oz.
- Sept. 17 - Richard Thorpe assigned to direct MGM's The Wizard
of Oz. He brings in Sid Silbers to help with script revisions.
(Note: At some point, Norman Taurog also worked as director.)
- Sept. 22 - MGM announces that Frank Morgan will have the role of
the Wizard. Ed Wyne had turned the part down as too small. Wallace
Beery and W.C. Fields also had been considered.
- Sept. - A final cast member is signed for The Wizard of Oz
at $125 per week. Toto will be played by a female Cairn terrier, Terry,
owned and trained by Carle Spitz.
- Aug 20 - MGM announces that Gale Sondergaard will be the Wicked
Witch of the West in The Wizard of Oz.
- Oct. 1 - Leo Singer signs a contract to supply MGM with
approximately 125 little people to portray Munchkins. His compensation
includes expenses for a cross-country search.
- Oct. 8 - Final shooting script of MGM's The Wizard of Oz
complete.
- Oct. 12 - Thorpe starts directing MGM's production number 1060, The
Wizard of Oz.
- Oct. 21 - Buddy Ebsen suffers an almost fatal allergic reaction
to his Tin Woodman makeup and is hospitalized; his role as the Tin
Woodman is filled by Jack Haley.
- Oct. 22 - George Cukor replaces Thorpe for seven days as interim
director of MGM's The Wizard of Oz.
- Nov. 1 - Thompson's King Kojo is published by David McKay
Co., Philadelphia, with illustrations by Marge Henderson (later Buell).
"Marge" becomes famous for her Little Lulu character. She had
been a friend and fan of Thompson's since she was just 9 years old.
- Nov. 3 - Victor Fleming starts directing MGM's The
Wizard of Oz. He brings in John Lee Mahin to help with the script.
Mahin suggests that a third Kansas farmhand foreshadow the Cowardly
Lion in place of a caged lion at Professor Marvel's camp. He also
suggests the Toto's cat chasing be the conflict in Kansas and the
reason the Dorothy misses the Wizard's balloon.
- Nov. 5 - Twenty-seven midgets and four others begin a New York to
Los Angeles publicity-stunt bus trip. They stop often as they cross
country to pick up additional midgets.
- Nov. 11 - Little people arrive to begin shooting the Munchkinland
sequence. Most of them, those under contract through Leo Singer, make
about $50 a week, half of what MGM pays Singer for their services.
Though many are experienced vaudeville performers, others are first
introduced to show business with their roles in this film. They stayed
in the Culver and the Adams Hotels. Singer's own touring company, The
Singer Midgets, share a rented house.
In addition to those signed by Singer, MGM begins to hire little people
wh learn of the studio's need by word-of-mouth and head for Hollywood
hoping to join the cast.
Their costumes are individually designed by Adrian and each person's
make up is created by Jack Dawn. The make up is applied using an
assembly line with stops for facial appliances, rubber head pieces,
cosmetics and hair pieces. Harry Monty, a veteran Hollywood midget
stuntman, Walter Miller, Sid Dawson, Pat Walshe and Buster Brody, who
are among the taller little people, are cast as Flying Monkeys and are
fitted with battery-operated wings.
To make the midget casts larger, director Victor Fleming regroups the
Munchkins at every cut. For the Flying Monkey sequences, eight-inch
painted rubber puppet monkeys with foam-like wings and pipe cleaner
tails are filmed in the background.
- Nov. 24 - Bill Gibling, the last midget actor, arrives to join
the cast of MGM's Wizard of Oz production.
- Nov. 25 - Judy Garland elevated to star status by MGM. She
receives a private dressing room tied with a giant red bow.
- Dec. 23 - Margaret Hamilton accidentally burned on the MGM set
during a fiery stunt in Munchkinland. Make-up man Jack Young wipes the
toxic copper-laden green make up off with alcohol as she receives first
aid. His quick work prevents it from seeping further into her burned
skin where it would have caused serious infection. She will return to
shooting Feb. 11.
- Dec. 18 - Munchkinland sequence is complete. All but 20 little
people return home. Those who remain participate in publicity stills
and events, and retakes. Most of the vocals are soon dubbed over by
members of the King's Men Octet and The Debutantes.
- Dec. 30 - The remaining little people are sent home.
- Wizard of Oz cartoon shorts are proposed by Kenneth McLellan, who
acquires rights from Maud Baum, but they are never produced.
© Copyright The International Wizard of Oz Club, Inc.
Page design copyright 1996, 1997 The Cuttenclips, Houston, Texas
First Draft © Copyright Nate Barlow 1994
Revised/expanded - June 10, 1995, to include contributions from Bill
Stillman.
Revised - June 25, 1995, to include contributions from John Fricke,
Steve Teller.
Edited for style - July 8, 1995, Jane Albright.
Further Revised - July 24, 1995, to include contributions from Peter
Schulenburg.
Further revised - August 21, 1995, to include contributions from
Willard Carroll.
Further revised - Sept. 5, 1995, to include
contributions/corrections by Eric Shanower.
Further revised - Sept. 11, 1995 to correct and include information
gathered so far using my own reference collection and cross-referencing
an extensive chronology contributed by Angelica Shirley Carpenter.
Sept. 25-30, 1995 - New material from Carpenter's list included.
Oct. 1-4, 1995 - Copyedited, Patty Tobias
Oct.16. - Dec. 13, 1995 - Incorporated additional info. from Baum
Bugles and material provided by Peter Schulenburg.
April/May 1996 - More edits. Input from Doug Greene, Mike Gessel,
Ozma Baum Mantele, Baum family history records and wills.
July 4, 1996 - Copyedits and corrections noted during 1996
Ozmopolitan convention. Also material gleaned from Our Landlady
(Koupal).
Note: edits from Feb-June, 1997 lost due to disk corruption.
Sept. 24, 1997 - Additional info from recent publications
including Brandywine's Denslow exhibit catalog, Cox's expanded MGM
Munchkin book, Bugles and primary research.
Oct. 28, 2007 - Additional information for 1997, to include
contributions from Scott Cummings
Oct. 28, 2007 - All information for years 1998-2007 courteously
provided by Scott. Cummings