The International Wizard of Oz Club
1957
- Jan. 1 - The Wizard of Oz Fan Club is founded with 16 members by
14-year-old Justin Schiller. To identify potential members, Martin
Gardner and Fred Meyer had given him names and addresses of Oz fans
they knew. Schiller's first letter generates responses from eight high
school and one college student, four professional writers, a lawyer, a
school teacher, a rare book dealer and a housewife. Dues are $1 per
year.
The original members' roster is: Frank J. Baum (Honorary President),
Ruth Berman, John A. Croghan, Nancy C. Dorian, Mrs. Robert G. (Alla
Tchikoff) Ford, Martin Gardner (Chairman, Board of Directors), David
Greene, Douglas Greene, Russell P. MacFall, Mary McClain, Fred M. Meyer
(Royal Historian), Robert R. Pattrick, Justin Schiller (Royal
Secretary), Gertrude Whittum, Steven Yaffe, Hyman Zelkowitz.
- Jan. 18 - Actor Oliver Hardy, the Tin Woodman from the 1925
Chadwick Production of The Wizard of Oz, dies after a long and
celebrated comic career with his professional partner, Stan Laurel.
- Jan. - Humpty Dumpty Magazine offers "Let's Play the Oz
Game" by Martin Gardner. Two other cut-out-and-play games follow:
"Let's Race to the Emerald City" (Jan. 1960) and "See the Scarecrow's
Brains - See the Tin Man's Heart" (May 1960).
- Detroit Library Director Ralph Ulveling removes the Oz books from
the shelves of Detroit Library's Children's Departments saying they are
negative and give youth a wrong approach to life. The Detroit Times
reacts by publishing The Wonderful Wizard of Oz in serial
installments so that no local child will be unable to read it.
- Feb. - Famous Authors Ltd. of New York prints a comic magazine
version of The Wizard of Oz in its "Classics Illustrated
Junior" series. It also is issued abroad and appears in Denmark,
Holland, Finland, France, Germany, Norway, Spain, Sweden, Portugal, and
in eight different languages in India.
- May 12 - Prof. Russell B. Nye responds to the Detroit action
writing, "If the message of the Oz books - that love, kindness and
unselfishness make the world a better place - seems of no value today,
it is perhaps time to reassess a good many other things besides the
Detroit library's approved list of children's books."
- June 30 - The first Baum Bugle is published by The Wizard
of Oz Fan Club. It consists of 4 mimeographed pages.
- July - Walt Disney announces he will begin shooting in November
for the never-produced The Rainbow Road to Oz, featuring TV's
popular "Mickey Mouse Club" Mouseketeers. (This title also had been
proposed by De Crawley Films, Canada, sometime in the 1930s.)
- Sept. 11 - Three musical numbers for the planned Rainbow Road
to Oz are shown on the television program, "Disneyland Fourth
Anniversary Show." The Mouseketeers star as the Oz characters and Walt
Disney himself appears on the program to talk about his Oz project.
- Sept. - "Justin, Boy King of Oz," an article by Robert Freidberg
about the Oz Club's young founder, Justin Schiller, appears in Hobbies
magazine
- Martin Gardner and Russell B. Nye's The Wizard of Oz and Who
He Was is published by Michigan State University Press, East
Lansing, Mich. This volume is the first critical study of Baum's work
as a children's writer. It also includes the unabridged text of The
Wizard of Oz.
- A new Italian translation of The Wizard of Oz, Il Mago di Oz,
is published by Fratelli Fabbri Editori of Milan, Italy. It is
translated by Emma Saracchi and illustrated by Maraja.
- Sawyers Company's View Master Stereo Slides are issued that
include The Wizard of Oz. Three slides, each with 7 photos of
sculpted character models placed in elaborate settings, are included.
The toy provides a 3-dimensional effect.
- Nobel Prize winner Yasumari Kowabata translates The Wizard of
Oz into Japanese. Ozu no Mahotsukai is published by
Hobunkan, Tokyo with illustrations by Akitsuga Yokata. More than 15
additional translations will follow in the next 20 years.
- 1958
- Apr. 21 - Baum's son, Robert Baum, dies.
- Dec. 2 - Baum's son, Frank J. Baum, dies of a heart attack at his
home in Los Angeles.
- Alla Tchikoff Ford and Dick Martin's The Musical Fantasies of
L. Frank Baum is published by The Wizard Press, Chicago. The
authors include three unproduced Baum plays: The Maid of Athens
(1903), The King of Gee Whiz (1905); and The Pipes O'
Pan (1909). Reference to Baum's other theatrical ventures
and a checklist of his writings is included. Dick Martin is an
illustrator for Reilly & Lee.
- The Wizard of Oz Fan Club, now 43 members strong, becomes the
International Wizard of Oz Club.
- A doo-wop group called The Channers records "Somewhere Over the
Rainbow."
- 1959
- Comedian Red Skelton and his daughter Valentina host the second
television airing of MGM's 1939 film of The Wizard of Oz.
- Mar. 6 - Actor Fred A. Stone, the Scarecrow from the original
Broadway play of The Wizard of Oz, dies.
- Baum's last surviving son, Harry Neal Baum, is named Honorary
President of The International Wizard of Oz Club.
- Walt Disney proposes a Land of Oz attraction in the Storybook
Land section of Disneyland. Designs are created but the plans are never
implemented.
- Henry Regnery Company buys Reilly & Lee and soon brings all
the Oz books back into print. They continue to use the Reilly & Lee
imprint on children's books. Eleven titles are distributed in new dust
jackets by artist Roland Roycraft.
- Volshebnik Izumrudnovo Goroda, entirely rewritten by
Alexander Volkov, is reprinted in Moscow by Soviet Russia Publishers,
with illustrations by L. Vladimirskow (a.k.a. Vladimirsky and
Vladimirskov). Volkov is again credited as its author. In addition to
later printings and illustrators, this Russian translation will itself
be translated into many languages including Armenian (Erevan, 1962),
Chinese (Forumsa, 1962), Czechoslovakian, German (Moscow, 1963),
Kirghiz, Latvian (Riga, 1962), Lettish, Lithuanian, Serbo-Croatian
(Novi Sad, 1955 and Zebrib, 1963)and Ukrainian.
- Second broadcast of MGM's The Wizard of Oz (1939) on CBS.
- Alla T . Ford's The High-Jinks of L. Frank Baum is
published by the author as The Wizard Press, Chicago. It
contains four poems by Baum and Baum's platform for the Uplifters, a
Los Angeles social club. the material originally appeared in The
Uplifters' Humnal, Silver Anniversary Edition (1938). Ford
(1910-1994) is a founding member of the International Wizard of Oz
Club.
- The Wizard of Oz translated into Slovenian by Janko
Moder. Carovnik iz Oza is published by Mladinska Knjiga,
Ljubljin, Yugoslavia with illustrations by Maksim Sedej.
- The Wizard of Oz translated into Persian by A. Halat. Jaduar-e-Shahr-e
Zommorod is published by Andisheh, Tehran, with Copelman's
illustrations.
- The Wizard of Oz, as translated into Japanese by Yasunari
Kawabata, is published as Oz Mako Tzukai in Tokyo.
- 1960
- Actor Richard Boone introduces the third television broadcast of
MGM's The Wizard of Oz from the location of this television
series, "Have Gun, Will Travel."
- Aug. 17 - Robert Riley Pattrick, author of Unexplored
Territory in Oz (1975), dies.
- Sept. 18 - The first episode of the weekly "The Shirley Temple
Show" presents The Land of Oz on NBC. The 55-minute William
Asher production stars Shirley as Tip/Ozma, Agnes Moorehead as Mombi,
Ben Blue, Arthur Treacher and Jonathon Winters. Asher will cast Agnes
Moorhead as Endora in the long-
running television series "Bewitched" because of this performance.
- Baum's The Visitors from Oz is published by Reilly and
Lee, Chicago, with illustrations by Dick Martin. The book includes
Baum's newspaper stories, "Queer Visitors from the Land of Oz"
(1904-1905) - heavily revised by Jean Kellogg - in a picture-book
format.
- Ice Capades, produced by Broadway's John H. Harris, tours
the country and includes a Wizard of Oz segment. Souvenirs
include programs and felt banners. The 13-minute production uses more
than 150 ice skaters. Lynne "Patsy" Finnegan is Dorothy.
- Baum's son Harry Neal and his wife Brenda call their resort on
the shores of Bass Lake in Knox, Ind., Ozcot: The Wizard of Oz Lodge.
Above the door they hang the original hand-carved signboard from the
old Baum family cottage at Macatawa, Mich.
- Cartoons called Tales of the Wizard of Oz are produced by
Rankin-Bass Productions and syndicated for television. They include 105
five-minute cartoons of Dandy Lion, Socrates the Scarecrow and Rusty
the Tin Man. Tie-in merchandise includes dolls, coloring and comic
books, a board game, purses, Halloween costumes and other items.
- The Wizard of Oz translated into Chinese from the 1939
Russian translation by Alexander Volkov. Le Yeh Sien Tsung
published by Kuo-ming Ch'u-pan-she, Taipei, Taiwan. Volkov, not Baum,
is credited as the original author.
- Number 13 experimental film based on The Wizard of Oz is
written and directed by Harry Smith for Film Makers Cooperative
Production. This is a 108-minute live-action feature using
elaborate sets and photography techniques. It is also known as The
Magic Mushroom People of Oz and as Fragments of a Fate Forgotten.
- An animated feature is proposed but never produced in Italy by
Studio Gribba.
- 1961
- Actor Dick Van Dyke and his three children host the fourth
television broadcast of MGM's The Wizard of Oz on CBS.
- March 23 - Henry Neal Baum talks to the North Shore Chapter of
the Theta Sigma Psi Journalism Society. He repeats his presentation,
"My Father Was the Wizard of Oz," on April 21 at the Cliff Dwellers
Club of Chicago.
- Apr. 2 - A reprise broadcast of "The Shirley Temple Show," The
Land of Oz, is scheduled on NBC but never airs.
- Dick Martin and Fred Meyer take over as editors of The Baum
Bugle and Fred assumes the position of secretary as college studies
demand more of Justin Schiller's time.
- Sept. 8-10 - The first Ozmopolitan Convention of The
International Wizard of Oz Club is held in Knox, Ind. at Ozcot; The
Wizard of Oz Lodge, the home-like summer hotel of Harry Neal and Brenda
Baum on the shores of Bass Lake. During the convention, the first
annual L. Frank Baum Memorial Award is presented to Dick Martin.
- Frank Joslyn Baum and Russell P. MacFall's biography of L. Frank
Baum, To Please A Child, published by Regnery Co. (as Reilly
& Lee), Chicago. In the Chicago Tribune, Hedda Hopper
suggests that the book would make a good movie.
- The National Radio Astronomy Observatory tries to find life on
other stars calling the effort "Project Ozma." The founding director of
the project is Frank Drake.
- The Wizard of Oz is translated into Serbo-
Croatian by Alexander Stafanovic. Carobnjak iz Oza and is
published by Mlado Pokolenjz, Belgrade, with illustrations by Sasha
Mishi.
- The Wizard of Oz is adapted and translated into
Portuguese by Selso Luiz Amorim. O Magico de Oz is published by
Distribuidora Record, Rio de Janeiro, with illustrations by Gutemburg.
- A direct Baum translation of The Wizard of Oz is used as
an English language text book for Soviet children. Also, The Magic
of Oz, retold by G. Magidson-Stepanova is published by State
Text-Book Publishing House, Leningrad, with Russian footnotes. It
includes abridgments of both The Wizard of Oz and Baum's The
Magic of Oz. The illustrations are by an anonymous artist. Also
available from the same publisher for use as a text book is an abridged
version of Volshebnik Izumrudnovo Goroda Oz (Alexander Volkov's
version of Baum's The Wizard of Oz), retold by M. Talinshaya.
- MGM proposes an animated television series based on The
Wizard of Oz using Judy Garland as the voice of Dorothy. The series
is never produced.
- 1962
- April 15 - Actress Clara Blandick, Aunt Em from the classic 1939
MGM film, dies. Suffering from severe arthritis and impending
blindness, her death is a suicide.
- June 16-22 - The International Wizard of Oz Club presents the L.
Frank Baum Memorial Award to Russell P. MacFall during its convention
at Ozcot: The Wizard of Oz Lodge. Additionally, other awards are
presented including "Ozcars" and a "Trailblazer Shield" to honor active
members. The group includes an auction this year. Forty items are
offered including original Neill illustrations contributed by Reilly
& Lee.
- The cover of the Christmas issue of The Baum Bugle is
printed for the first time in full color.
- The Wizard of Oz is translated into Polish by Stefania
Wortman. Czarnoksieznik ze Szmaragdowego Grodu is published by
Nasza Ksiegarnia, Warsaw, with illustrations by Adam Kiljan.
- The Wizard of Oz is translated into Czechoslovakian by
Jekub Markovic. Carodez Ze Zeme Oz is published by Statni
Kikladatelstvi, Prague, with illustrations by Arnost Karasek.
- Richard Fullmer produces Thompson's The Yellow Knight of Oz
(1930) for the stage. He is the manager of the Sacramento Civic
(Eaglet) Theater.
- The American Book Collector publishes an issue filled with
Oz material. It includes Martin Gardner's article, "Why Librarians
Dislike Oz;" an updated version of Edward Wagenknecht's 1929 essay,
"Utopia Americana - A Generation Afterwards;" Harry Neal Baum's "My
Father Wrote the Oz Books;" an analysis by Dick Martin of Geo. M. Hill
variants of the first edition of The Wonderful Wizard of Oz; an
article by Howard Mott that provides a rare book dealers perspective on
the Oz books; and an article about the founding of The International
Wizard of Oz Club in 1957. An unpublished Baum short story also is
included. "The Tiger's Eye" had originally been written as a tenth
story for the "Animal Fairy Tales" (1905).
- The Wizard of Oz is published as an English language
textbook for children in India by Umadevan & Co., Madras. Denslow's
illustrations are adapted.
- Work begins on a feature-length animated musical called Return
to the Land of Oz (a.k.a. Journey Back to Oz). It
is not released until 1970 and then only overseas. The first U.S.
release will be in 1974. Judy Garland's daughter, Liza Minnelli, is the
voice of Dorothy.
- In Yugoslavia, Return to the Land of Oz is proposed by
Lincoln/Ragrab Productions. It is to be directed by Boris Kolar but
when Kolar dies it is never completed.
- Seven Day Magic, by Edward Eager, included overtones of the
original Oz story. A retired vaudeville magician is the principal
character. The volume is published by Harcourt, Brace and World, New
York, and features illustrations by N.M Bodecker.
- 1963
- Oct. 12 - Eloise Jarvis McGraw and Lauren McGraw Wagner's Merry
Go Round in Oz published by Regnery, Chicago, using the Reilly
& Lee imprint. The publisher revives The Ozmapolitan promotional
children's newspaper to publicize its last official Oz book, which is
illustrated by Dick Martin.
- Oct. 23 - Oz author/illustrator Eric James Shanower is born in
Key West, Fla. At age 9 he joins The International Wizard of Oz Club.
His original works, beginning with The Enchanted Apples of Oz
(1986), will continue the Oz series in the graphic novel format.
- Nov. 14 - A 200-piece Baum collection goes on display at the
Syracuse University Library. The collection, purchased from Russell
MacFall - an editor at The Chicago Tribune and co-
author of To Please A Child (1961) - includes a salesman's kit
of Baum book samples and original Oz illustrations by Denslow and
Neill.
- The L. Frank Baum Memorial Award is presented to Harry Neal Baum.
- Volkov's first original Oz sequel, Urfin Dzhus i evo
Dereviannie Soldati (Urfin Dzhus and his Wooden Soldiers), is
published by Soviet Russia Publishers with illustrations by L.
Vladimirskov. It will also be published by Yunatstba Publishers, Minsk,
with illustrations by N. Sustava. In 1962 it is translated into
Latvian.
- Anne Coulter Martens dramatization of The Wizard of Oz as
a 2-act play is published by The Dramatic Publishing Co., Chicago.
- Opening of Reed Marionettes Oz show. By 1965, newspapers
will describe this production as a classic.
- Harry Neal Baum attends the dedication of an elementary school in
Chicago that is named after L. Frank Baum. It is located at 4950 South
La Porte Ave.
- The Wizard of Oz is translated into Tamil by R.A.
Padmanabham and P. Mohan. As Nattu Mayavi is published by
Umadevan, Madras with illustrations by Gopi.
- The Wizard of Oz is translated into Bengali by S.F. M.
Rahman and is published with a few black and white Copelman
illustrations.
- Baum's The Uplift of Lucifer (1915) and "The Corrugated
Giant" from Prince Mud Turtle (1906) are privately printed with
an introduction by Manuel Weltman.
- 1964
- Spring - A essay by Henry M. Littlefield's, "The Wizard of Oz:
Parable on Populism," is published by American Quarterly.
Littlefield, a history teacher, finds that Baum's story can be used to
illustrate the Populism political movement from the turn of the century
and make its basic facts easy for his students to remember. He makes no
claim that the similarities between the movement and the fairy tale are
intentional on Baum's part, yet his parable is accepted by many as a
covert polital message and prompts criticism of the book. Although
nothing from Baum's life, interviews, political beliefs or other
writings substantiate the populism theory - and, in fact, clearly
contradict it - it receives widespread acceptance in the academic
community and is repeated frequently.
- Actor Danny Kaye hosts the CBS presentation of MGM's The
Wizard of Oz.
- The International Wizard of Oz Club is incorporated under the
laws of Illinois as a non-profit educational organization.
- The Wizard of Oz is translated into German by Sybil Grafin
Schonfelt. Der Zauberer Oz is published by Cecilie Bressler
Verlag, Berlin, with illustrations by Peter Krukenberg. Though
translated into German in 1940 for a Swiss publisher, this is the first
translation of the classic story to be published in Germany.
- Feb. 9 - NBC television presents Return to Oz, an
animated musical sponsored by General Electric. A pot-metal charm
bracelet promotes the broadcast. The Rankin-Bass production lasts 55
minutes and is based on their animated shorts "Tales of the Wizard of
Oz" (1960).
- The L. Frank Baum Memorial Award is presented to Justin G.
Schiller.
- West coast members of The International Wizard of Oz Club gather
at the Los Angeles home of member Peter Hanff's parents for the first
Winkie Convention. The gathering is named after the western country of
Oz.
- Nov. 27 - In Van Nuys, Calif., a ground-breaking ceremony is held
at the proposed site of a Land of Oz park.
- Dec. - "A Librarian Looks at Oz," by Richard Paul Smyers, is
published in Library Occurent, Indiana State University. The
author assumes his readers' opinions are against the Oz books and
suggests that they've never read them.
- An Oz traveling fashion show previews back-to-school clothing for
kids with an original musical playlet. The show is heavily advertised.
- June - Bill Eubank, a puppeteer, clown, artist and
entertainer, displays his hand-made Oz character puppets at the
convention of The International Wizard of Oz Club.
- A new French translation by Jean Murray of Baum's The Wizard
of Oz, Le Magicien d'Oz is published by Librairie Hachette,
Paris, with illustrations by Romain Simon.
- A new Japanese translation by Fujie Tamamoto of Baum's The
Wizard of Oz, Ozu no Mahotsukai is published by Kaiseisha,
Tokyo, with illustrations by Maraja. By the 1990's, dozens of Japanese
translations will be available.
- Eloise Jarvis McGraw's short story, "The Magic Land," is
published in Childcraft Vol. 13. It is a fictionalized account
of how Baum wrote The Wonderful Wizard of Oz.
- The Wizard of Oz is translated into Tamil by Gopala
Krishnan. It is published in three small volumes as Acunakara
Mantiravati by Vairam Publishers, Madras.
- 1965
- Jan. 25 - The Chicago Tribune reports that the Lilly
Library at Indiana University has acquired the author files of
publishers Bobbs-Merrill to 1940. Baum and later Oz material is
included.
- Jan. 26 - A first edition of The Wonderful Wizard of Oz
is sold at public auction to a woman who says only that is will be a
25th anniversary gift for her husband. He proves to be actor Bert Lahr,
the Cowardly Lion from the 1939 MGM classic film of the book.
- Jan. 31 - The Willard Library, Evansville, Ind., announces the
purchase of a full set of 40 Oz books.
- Feb. 21 - Return to Oz is rebroadcast on NBC.
- March - The Smyers' article, "A Librarian Looks at Oz" (Dec.
1964) is reprinted in "The Flying Maverick," Wyoming State Library.
- April 25 - Margaret Hamilton appears in a Wicked Witch costume
during an interview on the television program "Discover."
- June 18 - The fifth annual convention of The International Wizard
of Oz Club is again hosted in the home of Harry Neal and Brenda Baum
Ozcot: The Wizard of Oz Lodge. The L. Frank Baum Memorial Award is
presented to twin brothers David and Doug Green. Bill Eubank premiers
his one-man puppet show of The Wizard of Oz.
- July/Aug. - The Wizard of Ooze, The Adventures of Jerry Lewis
offers an unusual comic book burlesque of The Wizard of Oz. It
is published by National Periodical Publications, Inc., (D.C. Comics).
- Aug. 1 - "Project Ozma," an attempt by the National Radio
Astronomy Observatory since 1961 to find life on other planets is
reported in The (Philadelphia) Sunday Bulletin.
- Nov. 7-30 - The Port Washington Library on Long Island, N.Y.
hosts an exhibition of 23 Neill illustrations.
- Nov. 18 - Peter Hanff presents a biographical-bibliographical
lecture on Baum for the Literary Rescue Society of Los Angeles. Hanff
reports that members of this informal group are interested in authors
who've suffered neglect from the critics or reading public. They are
generally surprised to learn of Baum's non-Oz books.
- Dec. - "A Late Wanderer in Oz," by Jordan Brotman, is published
in Chicago Review.
- The Henry Regnery Company releases the Baum Oz books in white
hardback volumes. Artist Dick Martin traces and re-draws Neill's cover
designs which are printed directly onto the books rather than being
applied as paper, paste-on labels. The original copyright dates are
preserved and for each title Martin draws a different ampersand (the
"and" sign) for the Reilly & Lee spine imprint. This is his inside
joke for Oz bibliophiles who use the design of the ampersand to help
date earlier Oz books in the absence of updates to the publisher's
page.
- A brief Oz feature in the Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey
Circus generates posters and banners.
- For the second year, actor Danny Kaye hosts the CBS presentation
of MGM's The Wizard of Oz.
- Proctor and Gamble sponsors a telecast of MGM's The Wizard of
Oz (1939) and introduces a successful line of plastic hand puppets
that are packaged with Zest, Downey and Top Job cleaning products. Consumers
also can respond to a mail-in opportunity to add a puppet of the
Wizard, a script and a puppet theater to complete their set.
- The Wizard of Oz is translated into Hungarian by Klara
Szollosy. Oz, a Nagy Varazslo is published by Mora Klado,
Budapest. Illustrations are by Konyvkiado.
- 1966
- Jan. 1 - Ralph Fletcher Seymour is accidentally killed by an
automobile near his home at Elburn, Kane County, Ill. The artist
hand-lettered the pages of Baum's first successful book, Father
Goose: His Book (1899). His autobiography, Some Went This Way
is privately printed in Chicago in 1945.
- Feb. 13 - Scenes from The Wizard of Oz are portrayed in
the 14 elaborate floats of the Krew of La Mardi Gras parades in New
Orleans, La. The theme was previewed Jan. 29 at the Ball of the Krew of
Alla.
- March 3 - Maxfield Parrish dies. The popular artist, best known
for his theatrical, tableaux-like paintings accented with a vivid blue,
had illustrated Baum's first children's book, Mother Goose In Prose
(1897).
- April - Jack and Jill features Ruth Plumly Thompson in
their series, "With Our Authors."
- April - Gold Key Comic Books publishes "The Wizard of Bahs" a
parody with Daisy Duck as Dorothy in the Walt Disney's Comics and
Stories series.
- At the sixth annual convention of The International Wizard of Oz
Club, the L. Frank Baum Memorial Award is presented to two of Baum's
surviving daughters-in-law, Mrs. Frank J. (Elizabeth) Baum and Mrs.
Robert. S. (Edna) Baum. Member Martha Liehe also presents the Club with
a flag of Oz.
This summer, two new regional conventions also begin named after
corresponding countries in Oz. The Quadling Convention is held in the
Baton Rouge, La., home of member Joan Holden. It includes a display of
original art by Denslow, Neill, "Dirk," Martin, Ulrey and Youngren from
the collection of Fred Meyer. In Malvern, Pa., Daniel Mannix hosts the
Munchkin Convention at his farm with Ruth Plumly Thompson and Mrs. John
R. (Margaret) Neill as guest of honor. A third annual Winkie Convention
in La Canada, Calif., meets in the home of Mr. Florence Hurst,
granddaughter of L. Frank Baum. There, children pick box lunches from a
lunch box tree as Dorothy did in Ozma of Oz (1907).
- Sept. - The Royal European Marionette Theatre's version of The
Wizard of Oz is performed in Illinois. The elaborate production
uses 55 large-scale marionette characters.
- Nov. 19 - Bill Eubank premiers a new puppet show, The
Wonderful Land of Oz, at Beverly Unitarian Church, Chicago. The
play is based on Baum's The Land of Oz. By this time, Eubank
also is working with ventriloquist figures of the Scarecrow and Tin
Woodman.
- Fantasia 3, the second of three separate fairy tales,
filmed in Spain, is an 82-minute version of The Wizard of Oz.
- The Blue Emperor of Oz by Henry S. Blossom is published in
St. Croix, Virgin Islands. This is the first full-
length Oz pastiche.
- The Magnificent Defeat, a book of sermons by author and
minister Frederick Buechner is published by Seabury Press, New York.
One of the 18 sermons in the collection uses the story of The
Wizard of Oz to illustrate that none of us is altogether the person
we wish we were.
- "The Wizard of Oz and Other Trans-love Trips" by Capitol Records
presents an album of Oz music with a unique 60s sound. It is described
in reviews by Oz fans as "weird" and "disturbing."
- Actor Danny Kaye again hosts the CBS presentation of MGM's The
Wizard of Oz.
- 1967
- June 7 - Baum's son Harry Neal Baum dies.
- The annual L. Frank Baum Memorial Award is presented to James E.
Haff.
- Sept. 8 - ABC airs 26 episodes of the Off to See the Wizard
television show, which features animated Oz characters opening and
closing the program. Much of the ensuing toys and other merchandise
will be available into the 1970s. These Oz animations are produced by
Chuck Jones.
- Oct. 1 - The Wizard of Oz underwater feature opens at
Weeki Wachee Springs in Brookville, Fl. It runs through Sept. 3, 1968.
- Nov. 27 - Puppeteer Bil Baird's The Wizard of Oz opens
using songs for the MGM film in a marionette production.
- Dec. 4 - Actor Bert Lahr dies in New York City. The character
actor from burlesque, vaudeville, Broadway stage and motion pictures
and television will always be best-remembered as the Cowardly Lion from
MGM's 1939 classic, The Wizard of Oz.
- For the fourth, actor Danny Kaye hosts the CBS presentation of
MGM's The Wizard of Oz.
- Harvey Publications' Harvey Hits adds another comic
version of Oz, "G.I. Juniors."
- The Wizard of Oz is translated into Bulgarian by Anna
Kamenova. Valsebnikat of Oz, published by Narodna Mladez, is
illustrated by L. Zidarov.
- 1968
- Jan. 2 - The Chicago Daily News reports that The
Wizard of Oz has been named the # 1 all-time favorite children's
book by Alice Payne Hackett in 70 Years of Best Sellers.
- Feb. - Time magazine reports that The Wizard of Oz
is the 11th best-selling fiction book of all time, and the 20th
best-selling book of all time in any category.
- March-April - Baum's writings are presented in a two-part
checklist in The Fantasy Collector.
- NBC television broadcasts MGM's 1939 The Wizard of Oz for
the first time. Rights had been purchased from CBS in Aug. 1967.
- Oz author Ruth Plumly Thompson and her sister Dorothy Thompson
Curtiss move to the Kingsbury Apartments in Malvern, Pa.
- At the eigth annual convention of The International Wizard of Oz
Club, Oz author Ruth Plumly Thompson is announced as the winner of this
year's L. Frank Baum Memorial Award.
- Hallmark Cards SA issues a French version of the Albert G.
Miller/Paul Taylor pop-up edition of The Wizard of Oz. Called Le
Magicien du Pays Verts, it is distributed in France.
- The Wizard of Oz is translated again into Tamil, this time
by Naka Mattaiah. Mantiravatiyin Katai is published by Ciruver
ilakkiym pannaii, Madras.
- 1969
- Mar. 2 - Last performance of Bil Baird's The Wizard of Oz puppet
show.
- June 22 - Actress Judy Garland dies in London.
- June - Members of The International Wizard of Oz Club meet for
their seventh annual convention in Castle Park, Mich. In the
retreat-like setting, they don't learn of Judy Garland's death.
Convention attendee Patty Tobias, who drove away, remembers seeing
fellow Club members pull to the side of the road in shock as they first
hear the radio reports of the news.
- Ray Powell is given the L. Frank Baum Memorial Award.
- July - Mad Magazine includes a 7-page cartoon parody of
The Wizard of Oz, "The Guru of Ours."
- Dec. 25 - The Chadwick film of The Wizard of Oz (1925) is
shown on television in Chicago.
- The Wonderful Land of Oz, a 72-minute low-budget
children's matinee film from Cinetron Corporation is released. The
production is directed by Barry Mahan whose son plays the character of
Tip.
- The Land of Oz theme park opens on a mountain in Banner Elk, N.C.
- Proctor and Gamble repeats its 1965 Wizard of Oz puppet
promotion.
- Walt Disney Studios produce Disneyland storyteller albums of
The Cowardly Lion of Oz and The Tin Woodman of Oz. The
Cowardly Lion is an original story but The Tin Woodman is
loosely based on Baum's book (1918) - with particularly notable
liberties taken with the ending. Sam Edwards narrates both albums and
Bill Lee provides the songs. Ron Howard, the child star of television's
Andy Griffith Show, is the voice of Woot the
Wanderer.
- A miniature edition of The High-Jinks of L. Frank Baum
(1959) is published by Ford Press, Hong Kong. The tiny volume
measures two by two-and-a-half inches. It is limited to 500 copies.
- Baum's A Kidnapped Santa Claus (1904) is published by
Bobbs-Merrill, Co., N.Y., with new illustrations by Richard Rosenblum
and an introduction by Martin Williams (1926-1993). This is the first
appearance of this short story in book form.
- Volkov's Urfin Dzhus I evo Dereviannie Soldati (1963) is
translated into English from the original Russian by Mary G. Langford. The
Wooden Soldiers of Oz is published by Opium Books, Hong Kong, with
illustrations by L. Vladimirskow (a.k.a. Vladimirsky and Vladimirskov).
- Volkov's second original Oz sequel, Sem' Podsemnykh Korolei
(Seven Underground Kings), published by Soviet Russia Publishers
with illustrations by L. Vladimirskow (a.k.a. Vladimirsky and
Vladimirskov). A later reprint is illustrated by Alexander Koval.
- The Wizard of Oz is translated into Portuguese by Paulo
Meudes Campos. O Magico de Oz is published by Edicoes do Ouro,
Rio de Janeiro with Denslow illustrations.
- John Lahr's biography of his father, Bert Lahr, Notes on a
Cowardly Lion, is published by Alfred A. Knopf, New York.
- Baum's Animal Fairy Tales (1905) are published by The
International Wizard of Oz Club, Inc., with an introduction by Russell
P. MacFall. Dick Martin illustrates the stories. This is the first
appearance in a single volume of these stories.
© 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