The Oz Club Grows
1970
- The television series, Death Valley Days, airs "The
Wizard of Aberdeen." This episode is the first film biography of L.
Frank Baum. Oz Club member Vernon H. Jones writes the script.
- March 14 - Margaret Hamilton, Jack Haley and Ray Bolger reminisce
about their roles in MGM's classic film of The Wizard of Oz for
an article published in TV Guide.
- Actor Gregory Peck hosts the television broadcast of MGM's The
Wizard of Oz. He provides a tribute to the late July Garland.
- May 14 - MGM employee Kent Warner finds four pair of ruby
slippers worn by Judy Garland in MGM's classic film, The Wizard of
Oz (1939), deteriorating in a costume-packed warehouse. He
turns over the pair that are in the worst condition, then secretly
keeps the best pair and sells the others to actress Debbie Reynolds and
a friend, Michael Shaw. The pair purchased by Reynolds - eventually
dubbed the Arabian Test pair -
were a rejected design with curled toes. Warner's own pair show
virtually no wear and may have been used on the feet of the Wicked
Witch of the East. Whether he actually found more than four pair, and
if so what became of them, remains a mystery.
- May 1e - Actress Billie Burke, Glinda the Good Witch of the
classic 1939 MGM film The Wizard of Oz, dies. Following a
career on the stage, she was featured in more than 80 films, wrote two
autobiographies and had been married to Florenz Ziegfeld.
- May 17 - In an auction of MGM film memorabilia, the Ruby Slippers
turned in by Kent Warner are auctioned for $15,000 to an anonymous
buyer.
- June - National Periodical Publications (DC Comics) Adventure
Comics publishes a short story, "The Mysterious Motr of Doov." The odd
time-travel adventure ends with the Supergirl and her pet super-cat,
streaky, telling her story to L. Frank Baum in 1898, thus inspiring The
Wizard of Oz. It was written by Cary Bates and illustrated by Win
Mortimer.
- The L. Frank Baum Memorial Award is presented to its youngest
recipient, John Fricke.
- Oct. - Films and Filming report that DePatie-Freleng
Enterprises plan to produce a serialized carton version of The
Wizard of Oz for NBC Saturday morning television.
- Dec. 30 - Jack Haley appears on television's Mike Douglas Show
where he sings "If I Only Had a Heart."
- MGM's 1939 The Wizard of Oz is re-released in theaters as
a children's matinee.
- The first Greek translation (by M. Psarra) of The Wizard of Oz
is published by M Pechlivanidis & Co., Athens, with Copelman's
illustrations.
- The Wizard of Oz is translated into Afrikaans by Peter W.
Gobbelaar. Die Ongelooflike Towenaar van Oz is published by
Human & Rousseau, Capetown, with illustrations by B.S. Biro.
1971
- Feb. 2 - The Houston Chronicle reports that Michael Shaw
owns a pair of Judy Garland's Ruby Slippers from MGM's The Wizard
of Oz. He is quoted saying that four pair exist.
- Feb. 7 - Sixteen Wizard of Oz floats are featured in a
Mardi Gras parade in New Orleans. Souvenir coins called doubloons that
feature the main characters are thrown to the crowd.
- Martin Gardner receives the L. Frank Baum Memorial Award.
- June 28-July 28 - The Emerald City of Oz is produced on
the stage for the first time at Pioneer Memorial Theatre in Salt Lake
City by Gayle Cotterell Nemelka.
- Dec. 6 - Baum's daughter-in-law, Elizabeth Baum, dies in Los
Angeles. She was the third wife of his oldest son, Frank J. Baum.
- Publishers Rand McNally, Chicago, publish paperback versions of
the current editions of the Oz books by Reilly & Lee.
- First translation of The Wizard of Oz is published in
Belgium by L. Opplebeek, Antwerp.
- After 12 years in production, Filmation Associates' Journey
Back to Oz, an 88-minute feature is finally released in U.S.
matinee theaters and is sold almost immediately to television. Liza
Minelli, Judy Garland's daughter, provides the voice of Dorothy. Other
voices include: Margaret Hamilton, Aunt Em; Mickey Rooney, Scarecrow;
Milton Berle, Cowardly Lion; Danny Thomas, Tin Woodman; Mel Blanc,
Wizard; Rise Stevens, Glinda; Paul Ford, Uncle Henry; and Ethel Merman,
Mombi. Musical numbers were provided by lyricist Sammy Cahn and
composer James Van Heusen.
- A 100-minute live-action Turkish film of The Wizard of Oz,
Aysecik Ve Sihirli Cuceler Ruyaler Ulresinde (The Bewitched Dwarfs in
Dreamland) is produced in Turkey by Birsen Films.
- The International Wizard of Oz Club publishes it's first
collection of short stories by members, the Oziana. Original
illustrations by members accompany the stories. A high school student,
Gary Ralph, edits.
1972
- Thompson's Yankee in Oz, written in the 1960s, is
published by International Wizard of Oz Club with illustrations by Dick
Martin.
- Spring - The catalog of Custom-Craft Furniture, Inc., Hickory,
N.C., pictures a child's bedroom of Oz furniture and accessories
available from the company.
- Baum's niece, Matilda J. Gage, receives the L. Frank Baum
Memorial Award.
- Summer - More than 1,600 children participate in "The Road to
Oz," a reading program in Herkimer, Madison and Oneida counties, N.Y.
- July 28 - Fanny Cory, illustrator of Baum's The Master Key
(1901) and The Enchanted Island of Yew (1903), dies.
- Journey Back to Oz is released in England and Australia.
- Volkov's next original Oz book, Ognyennei Bog Marranov (The
Fire God of the Maronnes), is published in Russia by with
illustrations by L. Vladimirskow (a.k.a. Vladimirsky and Vladimirskov).
The book itself, which is also known as The Fiery God of the Mavrans,
is also published by Murmansk Book Publishers with illustrations by V.
Medvedyer and by Eastenr Siberian Book Publishers, Novosibirsk, with
illustrations by I.D. Shurits.
- The Wizard of Oz is translated into Dutch by C. Buddingh.
Lonneke in Het Land Van Oz is published by Frank Fehmers
Productions, Amsterdam.
- MGM's 1939 The Wizard of Oz is re-released again as a
children's matinee.
- Winter (1972-1973) - The Hudson Review features an
article on Baum by Roger Sales. It is especially noteworthy because in
1978 it will be included as a chapter in Fairy Tales and After From
Snow White to E.B. White, by Harvard University Press, Cambridge,
Mass.
1973
- The Tournament of Roses Parade includes an Oz float and wins the
Governor's Trophy. Giant animated heads of the Cowardly Lion, Tin
Woodman and Scarecrow dominate the float, which also features Billy
Curtis, Hazel Resmondo and Jerry Marren, who had appeared as Munckins
in the 1939 MGM film of The Wizard of Oz.
- Apr. 12 - Producer Arthur Freed, who had signed MGM's contract
purchasing rights to The Wizard of Oz from Samuel Goldwyn,
dies.
- June - Cycle Toons prints "Hogg in Oz by Bil Stout. This
10-page parody of The Wizard of Oz is about a motorcyclist's
adventures. The magazine is published by Peterson Publishing Company.
- The L. Frank Baum Memorial Award is presented to Peter E. Hanff.
- July - A new Turkish translation of The Wizard of Oz by
Feza Ozgen, Billur Kosk, published by Koza Yayinlari, Istanbul.
- Autumn - Jerry Tobias replaces David Green as central editor of
the International Wizard of Oz Club's publication, The Baum Bugle.
- Sept 20-Nov. 29 - In Denmark, Trolmanden fra Oz is staged
at the Det Lille Theater in Copenhagen. The stage play is adapted from
the Classic Comics version of the Baum story.
- Michael Patrick Hearn's The Annotated Wizard of Oz
published by Clarkson N. Potter, New York. The New York Times
chooses it as one of the year's top Christmas gift books. Hearn has
been corresponding with Fred Meyer, secretary of the International
Wizard of Oz Club, since he'd been a boy. Meyer once wrote that mail
from young Michael did not include letters, "he sent questionaires."
- The Land of Oz is translated into Polish by Stefania
Wortman. W. Krainie Czarnoksieznika Oza is published in Poland
by Instytut Wydawniczy, Warsaw with illustrations by Zbigniew
Rychlicki.
- O Magico Monarca de Mo, a Portuguese translation of Baum's
The Magical Monarch of Mo (1903) by Paulo Silveira, is
published by Editora Technoprints A., Rio de Janeiro with Ver Beck's
original illustrations.
- The Wizard of Oz in the Wild West, a play by Willard
Simms, is published by Pioneer Drama Service, Denver. The children's
play combines historic American figures, such as Wild Bill Hickok,
Billy the Kid and Annie Oakley, with a adaptation of MGM's version of
Baum's original story.
1974
- Jan. - Julian Oldfield writes and directs an original sequel to The
Wizard of Oz for the British stage.
- April - Five performances of The Wizard of Oz are given
at the Central Children's Theater in Moscow. An American Troupe from
the State University of New York at Albany performs under the direction
of Patricia Synder. Russian author Alexander Volkov, credited by most
Russian children with authorship of the original story, appears at the
final presentation and takes a bow.
- May 21 - Fairuza Alahandra Balk is born. The young actress will
star as Dorothy in Disney's feature length, live-action film, Return
to Oz (1985).
- June - C. Warren Hollister is presented with the L. Frank Baum
Memorial Award for 1974.
- Oct. 21 - Trial runs of a new stage musical based on The
Wizard of Oz, called The Wiz, are staged in Baltimore,
followed by Detroit and Philadelphia performances.
- Nov. - Journey Back to Oz released in the United States.
- Dec. 24 - The Wiz, a new musical based on The Wizard
of Oz that features an all-black cast, previews in New York.
- Film collector William Wantz discovers 5 reels of Baum's 1914
silent film production The Patchwork Girl of Oz among other
films stored in his garage. He sells them to Murry Glass of Glenn Photo
Supply who restores them and makes copies available for sale.
- Raylyn Moore's Wonderful Wizard, Marvelous Land published
by Bowling Green University Popular Press, Bowling Green, Ohio. This
analytical study of Baum's work includes enough factual errors to
prompt criticism from other Baum scholars.
- Volkov's translation/adaptation of The Wizard of Oz, The
Wizard of the City of Emeralds (1939, 1941), is produced as an
animated film series for television.
- Volkov's Zholti Tuman (The Yellow Fog) published in Moscow
with illustrations by L. Vladimirskow (a.k.a. Vladimirsky and
Vladimirskov).
- Last broadcast on NBC of MGM's 1939 The Wizard of Oz.
- Smithsonian Institution Puppet Theater presents a 49-minute
marionette version of The Marvelous Land of Oz based on a
script by Oz enthusiast Martin Williams. This elaborate
production includes music, slides, and 3-feet tall puppets
- The Wizard of Oz is translated into Hebrew by Eliezer
Carmi. Hakosem Me 'Eretz Utz is published by Dora Publishing
House, Tel Aviv with Denslow's illustrations.
1975
- Jan. 5 - The Wiz opens on Broadway at the Majestic
Theater on 44th Street and goes on to win seven Tony Awards. They are:
Best Musical Score; Best Supporting Actor (Ted Ross/Tin Woodman); Best
Supporting Actress (Dee Dee Bridgewater/Glinda); Best Director
(Musical); Best Costumes; and Best Choreographer. The production is
directed by Geoffrey Holder.
Butterfly McQueen (the actress who played Prissie in Gone With the
Wind, 1939) was originally cast to play the Queen of the Field
Mice until her scene was cut from the musical. The original recording
is available on Atlantic. Music and lyrics are by Charlie Smalls except
for "Tornado" by Timothy Graphenreed and "Everybody Rejoice" by Luther
Vandross. William Brown adapted the story. New names from characters
include "Evvamene" as the Wicked Witch of the East; "Evillene" as the
Wicked Witch of the West; and "Addaperle" as the Good Witch of the
North. The cast includes: Dorothy, played by 17-year-old Stephanie
Mills; Hinton Battle as the Scarecrow; Tiger Haynes as the Tinman; Ted
Ross as the Cowardly Lion; Andre de Shields as the Wizard; Mabel King
as Evillene and Dee Dee Bridgewater as Glinda.
Several elements are faithful to the original Baum story. Dorothy's
shoes, for example, are silver. The characters get lost in the land of
the Kalidahs, and the Cowardly Lion is rescued from the poppy field by
the Mice Squad. The Wizard became the ruler by giving everyone in the
city green sunglasses. After the Wizard's balloon takes off without
Dorothy, Addaperle summons Glinda to see if she can help, and Glinda
tells Dorothy about that the silver shoes will carry her home.
- Surviving cast members of MGM's classic film, The Wizard of Oz,
are united in the grand ballroom at the Waldorf Astoria in New York
City. Margaret Hamilton, Ray Bolger and Jack Haley all attend.
- Feb. 3 - In Kansas City a Tin Man building contest is used to
promote the animated film of Journey Back to Oz (1971).
- Feb. - Mego Toy Co. produces Oz dolls and three playsets based on
the 1939 MGM film. The play sets are the Emerald City, Munchkinland and
the Wicked Witch's castle. The popularity of these toys prompts
additional interest in the MGM Oz license among other manufacturers.
- Bill Eubank is presented with the L. Frank Baum Memorial Award.
- Summer - Margaret Hamilton tours with a production of The
Wizard of Oz. She shares billing with the Hudson Brothers who play
the Scarecrow, Tin Woodman and Cowardly Lion.
- July-Aug. - Baum's 1909 Oz book, The Road to Oz, is
presented on stage at the University of Utah.
- Dec. 25 - MGM's The Wizard of Oz is broadcast for the
first time in England.
- Dec. 28 - A fire in the theatre, gift shop and museum at the Land of Oz park in Banner Elk, N.C., is
followed by the reported thefts of several pieces of MGM memorabilia
including a Judy Garland dress.
- DC and Marvel Comics publishers join forces to produce an
oversized comic book adaptation of MGM's The Wizard of Oz; a
similar version of Baum's Marvelous Land of Oz follows. Though
Baum's Ozma of Oz also is planned, it is never published due
primarily to the expense of related copyrights.
- An animated Oz television series is projected by Lennie Weinb
Productions.
- The Wizard of Oz and The Land of Oz are translated
into Swedish by Sam J. Lundwall. Trollkarlen fran Oz and Landet
Oz are published by Delta Förlags, Bromma. Denslow and Neill
illustrations are used.
- Unexplored Territory in Oz, a collection of four essays by
Robert R. Pattrick, is published by The International Wizard of Oz
Club. The individual essays are "Oz vs. Authors," "The Early History of
Oz," "Oz Magic," and "Books in Oz."
- A hard-line Freudian interpretation of MGM's The Wizard of Oz
by Harvey R. Greenburg, "The Wizard of Oz: Little Girl Lost - and
Found," is published in The Movies on Your Mind, Dutton, New
York.
- The International Wizard of Oz Club's publication, The Baum
Bugle, is renamed The Baum Bugle: A Journal of Oz.
1976
- Feb. 20 - The Washington Post reports that Ray Bolger
says he was inspired to dance at age 16 when he saw Fred Stone, the
Scarecrow from the original Broadway production of The Wizard of Oz
(1902), dance on stage in Boston.
- Apr. 6 - Author Ruth Plumly Thompson dies. She had served as the
Royal Historian of Oz since Baum's death in 1919 contributing 20 Oz
books and dozens of original characters to the series. Her ashes are
interred at the West Laurel Hill Cemetery in Philadelphia, Pa.
- Apr. - Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine prints a short story
by Honathon Breen, "The Flying Thief of Oz."
- May - The Children's Literature Association names The Wizard
of Oz in its list of the 10 best books written by American authors
in the last 200 years.
- May-June - Cobblestone reports that Jack Haley is writing
a book, The Heart of The Tin Man.
- Daniel P. Mannix is given the L. Frank Baum Memorial Award.
- Dec. 5 - Journey Back to Oz (1971) appears on ABC hosted
by Bill Cosby.
- Dec. - The Chicago Park Board approves the new name of "Oz Park"
at 2100 North Larrabee. More than 14,000 Chicago school children
support the name in an election. It was proposed by Oz Club member Bill
Eubank, whose publicity efforts included a group of people in Oz
costumes parading through the area.
- Chris Lofven's rock 'n roll musical film, Oz, (a.k.a. 20th
Century Oz), produced by Count Features, Inc., is released in
Australia. The adult story is loosely based on Baum's story.
- Thompson's The Enchanted Island of Oz is published by The
International Wizard of Oz Club, Inc., with illustrations by Dick
Martin. She had begun writing the manuscript in the 1940s and had
reviewed and rewritten much of it just prior to her death.
- Douglas G. Greene's and Michael Patrick Hearn's definitive
biography, W. W. Denslow, is published by the Clarke Historical
Library, Central Michigan University. It includes a 44-page
bibliography with a checklist of Denslow's published works.
- Bibliographia Oziana is published by The International
Wizard of Oz Club. Written by Douglas G. Greene and Peter Hanff, the
content is based on Baum Bugle checklists originally prepared
by Martin Haff and David Geene. This is the first reference book to
detail the textual variants of the Oz series.
- Doug McClelland's Down the Yellow Brick Road: The Making of
the Wizard of Oz is published by Pyramid Press, N.Y.
- Volkov's latest original Russian Oz book, Taina Zabrosynnovo
Zamka (The Secret of the Deserted Castle a.k.a. The Mystery of the
Witch's Deserted Castle), is published in Moscow with illustrations
by L. Vladimirskow (a.k.a. Vladimirsky and Vladimirskov).
- The Purple Dragon and Other Fantasies is published by
Fictioneer Books, Lakemont, Calif. This collection of short stories is
selected and edited by David. L. Greene and is illustrated by Tim Kirk.
It includes the first appearance in a book of Baum's short story, "The
King Who Changed His Mind" (circa 1901).
- A soft-core pornographic version of The Wizard of Oz to
star Kristine de Bell is projected by Bill Osco, but Dirty Dorothy
is never produced.
- Volkov's 1939 Russian translation of The Wizard of Oz is
produced for the stage at the Malaya Bronaya Theater in Moscow.
Consistent with the Volkov text, Dorothy's name is Elli and her dog is
Totoshka. The production is later presented in England as "The
Scarecrow, The Lion, The Tinman and Me."
1977
- April - The Actors Theater for Children, Santa Rosa, Ca.,
announces a state-wide contest for children's theater scripts. The
competition is restricted to play versions of Baum's Oz stories other
than The Wizard of Oz. The winning play, to be announced in
October, will be produced in 1978.
- Barbara Koelle is given the L. Frank Baum Memorial Award.
- July 27 - Henry Regnery company becomes Contemporary Books, Inc.
- Nov. 17 - MGM's The Wizard of Oz voted the third best
American movie of all time by the members of the American Film
Institute. Others in the top 10 are: Gone With the Wind, Casa
Blanca, Signing in the Rain, One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, Star
Wars, 2001: A Space Odyssey, The African Queen, The Grapes of Wrath
and Citizen Kane.
- Aljean Harmetz's The Making of the Wizard of Oz is
published by Alfred A. Knopf, New York. This is the longest reference
book published to date about the classic MGM film.
- David L. Greene and Dick Martin's The Oz Scrapbook is
published by Random House, N.Y. This volume, packed with illustrations
and photos, reviews the popularity of the Oz series and the many stage
and screen treatment inspired by Baum's The Wizard of Oz.
- Sept 29 and Oct. 6 - The New York Review of Books prints
"The Wizard of the 'Wizard'" and "On Rereading the Oz Books" a lengthy
2-part article about L. Frank Baum and Oz by author Gore Vidal.
- Nov. 30-Dec. 16 - The Philomathean Art Gallery of the University
of Pennsylvania presents an exhibition of W.W. Denslow's works.
Nineteen original drawings and 16 books and pamphlets are included
drawn primarily from the private collection of Michael Gessel. Other
members of the International Wizard of Oz Club lend material as does
the New York Public Library.
- Edwin M Knowles china company introduces the first in a series of
eight Wizard of Oz plates. They are the first such series to
commemorate a motion picture.
- Chris Lofven's Australian Oz released in the U.S. as the
R-rated 20th Century Oz.
- Stuart Kaminsky's mystery novel, Murder on the Yellow Brick
Road, is published by St. Martin's Press, New York, with a cover
illustration by Joel Iskowitz.
- Alexander Melentyevich Volkov, Russian professor, mathematician
and author of five original Oz books - sequels to his own translation
of Baum's original - dies.
- Author and minister Fred Buechner again uses Oz in one of his
books. Telling the Truth: The Gospel as Tragedy, Comedy and Fairy
Tale is published by Harper & Row, San Francisco.
1978
- The L. Frank Baum Memorial Award is given to Fred. M. Meyer.
- Nov. 2 - Swann Galleries auctions the lifetime collection of The
International Wizard of Oz Club founder, Justin G. Schiller. This is
the first such sale of its kind. A 144-page catalog is published of
items in the sale leaving a lasting record of this superb collection.
- Nov. 6 - Rainbow, a televison dramatization of the early
life of Judy Garland, airs. Child actor-turned-director Jackie Cooper
draws on his own early memories of Judy to prepare the film.
- Artist Michael Herring is assigned to illustrate new covers for
Oz books to be reprinted in paperback by Del Rey, New York.
- A feature film version of The Wiz, produced by Universal,
opens. The all-star cast include Diana Ross as Dorothy, Michael
Jackson as the Scarecrow; Nipsey Russell as the Tin Woodman; Ted Ross
as the Cowardly Lion; Lena Horne as Glinda; Richard Pryor as the
Wizard. The film does not receive the critical or popular success
enjoyed by the 1975 stage production. Additional credits include Tony
Walton, production design and costumes; Charlie Smalls, songs; Quincy
Jones adapted and supervised music; Ken Harper, executive producer;
Joel Schumacher, screenplay; Sidney Lumet, director; Albert Whitlock,
special effects.
- The Wiz Scrapbook by Richard J. Anobile is published
by Berkley Publishing Corp., N.Y. It includes 200 photos from
the film production.
- MCA releases the original soundtrack to The Wiz.
- Rob Roy McVeigh begins work on a feature-length animated
production of The Wonderful Wizard of Oz that will be faithful
to the original Baum text. Although the film's storyboard, score and
several sequences are eventually completed, the film doesn't receive
the financial backing it needs to be finished.
- Dick Martin and James Lawrence develop an Oz comic strip that is
proposed but never published.
- Mayor Darwin Houseman of Chittenango, N.Y. proposes that a double
row of real yellow bricks replace the painted double yellow line on
State Road 5 in honor of Baum.
- Millennium Records releases a disco version of the music from
MGM's The Wizard of Oz.
1979
- March - At the Victorian Album Conference in Washington, D.C.,
Robert B. Luehrs presents "L. Frank Baum and the Land of Oz: A
Children's Author as Social Critic."
- May 12 - "Wizard of Oz Day" in Los Angeles unites Jack Haley,
Margaret Hamilton, Ray Bolger, Munchkins Billy Curtis, Hazel Resmondo
and Jerry Marren in a celebration of the classic film. Director Mervyn
LeRoy is interviewed and Oz Club member/Oz collector Warren Hollister
speaks about Baum's life and writings. Memorabilia on exhibit includes
Bert Lahr's Cowardly Lion costume.
- May 12 - The first annual Oz festival is held in Chittenango,
N.Y., birthplace of L. Frank Baum.
- Ray Bolger and Jack Haley appear on the Oscars. They dance on
stage to "We're Off to See the Wizard."
- In Chittenango, N.Y., a citizens' committee forms to build a
winding path of yellow bricks through the business district.
- June 6 - Actor Jack Haley dies in Los Angeles.
- Margaret Hamilton is the guest of honor at the Ozmopolitan
Convention of The International Wizard of Oz Club in Castle Park, Mich.
- Jerry Tobias receives the L. Frank Baum Memorial Award.
- Oct.-Nov. - Susan Zeder's dramatization of Baum's Ozma of Oz
is performed at Poncho Theater in Seattle.
- Dec. - The Ruby Slippers purchased in the MGM memorabilia auction
of 1970 are donated anonymously to the Smithsonian Institute.
- Michael Korolenko and Leslie Johnson develop a film treatment
about Oz that is never produced. The screenplay opens with a
documentary approach then the characters are transported to Oz for a
lengthy fantasy sequence.
- Del Rey/Ballantine Books of New York begin publishing the Oz
series in paperbacks.
- The Wizard of Oz is again translated into Hebrew. This version is
the work of Bosmat Even-Zohar.
1980
- May 15 - The Congressional Record reports that
Congressman James Hardy in whose district Chittenango, N.Y. lies,
records remarks to the Congress of the United States on the 124
anniversary of Baum's birth. He includes information about the annual
Oz festival held in the town, the Yellow Brick Road that is under
construction there, and Baum's life and career.
- Irene Fisher is given the L. frank Baum Memorial Award.
- Nov. 25 - An animated made-for-television movie, Thanksgiving
in Oz (a.k.a. Dorothy and the Land of Oz, Christmas in Oz, and
Dorothy and the Green Gobbler in Oz), is broadcast. The
26-minute production is by Muller-Rosen Productions. Sid Ceasar is the
voice of the Wizard.
- Dec. - Susan Zeder's dramatization of Baum's Ozma of Oz
is performed at the Honolulu Theater for Youth. It is published by
Anchorage Press, New Orleans.
- Eloise Jarvis McGraw & Lauren Lynn McGraw's The Forbidden
Fountain of Oz published by The International Wizard of Oz Club
with illustrations by Dick Martin. Lauren Lynn has returned to the use
of her maiden name.
- Dover Publications, New York, publishes a Cut & Assemble
Emerald City of Oz by Dick Martin. It sells well enough to prompt
additional Oz activity books by Martin for children.
- MGM's 1939 The Wizard of Oz is released on video
cassette.
- The Land of Oz theme park in Banner Elk, N.C. goes out of
business. It had opened in 1969. A fire at the park (12/28/75) and
difficulties in the owner's overseas investments lead to the decision
to close.
- Books of Wonder opens at 444 Hudson St., New York, N.Y. The
specialty book store offers a large stock of out-of print Oz books and
more than a dozen original Oz pen-and-ink drawings by Neill.
- An addendum to the list of Denslow work included in his biography
(W.W. Denslow, 1976) is written by Douglas Greene and published
in the Autumn 1980 issue of The Baum Bugle.
- "Le Magicien d'Oz a l'Ecran" by Christopher Gang and Jean-Pierre
Samuelson is published in L'Ecran Fantistique, Paris. The
33-page article offers an in-depth look at Oz dramatizations for French
readers with 87 illustrations.
- The Wizard of the City of Emeralds, a Russian television
series of ten 20-minute episodes based on the first three Volkov books
is produced in Russia using stop-motion puppet animation.
- The International Wizard of Oz Club, Inc., publishes Runaway
Shadows and Other Stories by L. Frank Baum. The other five titles
are: "Strange Tale of Nursery Folk," 1901; "The Bad Man," 1901; "The
King Who Changed His Mind," c. 1901; "A Kidnapped Santa Claus," 1904;
and "Nelebel's Fairyland," 1905.
- Robert A. Heinlein's The Number of the Beast, published by
Fawcett Columbia, New York, uses an Oz theme for its' illustrated cover.
- The Seattle-King County Visitor's Bureau solicits nicknames of
Seattle. The Emerald City -- with 400 ballots -- wins a vote and the
theme is incorporated into promotions and advertisements.
1981
- Mar. 5 - MGM lyricist E. Y. Harburg dies of a massive heart
convulsion while driving near his Brentwood, Calif., home. Most news
reports indicate incorrectly that his death is the result of an
automobile accident; his sudden death actually caused the collision.
- April - The first large-scale sand sculpture with an Oz theme is
built at the Mission Valley Shopping Center in San Diego. The Emerald
City scene is on view for a month.
- Jun 11 - In Liberal, Ks., a new tourist attraction of "Dorothy's
House" opens to the public. 15,000 residents attend the ceremonies.
Seward County Historical Society is responsible for the site, led by
Max Zimmerman who has prompted the community to capitalize on the
state's Oz connection.
- June 15-Aug. 8 - The Thomas Hughes Children's Library at the
cultural center and about 50 branch libraries in the greater Chicago
area emphasize Oz in a summer reading program. "Read on Down the Road"
includes a 44-page manual.
- The L. Frank Baum Memorial Award is given to John Van Camp.
- Aug. - A Yellow Brick Road is completed in Chittenango, N.Y.,
birthplace of Oz author, L. Frank Baum.
- Chesterton, Ind., hold its first Oz festival. Jean Nelson, Oz
enthusiast and owner of The Yellow Brick Road Gift Shop and Fantasy
Museum, is behind the effort.
- Oct. 1 - A pair of Ruby Slippers that Kent Warner found and kept
in 1970 is sold at auction. Christie's Auction House gets a winning bid
of $12,000.
- A feature-length puppet film of The Wizard of Oz is
projected by Trnka Studios in Czechoslovakia.
- Child Vision Company releases a video version of The
Marvelous Land of Oz stage play produced by John Clark Donahue. The
105-minute film is produced by Richard Cary and Jonathan Stathakis from
Cary's adaptation of Baum's story. Produced by the Children's Theater
Co. & school of Minneapolis (a.k.a. The Minneapolis Children's
Theatre Co.) and directed for television by John Driver, the music is
by Richard A. Dworsky with lyrics by Gray Briggle.
- The Wonderful Wizard of Oz Cookbook by Monica Bayley is
published by Macmillan Publishing Co., Inc., New York. Denslow's
illustrations fill this unique volume of recipes.
1982
- May 2 - The New Amsterdam Theatre Co. presents a 75-minute
treatment of the 1902 stage musical extravaganza, The Wizard of Oz,
that includes 16 songs.
- Aljean Harmetz is given the L. Frank Baum Memorial Award.
- Oct. 10 - Joslyn "Josh" Stanton Baum, Baum's oldest grandson,
dies.
- Nov. 1 - Director King Vidor dies. He had directed MGM's classic
film version of The Wizard of Oz (1939) for three weeks.
- Philip Jose Farmer's A Barnstormer in Oz is published by
Berkeley, New York. The well-known and prolific science fiction writer
dedicates the book to Judy and Lester Del Rey in recognition of their
efforts to make the Oz books available to kids. In describing his
affection for the Oz stories, Farmer says "If my heart were a hill, the
Emerald City would sit at its top."
- An animated version of The Wizard of Oz is produced in
Japan by Toho Co., Ltd., and distributed by Alan Enterprises. The
78-minute film is produced and directed by John Danylkiw. Lorne Greene
- star of television's long-running series, Bonanza - is the
voice of the Wizard. The film was adapted by Yoshimitsu Banno (Godzilla
vs. Hedorah) and Akira Miyazaki.
- A new issue of The Wizard of Oz is published by Holt,
Rinehart, and Winston, N.Y. Illustrator Michael Hague provides 90
watercolors for the book.
- After two years in business in New York, Books of Wonder more to
464 Hudson street. The new location is three times larger than the
original store and owner Peter Glassman expands the selection to
include in-print Oz books as well as out-of-print material.
- Pat Marzilli of Atlanta, Ga., develops an Oz badge for Girl
Scouts.
1983
- Jan. - Scraps, one of 11 monologues, is presented at the
Annenberg Center of the University of Pennsylvania by the People's
Light and Theatre Co. The anonymous author used the pseudonym Jane
Martin.
- May - The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences holds a
special salute to MGM's classic film, The Wizard of Oz. Special
guests include author Aljean Harmetz (The Making of The Wizard of Oz,
1977); Margaret Hamilton (the Wicked Witch of the West); actor Ray
Bolger (the Scarecrow); Munchkin Jerry Marren; make-up man William
Tuttle; and producer Mervyn LeRoy.
- The L. Frank Baum Memorial Award is given to Eloise Jarvis McGraw
and Lauren Lynn McGraw.
- July 24-Sept. 11 - In Tokyo, a new stage production of The
Wizard of Oz stars Chika Takami as Dorothy. It is produced by
Seiyu, a theatrical subsidiary of the Seiby department store chain.
- Aug. - Mount Holyoke College Summer Theatre in South
Hadley, Mass hosts an Oz festival with an original stage play and
community parade.
- Fall - Miss Piggy (the Muppet) searches for "The Wizard of Foz"
in a 5-page comic parody of The Wizard of Oz in Muppet
Magazine, by Telepictures Publications, Inc.
- Sept. 6 - Baum biographer and charter member of The International
Wizard of Oz Club, Russell P. Mac Fall dies.
- Oct. 2 - The television program Ripley's Believe It or Not
airs for the first time footage taken on the MGM set by composer Harold
Arlen. These "home movies" include the "Jitterbug" number that had been
cut from the film. Jack Haley Jr. produces the program.
- Dec. 2-4 - The Quirk Theater in Ypsilanti presents ODDyssey
in Oz, a new play by Virginia Koste. The play-
within-a-play is inspired by Baum's Oz books, but is not a direct
adaptation of any one story.
- Books of Wonder, N.Y., releases a catalog, The Wonderful
World of Oz, Volume 1: The works of L. Frank Baum, his successors and
illustrators. It includes 343 Oz books and Oz-related items, many
with color photographs. A dealer's catalog of rare material, it quickly
becomes a reference book for collectors. A public exhibition of the
catalog's highlights goes on display and the company publishes an
exhibition poster of first-edition books covers.
- Martin Gardner's collection of essays, Order and Surprise,
published by Prometheus Books, Buffalo, N.Y., includes five essays
about various Oz/Baum subjects. Gardner, who is best known for his
monthly column in Scientific American, was a founding member of The
International Wizard of Oz Club.
- Dover Publications issues a book of paper Oz masks designed by
Dick Martin.
- The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, a play by Virginia Glasgow
Koste, is published by The Coach House Press, Inc., Chicago. The author
includes Baum in the script as a narrator.
- The Wizard of Oz, Critical Heritage Series, edited by
Michael Patrick Hearn, is published by Schocken Books, N.Y. This book
of critical essays includes many by well-known authors such as Core
Vidal, James Thurber and Ray Bradbury.
- Robert Dugaro of Rochester, N.Y., donates a small collection of
old films to the George Eastman House's International Museum of
Photography. Among them is a print of a silent version of The
Wizard of Oz. This lost treasure is spotted by an Oz specialist at
the March 1989 Cinefest in Syracuse, N.Y. and with the help of Michael
Patrick Hearn is identified as the 1910 Selig production.
- Music from the MGM sound track of The Wizard of Oz is
available on a music roll for player pianos. Bill Blodgett performs the
selections. The roll is produced by QRS Music Rolls, Buffalo, N.Y.
- Dec. 7-Jan. 14, 1984 - The Detroit Public Library - who's banning
of the Oz books in 1957 fueled considerable controversy about the
series - unveils a major exhibition of Oz material drawn primarily from
the private collection of Bill Beem. Twenty cases are filled with
books, records, toys and other Oz material.
1984
- Jan. 1 - MGM Munchkins Nels Nelson, Jerry Marren and Buddy
Douglas recreate their roles for the Burbank Calif., entry in the Rose
Bowl Parade.
- Jan. 10 and March 1 - Palsson's theater in New York stages Miss
Gulch Lives! by Fred Barton. This play is a one-man show that
presents the character of Miss Gulch, from the MGM film of The
Wizard of Oz, performing a song and dance number "cut from the
film." An album of the show soon becomes available.
- April 25 - Kent Warner dies. Warner's determined search among
MGM's warehouses of abandoned costumes led to the discovery of four
pair of Ruby Slippers in 1970. Though, technically, he steals them, he
does save them from inevitable destruction or disintegration.
- Spring - Del Rey publishes the first six Oz titles by Ruth Plumly
Thompson as they continue to make the series available in paperback.
This is the first time in decades that children can purchase new copies
the Thompson titles. Michael Herring continues to provide original
artwork for the cover illustrations.
- April - Hollywood Studio Magazine devotes much of the
issue to Oz.
- Baum's grandchildren Ozma Baum Mantele and Robert A. Baum are
presented with the L. Frank Baum Memorial Award.
- Sept. - Disney's film-in-production, working title Oz, is
named Return to Oz.
- The Art of Oz, a catalog of the largest collection of
original Oz art ever offered for sale is issued by Books of Wonder, New
York. It includes all the Oz art remaining in the archives of Oz
publishers Reilly & Lee.
- A Recall to Oz, a new play by Michelle Wan Loon, is
published by Eldridge Publishing Co., Franklin, Ohio. This sequel to
the MGM film includes Dorothy as an elderly woman.
© 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