Return to Oz & 50th Anniversary of MGM Film
1985
- Jan.-March - Captain Carrot and His Amazing Zoo Crew! In the
Oz-Wonderland War Trilogy is published by DC Comics. The story, by
E. Nelson, Bridwell combines characters from Baum's The Wizard of Oz
and Lewis Carroll's Alice in Wonderland and its own animal
super heroes in a battle with Baum's Oz villain the Nome King. The
artwork is by Carol Lay.
- May 16 - Actress Margaret Hamilton, who played the Wicked Witch
of the West in the classic MGM 1939 film of The Wizard of Oz,
dies. Though she acted in 70 films, her 12 minutes of screen time in The
Wizard of Oz is best remembered. Following her first career as a
teacher at Rye Country Day School in Rye, N.Y., she married landscape
architect Paul Meserve. They have a son, Hamlton Meserve, prior to
their divorce in 1938.
- The L. Frank Baum Memorial Award is presented to Edward
Wagenknecht.
- June 21 - Disney's Return to Oz premieres at Radio City
Music Hall. Gary Kurtz is the executive producer of this 109-minute
live action filmed in England. The story combines plot elements from The
Marvelous Land of Oz and Ozma of Oz, with a lengthy opening
segment original to the screenplay. Walter Murch, who also directs, and
Gill Dennis write the screenplay.
Its September release fails to appeal to the public. The short-
lived tie-in merchandise includes puppets, games, puzzles, books and
records. The film is more enthusiastically received - and inspires more
merchandise - in Japan. The cast includes 10-year-
old Fairuza Balk as Dorothy (the youngest of 400 children who tried out
for the part); Nicol Williamson as the Nome King; Sophie Ward as
Princess Mombi. Michael Sundin, an acrobat, was Tik Tok in costume that
required him to curl up with his head to his knees and walk backwards.
Costume designer Raymond Hughes used John R. Neill's illustrations to
guide his work. A coronation sequence included brief glimpses of dozens
of Oz characters from the series.
Products connected with the film include a novelization by Joan D.
Vinge published by Ballantine/Del Ray Books, New York; five Little
Golden Books; Walt Disney Pictures' Return to Oz by Scholastic,
New York, which presents the story through cartoon-
style color panels and is a offered in American, British and German
printings; a "retold by William Furstenberg" version of The Wizard
of Oz published by Weekly Reader Books and available only through
its book club; boxed jig saw and frame-
tray puzzles; Tops Bubble Gum trading cards; plush hand puppets
available as a Smucker's promotion; audio and video tapes; activity and
coloring books; plastic jointed figures; stuffed dolls; an 18-inch
German Dorothy Gale Doll (also marketed in Great Britain) of Fairuza in
costume; pins and buttons; film posters; and other items. Dunkin'
Donuts also used the film to promote its doughnut holes.
Illustrator Maurice Sendak is initially selected to develop concepts
for set designs, but proves unavailable during the production's time
frame. He does, however, finish one Oz poster.
- June - Starlog announces a new script by Tom Benedek for
a film treatment of Baum fantasies.
- Oct. - A video game of The Wizard of Oz is produced by
Windham Classics/Spinnaker Software/Apple II. Characters from The
Land of Oz also are included.
- Dec. - MGM releases That's Dancing! It features an
extended version of Ray Bolger's Scarecrow dance cut from the released
print of MGM's The Wizard of Oz (1939).
- Dec. 17 - Baum's The Life and Adventures of Santa Claus
is produced by Rankin/Bass for television, using stop-
action puppet animation. Music is by Bernard Hoffer with lyrics by
Julian P. Gardner.
- Thompson's The Wizard of Way-Up and Other Wonders is
published by The International Wizard of Oz Club, Inc., with
illustrations from the stories by Charles J. Coll, Dick Martin and
others. James E. Haff and Douglas Greene edit the collection of short
stories.
- A television documentary on the Public Broadcasting System, The
Whimsical World of Oz, is produced by Production Associates, (U.K.)
Ltd. The program features film clips from The Wiz (1978), the
Australian production Oz (1976), Journey Back to Oz
(1971), The Rainbow Road to Oz (projected 1957), Disney's Return
to Oz (1985), and other productions.
Celebrities interviewed on camera include Dr. Robert Baum and Ozma Baum
Mantele representing the author's family; Ray Bradbury; Erica Jong;
Justin Schiller who founded the Oz Club; C. Warren Hollister - an Oz
collector and authority; Romola Dunlap who appeared on stage as Dorothy
in Baum's Fairylogue and Radio Plays (1908); and others. Ray
Bolger and Jack Haley represented the 1939 MGM film classic. Mason
Adams is the narrator.
- The Wizard of Oz is published by Pennyroyal Press, West
Hatfield, Mass., with illustrations by Barry Moser.
- The Wizard of Oz is published by The Unicorn Publishing
House, Parsippany, N.J., with illustrations by Greg Hildebrandt.
- Baum's The Marvelous Land of Oz is co-published by Books
of Wonder, New York, and William Morrow and Company, New York. This
title is the first in a "Books of Wonder Classics" series that the two
companies have agreed to produce as first-
edition facsimiles.
- Books of Wonder, New York, produces a catalog of Oz material for
sale, "The Oz Collector."
- The Wonderful World of Oz, Volume II - a second
illustrated catalog of rare and out-of-print Oz books and related items
(including a facsimile of a rare Baum short story, "The Suicide of
Kiaros") - is issued by Books of Wonder, New York.
- Mago de Oz Cuento de Frank Baum (a.k.a. El Mago de
Oz,) a Spanish-language live-action film of The Wizard of Oz,
is produced by Million Dollar video Corp, Los Angeles.
1986
- Feb. - Denslow's 1915 grave is marked with a headstone
illustrated with his portraits of the Scarecrow and Tin Woodman from
the back cover illustrations of the first edition of The Wonderful
Wizard of Oz. Following inquiries from Stan Barker, a member of The
International Wizard of Oz Club, Vito Sorrentino donates the headstone
to the Kensico Cemetery grave site.
- Feb. - In Variety, Filmation Company lists Baum's The
Life and Adventures of Santa Claus as one of their projected
animation theatrical features.
- Feb. 1 - Matilda Jewell Gage, Baum's niece and a life-long Oz
enthusiast, dies. Baum had once named a strain of chrysanthemum he had
developed in honor of his favorite niece.
- April 21-28 - Gregg Galleries of the National Arts Club, N.Y.,
exhibit 30 Oz paintings created by Michael Herring for the covers of
the Del Rey paperback Oz books.
- April - A traveling exhibit by the Smithsonian Institute includes
a pair of Judy Garland's Ruby Slippers, Ray Bolger's Scarecrow costume
and a matte painting of the Emerald City from MGM's 1939 classic, Wizard
of Oz.
- May 1 - Author/illustrator Eric Shanower's The Enchanted
Apples of Oz published in graphic novel format by First Comics,
Inc., Chicago.
- May 16 - Virginia Glasgow Koste adapts Baum's The Patchwork
Girl of Oz ( 1913) as Scraps! The Ragtime Girl of Oz. The
play is presented at Eastern Michigan University, Ypsilanti, Mich., and
is published by Coach House Press, Morton Grove, Ill.
- Jay Delkin is given the L. Frank Baum Memorial Award by the
International Wizard of Oz Club.
- June 28 - A dress worn by Judy Garland in MGM's 1939 classic,
The Wizard of Oz, sells at Sothebys for $20,000.
- July - Fundamentalist Christian families in Tennessee file a
lawsuit to remove The Wizard of Oz and several other children's
classics from the required reading lists in public schools. The passage
to which they object is later described as an excerpt in the basic
reader that was adapted to "use simpler language."
- Aug. - The American Theosophist includes a report "A
notable Theosophist: L. Frank Baum."
- Aug. 7 - Author/illustrator Eric Shanower receives the Ross
Manning Most Promising Newcomer award at the San Diego Comics
Convention primarily in recognition of his Oz graphic novels.
- Aug. 31 - Disney's 1985 feature, Return to Oz, airs on
television for the first time.
- Aug.-Sept. - Off-the-Wall Theatre in Cambridge, Mass., shows the
1914 film of The Patchwork Girl of Oz. Other early Oz films
follow. The Boston Society of Film Critics later awards the theatre for
"best discovery...(of) The Oz Chronicle."
- Sept. 24-26 - "The American Fairyland: An International
Conference on Oz & L. Frank Baum" is announced at Pittsburg State
University in Pittsburg, Ks., under the direction of Steve Teller.
- Oct. - The American Theosophist includes the essay "The
Wizard of Oz: The Perilous Journey."
- Oct. - Alexander Volkov's Yellow Fog Over Oz translated
into English from the Russian original, Zholti Tuman (1974),
by March Laumer and published by Buckethead Enterprises of Oz,
Albuquerque, N.M., with illustrations by Chris Dulabone.
- Nov. - The Chrysanthemum Festival & Wonderful Garden of Oz at
Longwood Gardens, Kennett Square, Penn., presents the Oz story in a new
media: topiary figures and scenes created entirely with plants and
flowers.
- Nov. 13 - Author/illustrator Shanower's The Secret Island of
Oz is published by First Comics, Inc., Chicago.
- An Oz poster by artist Maurice Sendak, originally done for
Disney's 1985 film Return to Oz, is included in Posters by
Maurice Sendak published by Harmony books in New York.
- Dick Martin's The Ozmapolitan of Oz is published by The
International Wizard of Oz Club, Inc.
- Books of Wonder opens a second New York bookstore at 132 7th
Avenue. This store offers three times the space of the company's Hudson
Street location.
- Saban Video Productions/Entertainment, Burbank, Calif., produces
a short animated version of The Wizard of Oz.
1987
- Jan. 15 - Actor Ray Bolger dies in Cheviot Hills, Calif.
Obituaries and illustrations show that the character of Scarecrow in
the classic MGM film was his most memorable role. He is often quoted as
saying that he did not receive residuals for his work on The Wizard
of Oz, "just immortality. I'll settle for that."
- Jan.-Feb. - Plays prints "Lessons of Oz," by Christina
Hamlett, in which Dorothy returns home to Kansas and writes a book
titled Kansas Never Looked so Good.
- March 21 - The Sylmar Chamber Ensemble of Minneapolis performs
Baum's libretto, "The Astonishing Flight of the Gump" wearing Oz
costumes at their 10th anniversary.
- April 15 - A special edition of the comic Amazing Heroes
spoofs the popularity of swimsuit issues. Issue number 115 includes
Ozma, ruler of Oz, in a bathing suit as depicted by Oz
author/illustrator Eric Shanower. The comic is published by
Fantagraphics Books, Angoura, Calif.
- Brenda Baum Turner, widow of Harry Neal Baum, is given the L.
Frank Baum Memorial Award by the International Wizard of Oz Club
- July 12 - A one-woman show of Baum's The Enchanted Island of
Yew (1903) written and performed by Carmen de LaVallade is staged
at the White Barn Theatre of Westport, Conn.
- July 15 - The Alexandria (Louisiana) Daily Town Talk
reports that seven fundamentalist Christian families have filed suit
asking that several books including The Wizard of Oz be removed
from the required reading list of the community grade school. They
allege that the story teaches that courage, love and wisdom are
personally developed traits, rather than God-given gifts. Also, that
the story elevates animals to human status. Other writings named in
their suit include Ann Frank: The Diary of a Young Girl; the
works of Isaac Asimov and Hans Christian Anderson; and Shakespeare's MacBeth.
Publicity that follows the case soon adds that in The Wizard of Oz
females also assume traditional male roles and witches are projected as
being good.
- Aug. - The U.S. Court of Appeals rules, in review of the
Tennessee case, that exposing students to material to which the parents
object is not in violation of their religious beliefs, but that no
student may be forced to act in accordance with such teachings or speak
in allegiance to them.
- Sept. 1 - Composer Charlie Smalls, (The Wiz, 1975) dies.
- Sept. 13 - MGM producer Mervyn LeRoy dies.
- Sept. - The Smithsonian Institute acquires an original script
from MGM's 1939 classic, The Wizard of Oz.
- Oct. 29 - The Louisiana lawsuit is settled. The books in question
are not removed, but the judge agrees to let parents remove their
children from class when material they think is objectionable is being
used.
- Nov. 6 - Author/illustrator Eric Shanower's graphic novel The
Ice King of Oz published by First Comics, Inc., Chicago.
- Dec. - The Royal Shakespearean Company presents a new musical
version of The Wizard of Oz. This production expands on the
1939 MGM film to include material not used in the final cut such as
"The Jitterbug" and intros to other songs.
- Christmas season - Baum's daughter-in-law, Brenda Baum Turner,
lights the 30-foot Christmas tree at the Hotel del Coronado on Coronado
Island, Calif. The tree is covered with Wizard of Oz Christmas
ornaments. (Following Harry Neal Baum's death, Brenda married Frank
Turner but continued to use Baum as a middle name.)
- Dorothy Meets Ozma of Oz, a 30-minute animated film by
Lorimar Home video, is released. It is hosted by Michael Gross and
produced by Atlantic/Kushner-Locke, Hollywood.
- Hanna Barbera purchases animation rights to 34 of the Oz books.
- Baum's The Wonderful Wizard of Oz is co-published by
Books of Wonder, New York, and William Morrow and Company, New York in
their "Books of Wonder Classics" series. This is the first true
facsimile of the first edition of the classic American fairy tale.
- Baum's Sea Fairies (1911) is published by Books of
Wonder, New York, in its first paperback edition.
- Franklin Heirloom Dolls issues a limited-edition 17-inch doll of
Judy Garland as Dorothy that sells for $135. This is one of the first
collector's items specifically developed for and marketed to Oz fans in
anticipation of the 50th anniversary of the classic 1939 MGM film. The
company began to advertise the doll in 1986.
- The Classical Wizard - Magus Mirabilis in Oz, is published
by Scolar Press, Berkeley & London. C.J. Hinke and George Van Buren
are responsible for this Latin translation of
The Wizard of Oz.
- The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, is produced by Cinar Films,
Inc., Canada. This series of fifty-two, 23-minute episodes is based on
Baum's Wizard of Oz, Land of Oz, Ozma of Oz and Emerald
City of Oz. Margot Kidder narrates the English-language versions;
they also are produced in French. Four 93-minute video tapes of
material compiled from the series are released beginning in 1988.
- A Baum quote, lifted from the author's forward in The Lost
Princess of Oz (1917), is printed on boxes of Celestial Seasonings,
herbal teas.
- A new Hebrew translation of The Wizard of Oz , translated
by Uriel Ofek, editor of the Israeli Encyclopedia of Children's
Literature, is published in Israel following Ofek's death.
1988
- Feb. 19 - The Hotel del Coronado on Coronado Island, Calif.,
celebrates its centennial. In recognition of Baum's connections to the
facility (c. 1904-1908), costumed Oz characters participate in the
festivities. Special guests include surviving Munchkin cast members
from MGM's 1939 classic, The Wizard of Oz.
- Feb. 28 - MGM's classic The Wizard of Oz (1939) is one of
40 films chosen to be shown in Russia to advance Soviet-
American relations.
- April 3 - The Los Angeles Times prints a letter to the
editor from Baum's granddaughter, Ozma Baum Mantele. She explains that
Baum's book was written with no political messages or symbols but
simply to please children.
- June 9-12 - Point West Inn on Lake Macatawa, where the Baum
family had spent many summers, holds an Oz festival.
- Robin Olderman receives L. Frank Baum Memorial Award by the
International Wizard of Oz Club.
- June 21 - Roberta Jeffries Baumann's pair of Ruby Slippers, which
she won in 1940, are auctioned off at Christie's East. Buyer Anthony
Landini pays $165,000 anonymously - setting a world record for the sale
of a piece of movie costume memorabilia. At the urging of Christie's
staff, he soon contacts Baumann and the two become fast friends.
Also sold are the spray can of Witch Remover carried by the Cowardly
Lion ($20,000), two of costume designer Adrian's Munchkin designs
($10,000) and an early edition of The Wizard of Oz signed by
all cast members - including Toto ($19,000)
- Summer - An exhibition at the New York Public Library, "Timeless
Tales: Three Centuries of Children's Books from the New York Public
Library," includes 220 items. Among them are the first edition of The
Wonderful Wizard of Oz that Baum inscribed to his mother and two
original Denslow drawings for the book.
- Aug. 9 - The Kent Warner pair of Ruby Slippers sold by Christie's
Auction house in October 1981 is sold again, this time to Philip
Samuels of St. Louis for the same $165,000 price just paid by Anthony
Landini for the Roberta Baumann pair. Samuels had been the next highest
bidder in the June sale.
- Sept. 22 - Oz stamps to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the
classic MGM film are issued in Montserrat. The four designs are
designed by British artist Derek Miller and sold together on a souvenir
sheet.
- Nov. 22 - Author/illustrator Eric Shanower's The Forgotten
Forest of Oz published by First Publishing, Inc., Chicago.
- Dec. 16 - Sotheby's in New York auctions a hat from MGM's Wicked
Witch of the West costume for $33,000.
- Dec. 16-Jan. 14, 1989 - Baum's The Patchwork Girl of Oz
is staged live at the Palace Theatre in Watford England. Adrian
Mitchell writes the play and Andy Roberts provides original music.
- Dec 24 - Baum's grandson Robert Alison Baum dies in Newport
Beach, Calif.
- The Marvelous Land of Oz, a 90-minute animated video by
Cinar Films Inc., Canada, is released. Directed by Tim Reid, this is
one of four features compiled from Cinar's television series of Oz
stories.
- Bibliographia Oziana is written by Douglas G. Greene and
Peter Hanff, David Greene and Dick Martin. The updated volume is
published by The International Wizard of Oz Club, Inc.
- Baum's Sky Island (1912) is published in paperback for
the first time by Books of Wonder, New York.
- "The Wonderful World of Oz," a full-color panoramic map of Oz and
its environs by Dick Martin is published by Books of Wonder, New York.
The concept is inspired by "The Land of Make Believe," a similar "map"
of many fairy lands that Martin had admired as a child.
- In Port Arthur, Texas, an Oz poster made by songwriter Janis
Joplin when she was in 9th grade goes on display in the Janis Joplin
Memorial.
- Madonna Kolbenschlag's Lost in the Land of Oz: the Search for
Identity and Community in American Life is published by Harper &
Row, San Francisco.
- Baum's Little Wizard Stories of Oz (1913) are published
by Bantam, Toronto/New York.
1989
- The 50th anniversary of MGM's The Wizard of Oz draws
public attention thanks, in part, to a significant licensing effort by
Turner Licensing. Products and events generate widespread awareness of
Oz and appreciation for the 1939 film classic. Surviving little people
from the cast of Munchkinland appear activities to promote the
anniversary. They appear on virtually every popular television talk
show, at Oz festivals and retail events. Many wear costumes that
duplicate their MGM wardrobe.
- March 22 - The Wizard of Oz Live! musical presentation
premiers at New York's Radio City Music Hall. Produced and directed by
Michel M. Grilikhes, its special effects include a snowfall over the
poppy field and the tornado. Mayor Koch proclaims it "The Wizard of Oz
Day" in New York and honors outstanding students in a special
presentation. Some critics enjoy every minute of it and report
delighted fans, another writes that the show has "no brains, no hear
and a hell of a nerve." The original plan to travel the show to 70
cities is scaled back.
- April - Hollywood Studio Magazine publishes several
feature articles on MGM's The Wizard of Oz.
- May 1 - The Disney MGM Studios Theme Park opens in Orlando, Fl.
One attraction, The Great Movie Ride, concludes in Oz. An elaborate
Munchkinland set is filled with animatronic characters who interact
with the tour guide before allowing park visitors to move on. Next they
view an additional set recreating the first glimpse of the Emerald City
from the Yellow Brick Road. Prior to boarding the ride, visitors view
the Bauman/Landini Ruby Slippers which are on loan to Disney for public
display.
- May 31 - MGM/UA Home Video announces the release of a restored
video tape of MGM's The Wizard of Oz at an elaborate media
event in the Culver City Filmland Center Building in Los Angeles,
Calif. John Fricke, who's 32-page booklet accompanies the tape,
Munchkin Coroner Meinhardt Raabe and Jack Haley, Jr., are introduced as
celebrity guests.
- June 10-19 - The annual Judy Garland weekend festival in Grand
Rapids, Minn., is extended to a 9-day event. Crowd size is estimated at
20,000.
- Marc Lewis is given the L. Frank Baum Memorial Award by the
International Wizard of Oz Club.
- Aug. - Macy's Department Store, Herald Square, in New York City
features a 50th anniversary tribute to MGM's The Wizard of Oz.
In addition to a film screening and celebrity guests, the store itself
is redecorated throughout to an Oz theme. Props and products are found
in virtually every department. There is even an enormous balloon figure
of Margaret Hamilton as the Wicked Witch of the West over the main
entrance.
- Aug. 19 - MGM hosts an Oz celebration in Culver City featuring
several of the surviving Munchkin cast members. Jack Haley Jr. and Judy
Garland's youngest daughter Lorna Luft attend to promote the re-release
of the video.
- Sept. 15-17 - Chesterton, Ind., again hosts a Wizard of Oz
festival. This year's event is themed to honor the 50th anniversary of
the classic MGM film.
- Sept. - The Library of Congress includes MGM's 1939 classic, The
Wizard of Oz, in a list of 25 American films to be placed on the
National Film Registry as culturally, historically or aesthetically
significant.
- Sept. - Vernon E. Crawford's From Confucius to Oz is
published by Donald I. Fine, New York. The author provides techniques
for incorporating universal truths and virtues associated with the Oz
characters into readers' lives.
- Oct. 9 - The New York Times presents an editorial by
Isabel Wilkerson who writes that Kansans "...still don't want to talk
about the movie 'The Wizard of Oz', in polite conversation." "The state
has been cursed with an image as a bleak and tornado-
ridden wasteland that Dorothy dreams of escaping."
- Oct. 31 - The New York Times presents two letters to the editor
with an Oz theme. In the first, Fred Whitehead argues that Oz is "an
allegory of the great Populist credo" as suggested by Henry Littlefield
in 1964. The second letter, from Michael Patrick Hearn, says that Baum
"was not singling out Kansas for abuse."
- Long-time Oz enthusiasts John Fricke, Jay Scarfone and William
Stillman co-author The Wizard of Oz, The Official 50th Anniversary
Pictorial History which becomes a national best seller. The
photo-packed volume is published by Warner Books, New York, and
contains extensive never-before published material about the classic
MGM film.
- The 50th anniversary release of MGM's The Wizard of Oz on
video is the 5th best-selling video of the year.
- Librarian of congress James H. Billington names MGM's The
Wizard of Oz one of 23 film titles to be protected as "national
treasures" under the National Film Preservation Act of 1988. This honor
will protect the film from being altered or edited in the future.
- Baum's Ozma of Oz (1907) is published by Books of Wonder
and William Morrow and Company, New York, as the third Oz book in the
"Books of Wonder Classics" series. This is the first time a
first-edition facsimile of this title has been published.
- Merry Go Round in Oz is reprinted for the first time since
the 1963 original edition by Reilly & Lee, Chicago. Books of
Wonder, New York, publishes the title. Dick Martin, the books original
illustrator, creates a new dust jacket design for this edition.
- Baum's Animal Fairy Tales (1905) are published in a
single volume by Books of Wonder, New York, with their original
illustrations by Charles Livingston Bull.
- Dorothy of Oz, by Roger S. Baum - great-grandson to L.
Frank Baum - is co-published by Books of Wonder, New and William
Morrow, N.Y. with illustrations by Elizabeth Miles. Roger's father was
Frank J. Baum who wrote The Laughing Dragon of Oz (1935).
- Steve Cox's The Munchkins Remember The Wizard of Oz and
Beyond: at last the actors who played citizens of Munchkin Land in the
MGM classic tell their story, is published by E.P. Dutton, N.Y. The
memories of 31 surviving Munchkins are recounted and vintage and
contemporary photos - many never published before - illustrate the
volume.
- Rhys Thomas's The Ruby Slippers of Oz is published by
Tale Weaver Publishing, Inc., Los Angeles, Calif. Thomas's contribution
to Oz is a reference book about Dorothy's famous shoes in the MGM
classic, The Wizard of Oz (1939). Existing pairs of shoes,
rumored pairs never proven to exist and even "forged" pairs created and
passed off as real memorabilia all are reported in this true-mystery
style book.
- The Wizard of Oz: the Screenplay, by Noel Langley,
Florence Ryerson and Edgar Allen Woolf, edited by Michael Patrick
Hearn, is published by Delta (Bantam Doubleday Dell) New York.
- Cinar Films, Inc., Canada, releases The Emerald City of Oz.
Though the characters are reasonably true to Baum's original
descriptions, the plot varies wildly and widely from his 1910 book of
the same name. This film is compiled from material in the company's
1987 television series.
- Trouble in Oz, a 35-minute educational program is produced
by the Center for Drug-Free Living, Inc., Orlando, Fl. It is used in
the state's school system.
- The House of Harry Winston (jewelers) create a pair of ruby
slippers using actual gems.
- Jack Haley Jr. produces a documentary, The Making of The Wizard
of Oz, about the MGM film. It is hosted by actress Angela Lansbury.
- In Israel, a publisher releases a handsome new version of the
1979 Bosnat Even-Zolar translation of The Wizard of Oz.
1990
- Feb. 14 - Oz illustrator, author, collector and former Vice
President of the International Wizard of Oz Club, Inc., Dick Martin
dies in Chicago.
- Oz is again a featured part of a Mardi Gras ball in New Orleans.
This time, the Krewe of Okeanos has chosen the Oz theme for their
festivities.
- March 23 - The U.S. Postal Service issues four stamps that
commemorate the classic MGM films. The Wizard of Oz stamp
features a portrait of Judy Garland as Dorothy with Toto in her arms
and the Emerald City in the background. The original painting for the
stamp is done by Thomas Blackshear who is known to Oz collectors for
his earlier Oz paintings for collectors plates.
- March 31-April 1 - Camden House, Los Angeles, Calif., auctions 20
Oz items including 4 matte paintings salvaged from MGM discard
material. The painting of the Emerald City sells for $44,000.
- May - HBO begins airing the 52-episode animated series The
Wonderful Wizard of Oz produced by Cinar Films, Toronto, Canada in
1987. The weekly series airs only on the cable channel.
- June-Aug. - A major Baum exhibit is presented by the Frances
Goldwyn Hollywood Regional Library titled "The Road to Oz: The Life of
L. Frank Baum." Many rare items from the collection of Warren and Edith
Hollister - such as the pencil Baum used to write The Wonderful
Wizard of Oz - are, fortunately, included; on June 27 the
Hollister's home is destroyed by fire. They lose all their personal
belongings saving only the original artwork and rare books that
constitute the major part of their extraordinary Oz collection.
- Jean Brockway is given the L. Frank Baum Memorial Award by the
International Wizard of Oz Club.
- June - The Judy Garland Festival in Grand Rapids, Minn., unites
13 surviving little people who had appeared as Munchkins in MGM's 1939
classic, The Wizard of Oz.
- The Chittenango Foundation announces that it will honor Baum with
a museum and library, permanent and rotating displays and a children's
theatre. A 9-acre site is donated and fund-raising efforts begin.
- July - Sudan, Ks., holds its first community Wizard of Oz
Festival.
- Summer - Detroit Cranbrook Institute of Science adopts a
temporary Oz theme. Hands-on exhibits, science experiments, laser
shows, and other attractions are included. "Animals of Oz," for
example, is a special presentation.
- Aug. 25 - Jim Henson's Mother Goose Stories air on the
Disney channel. The stories themselves are based on Baum's first
children's book, Mother Goose in Prose (1897). Character voices
include Angie Passmore as Mother Goose, Karen Prell, Mike Quinby and
Mak Wilson as goslings.
- Oct. - Oztoberfest, on Oz event in Liberal, Kan., unites 14
little people who had been Munchkins in MGM's classic Oz film. They are
joined by one additional Munchkin, Viola White Banks, who, as a child
of average size, also had been cast in the film.
- Nov. 20 - The Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park's production of The
Wonderful Wizard of Oz based on the 1902 musical is featured in a
28-page issue of Prologue.
- Dec. - A new play, a two-man version of The Wizard of Oz
incorporating Mr. and Mrs Santa Claus and characters from Robin
Hood, is performed at the Pasadena Playhouse.
- Dec. 10 - The Dreamer of Oz, a Baum biography, is
broadcast on NBC. The Bedrock Productions, Inc., made-for-
television movie stars John Ritter and Frank Baum, Annette O'Toole as
Maud Baum and Rue McLanahan as Matilda Gage. David Kirschner and Bob
Myman produce. Jack Bender directs. Baum's grandson Robert Baum
provides rare books - including inscribed first editions - from his own
collection to use as props. The production receives a 1991 Christopher
Award for "affirming the highest values of the human spirit."
Though produced in cooperation with the Baum Trust, the film relies
heavily on imagery from the MGM film to tell Baum's first Oz story.
Factual accuracy also is altered for dramatic impact or to condense the
story. For example, Baum's niece Dorothy (who died at five months - a
baby he never saw) is presented as a much older child and his
inspiration to write. The Baums' fourth son, Kenneth Gage, is entirely
omitted.
- Christmas - Neiman Marcus department store offers for sale the
pair of gemstone Ruby Slippers made by jeweler Harry Winston in 1989.
The shoes are covered with 4,600 real rubies and 50 carats of diamonds.
The retail price is $3 million.
- The Wizard of Oz is paired on stage with another
children's classic in Joseph Robinette's new musical, Dorothy Meets
Alice or The Wizard of Wonderland. It is published by The Dramatic
Publishing Company of Woodstock, Ill..
- Baum's Dorothy and the Wizard in Oz (1908) is published
by Books of Wonder and William Morrow and Company, New York, as the
next Oz book in the "Books of Wonder Classics" series of first-edition
facsimiles. This is the first time in nearly 90 years that the title
has been available with all 16 of its color plates.
- Books of Wonder, New York, reissues Neill's The Wonder City
of Oz (1940) in honor of its 50th anniversary.
- The Dinamonster of Oz, written in 1941 by Kenneth Gage
Baum - fourth son of L. Frank Baum - is published by Buckethead
Enterprises of Oz, Albuquerque, with illustrations by the author's
granddaughter, Dorothy Gita Morena.
- Roger S. Baum, great grandson of L. Frank Baum, continues his
original Oz stories with The Rewolf of Oz, published by Green
Tiger Press, San Diego, Calif., with illustrations by Charlotte Hart.
- Eric Shanower's Oz graphic novels are approved by Parent's Choice
as one of the best comic series for children for 1990.
- The Wizard of Oz is produced by Turner Enterprises. This
series of thirteen 23-minutes cartoons is based on the 1939 MGM film.
- American Film Investment Corp., produces a short animated
film of The Wizard of Oz. Executive producers are Diane
Eskanzzi and Ron Layton. Jim Simon directs.
- The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, a play by Virginia Glasgow
Koste (1983), is revised and released as On the Road to Oz. It
is published by The Dramatic Publishing Company, Woodstock, Ill. This
is the author's third Oz play
- Six of Denslow's 1903 picture books are collected as Denslow's
Picture Book by arcade Publishing of New York. The volume includes,
Denslow's Five Little Pigs, Old Mother Hubbard, Simple Simon,
House That Jack Built, Mary Had a Little Lamb and Animal Fair.
1991
- Jan. 3 - A $3.2 million production of The Wizard of Oz
opens on stage in the Australia (Melbourne) Victoria State Opera House.
The sell-out season grosses more than $500,000 a week. Extra matinees
are added to meet demand. The musical is based on the 1989 Royal
Shakespearean Co. production.
- Jan. - Mad Magazine spoofs The Wizard of Oz with
a contemporary cast of famous personalities in "The Wizard of Odds."
- Frederick E. Otto receives the L. Frank Baum Memorial Award by
the International Wizard of Oz Club.
- Sept. - A new Baum biography by the mother-daughter team of Jean
Shirley and Angelica Shirley Carpenter is published by Lerner
Publications Co., Minneapolis, Minn. L. Frank Baum: Royal Historian
of Oz includes illustrations from the Oz books and rare family
photos. The book is designed for readers ages 10-13.
- Sept. - Jelly Bean Press publishes The Wizard of Oz with
new illustrations by Charles Santore. Although the text is somewhat
condensed, Santore's 58 watercolors please critics and fans.
- Oct. - Ground breaking ceremonies are held for the MGM Grand
hotel and theme park in Las Vegas. Though no Oz attractions are
included in the theme park plans, the hotel itself will be filled with
Oz images including murals in two restaurants, a towering Emerald City
in an atrium, Oz shops and slot machines with Oz graphics.
- Dec. 20 - The New York Times presents two letters to the
editor about Oz in response to a Nov. 28 report about "The Wizard of Oz
as a Secular Myth of America," by Paul Nathanson. First, Saul Rosen
argues that The Wizard of Oz is "a secular political tract
firmly based in history and ideology" and proceeds to relay alleged
populist messages from the book, though Henry Littlefield is never
credited as the source of this familiar 1964 theory. The second letter,
from Michael Patrick Hearn, details Baum's involvement with and
rejection of organized religion.
- Baum's The Road to Oz (1909) is published by Books of
Wonder and William Morrow and Company, New York, in the "Books of
Wonder Classics" series. This is the first time a first-edition
facsimile of this title has faithfully reproduced the book using
colored paper stocks for its pages.
- Books of Wonder, New York, reissues two Jack Snow Oz titles,
The Magical Mimics of Oz (1946) and The Shaggy Man of Oz
(1949) in both hardcover and paperback, and John R. Neill's The
Scalawagons Of Oz (1941) in honor of its 50th anniversary.
- The Book of Hamburgs - a poultry manual that was Baum's
first book (1886) - is reprinted by Books of Wonder, New York, using a
rare copy from the collection of Bruce and Gail Crockett.
- An unusual Oz pastiche, How the Wizard Came to Oz, is
published by The Emerald City Press (Books of Wonder), New York, N.Y.
Author/illustrator Don Abbott successfully mimics Denslow's original
artwork for this Oz prequel well enough to fool many fans familiar with
the classic illustrations. This is the first book published using the
imprint The Emerald City Press; it will be used on additional titles of
original Oz fiction.
- The Oz Squad comic series is published by Brave New
Worlds, Providence, R.I. Steven Ahlquist and Andrew Murphy collaborate
to produce what critic and second-generation Oz collector Steve Teller
describes as "the most repellent published work with the name Oz in the
title I have ever seen." Other Oz fans, however, are quick to collect
the series.
- Tales of Magic Land, 1 (soon followed by volume 2) offers
the Alexander Volkov Oz books in English language. Peter L. Blystone
has translated them and they are published with two tales per volume by
Red Branch Press, Staten Island, N.Y.
- Over the Rainbow: The Wizard of Oz as a Secular Myth of America
is published by the State University of New York, Albany. Author Paul
Nathanson merges elements of both Baum's original story and the 1939
MGM film and analyzes them from sociological, historical and
psychological perspectives. This theory follows Dorothy's "passage" as
it "recapitulates paradigmatic stories of both America and
Christianity... defining human identity on three symbolic levels
(individual, collective, and cosmic)." His 68 pages of chapter notes
include such remarkable claims as "Dorothy was played by Baum's wife"
in the 1925 Chadwick Pictures film of The Wizard of Oz.
- Behind the scenes at the Making of The Wizard of Oz, (the
complete NBC Maxwell House Good News Radio Broadcast of June 29, 1939),
becomes available on CD.
- The feature film Ramblin Rose, produced by Renny Harlin, Edgar J.
Scherick, executive producer, includes a scene in which a young boy is
reading The Wishing Horse of Oz. Other Oz books can be spotted in the
background.
1992
- Jan. 10 - The New York Times presents a letter to the
editor from Michael Patrick Hearn, "'Oz' Author Never Championed
Populism," in which the respected Baum scholar and biographer
methodically proves that Baum did not write The Wizard of Oz
with any purpose but to please children and earn a living. A previously
unpublished poem is included; it was written by Baum in anticipation of
the election of McKinley, the republican candidate, as president.
- Feb. 7 - The New York Times presents a letter to the
editor from Henry Littlefield, who originally proposed that The
Wizard of Oz was a parable on populism. He writes that he
absolutely agrees with Michael Patrick Hearn's recent letter "that
there is no basis in fact to consider Baum a supporter of
turn-of-the-century Populist ideology."
- May 1-23 - The Nevada County Performing Arts Guild presents an
original play, The Ozard of Wiz, in Nevada City, Calif. It is
written and directed by Mila Johansen.
- May 8 - Baum's niece Cynthia Baum Tassini cuts the ribbon at the
site of a proposed museum to be built in Chittenango, N.Y. The
Emerald City of Oz (1910) is dedicated to Cynthia. She is the
daughter of Baum's brother Henry Clay "Dr. Harry" Baum.
- May 11 - British author Salman Rushdie's essay, "Out of Kansas"
is published in the New Yorker. Rushdie says the MGM film of The
Wizard of Oz affected him deeply when he first saw it at age 10 and
prompted him to begin writing fiction.
- July 10 - Jay Scarfone and William Stillman's The Wizard of
Oz Collector's Treasury published by Schiffer Publishing,
Ltd., West Chester, Penn. This is the first extensive
reference work of Oz memorabilia and collectibles. The first copy is
presented at an International Wizard of Oz Club convention to dedicatee
and Club Secretary, Fred M. Meyer. Meyer's anonymous contributions to
the volume from his own impressive Oz collection are extensive.
- Oct. 27-Nov. 8 - An original ballet, Oz, written and
choreographed by Paul Taylor is performed at New York's City Center.
The Paul Taylor Dance Company production is a plotless series of short
pieces. A Neill illustration of the Patchwork Girl is featured in
promotional material. The performers represent a wide variety of
characters from many of Baum's Oz books. Wayne Horvitz provides a
modern jazz-rock score.
- Nov.-Jan. 1993 - Charles Santore's illustrations for children's
books, including some of his Wizard of Oz watercolors (1991),
are exhibited at the Brandywine Library in Chadds Ford, Penn.
- Dec. 4 - Animator Rob Roy MacVeigh dies at age 37. Left
uncompleted is his lifelong project, an animated version of The
Wonderful Wizard of Oz that would be true to the original book.
- Dec. 16 - Eric Shanower's The Blue Witch of Oz published
by Dark Horse Comics, Inc., Milwaukee, Or.
- Roger S. Baum writes an original Oz trilogy, The Silly
Ozbulls of Oz, The Silly Ozbulls and Toto and The Silly Ozbulls
and the Magic Merry-go-Round. The books are published by Yellow
Brick Road (a Roger Baum company) and illustrated by Lisa Mertins.
- Michael Ploog adds an interesting new title to the list of
Oz-related comic treatments. His condensed version of Baum's The
Life and Adventures of Santa Claus is printed as a hard-cover
graphic novel by Tundra Publishing, Ltd., North Hampton, Mass.
- A controversial adult novel, Was, incorporates sexual
abuse, insanity and other evils in an Oz-related theme although the
characters never actually reach Oz in the text. It is published by
Alfred A. Knopf, New York. One review calls author Geoff Ryman's work a
"perversion of material to purposes that the original author, by all we
can determine, would almost surely have disavowed." Another calls it
brilliant and describes it as a modern classic.
- Lucky Bucky in Oz (1942) is reissued by Books of Wonder in
honor of the Neill story's 50th anniversary.
- A proposed $300 million Wizard of Oz theme park to be called "The
Wonderful World of Oz" is announced in Kansas City, Ks. The ambitious
plan wins the support of the Baum family. Planners begin long-range
financing for the project.
- Reportedly, an Italian translation of Ozma of Oz called Regina
di Oz is published.
- Women, Church and State (1893) by Baum's mother in law,
Matilda Gage, is republished by Ayer Co., Salem, N.H.
1993
- Jan. 13 - Oz puppeteer, entertainer and illustrator Bill Eubank
dies at age 68. Eubank's "Wizard's" magic shows, clown acts and Oz
performances have delighted audiences for decades. His contributions to
the Oz Club include original artwork for an annual Christmas card and The
Baum Bugle. He was also instrumental in the naming of Oz Park in
Chicago (1976)
- Spring - Aberdeen, S.D., announces plans to include a Land of Oz
area in Wylie Park.
- May 30 - Marge Henderson Buell, illustrator of Thompson's King
Kojo (1934) and the popular "Little Lulu" comics, dies at age 88.
- June 12 - Rachel Cosgrove Payes' The Wicked Witch of Oz
is published by The International Wizard of Oz Club with illustrations
by Eric Shanower.
- Aug. 4 - Science fiction writer and long-time Oz fan Harlan
Ellison devotes a 3-minute segment on the Sci-Fi channel to the virtues
of the Oz books. He advises parents of troubled kids to turn off the
television and "sit them down - or possibly nail them to the chair if
they move too fast - and you read them the Oz books. One after another,
you read them the Oz books..."
- Dec. - Oz collector Nicholas Salerno donates a collection of 425
pieces (circa 1975-1990) to the Arizona State University Library.
- Dec. - A massive hotel opens in Las Vegas. The MGM Grand features
Oz theme décor including a towering indoor Emerald City, animatronic
characters and restaurant murals. Oz merchandise shops make a wide
range of materials available. In the Emerald Towers wing guest rooms
feature poppy field carpeting and bedspreads, and framed portraits of
Oz characters from the MGM film. The hotel also offers an MGM Theme
Park, but it does not offer any Oz attractions.
- Dec. 9 - The lifelong Oz collection of twin brothers David L. and
Douglas G. Greene is auctioned at New York City's Swann Galleries.
World-record prices are achieved for three books. The 366-lot
collection sells for a total of $175,846. The auction catalog rapidly
becomes a new reference book for Oz collectors.
- A Wizard of Oz video game is produced by Seta USA, Las
Vegas, for Super Nintendo Entertainment Systems.
- John Fricke writes, hosts and co-directs a new home video
documentary about the MGM Munchkins. We're Off to See the Munchkins
presents background and festival footage, film clips and vintage
photos. Eight Munchkins are interviewed on camera: Lewis Croft, Jerry
Marren, Nels Nelson, Margaret Pellegrini, Meinhardt Raabe, Clarence
Swensen, Karl Slover and Betty Tanner. John Anderson co-produces the
77-minute tape as Cinema Video Productions. Distribution is handled by
West Coast Entertainment.
- Sugar & Spice: The Wizard of Oz is released by Saban
Video Productions/Entertainment, Burbank, Calif. This new 30-minute
animated version imitates well-known celebrity voices. Contemporary
puns are common, such as Arnold Schwarzenegger's Tin Man who announces
in a crises, "I'll become the Tinmanator!"
- The Emerald City of Oz is issued in the "Books of Wonder
Classics" series by Books of Wonder and William Morrow and Company, New
York. This first edition facsimile marks the first time in more than 80
years that the lavishly illustrated Baum book is reprinted with the
metallic green inks that made the 1910 first edition unique in the Oz
series and prized by collectors.
- Eric Shanower's The Giant Garden of Oz is published by
Books of Wonder, New York. This is Shanower's first departure from his
successful Oz graphic novel format.
- Teachers at the Center of Inquiry, a program for gifted and
talented students from Syracuse, N.Y., teach children about the
American court system by putting Dorothy on trial for killing the
Wicked Witch of the West.
- Educational software called Reading Adventures in Oz is
introduced by Davidson of Torrence, Calif. The computer program is
designed to help develop reading skills in young children.
- The Wizard of Oz, adapted by Barbara A. Oliver, is
produced as a 30-minute animated film. Doug Parker is the voice
director.
1994
- Feb - The Lilly Library of Indiana University presents an Oz
exhibit of material from the files of publisher Bobbs-Merrill, now in
the library's collection.
- May -- TCI (Theatre Crafts) magazine provides detailed
descriptions of Las Vegas's MGM Grand's Emerald City animatronic
characters, sets and laser light show.
- June 27-28 - Special showings by the Alex Film Society of
Glendale, Calif., of the MGM Classic are attended by 2,400 people.
Special quests include Munchkin Jerry Marren; authors John Fricke (The
Wizard of Oz: The Official 50th Anniversary Pictorial History,
1989) and Steve Cox (The Munchkins Remember the Wizard of Oz and
Beyond, 1989); Ozma Baum Mantele and Robert Baum representing the
author's family; Willard Carroll and Thomas Wilhite, co-producers of The
Little Wizard Stories animated series; and Dona Massin who served
as assistant choreographer to the Munchkinland sequence in the MGM film
classic.
- Aug. - A color photo of the hour glass used by the Wicked Witch
of the West to terrorize Dorothy in the classic MGM film illustrates
the cover of Collector's Showcase. It also is featured inside
with the article, "Movie Classics Original Props and Costumes."
- Fall - The extensive Oz collection of long-time Oz fan and Club
member, actor Bronson Pinchot, is auctioned at Sotheby's, New York,
N.Y. The auction catalog is printed in three topical volumes.
- Hyperion Studios begins production on Little Wizard Stories,
(a.k.a. The Oz Kids) a 26-episode animated television series.
The programs are written and created by Willard Carroll who also
co-produces with Thomas L. Wilhite. John Bush is the producer.
- An Oz-inspired play, Twister, by Ken Kesey (One Flew
Over the Cuckoo's Nest) gets mixed reviews from small audiences.
- An article by David Parker, "The Rise and Fall of The
Wonderful Wizard of Oz as a 'Parable on Populism'" is published by
the Journal of the Georgia Association of Historians. The essay
traces the 1964 Littlefield theory that Baum's book was a parable on
Populism from its original proposal to its widespread acceptance. He
provides substantial evidence -
including quotes from Littlefield - that argue that Baum did not write
the book to promote political issues and ideologies.
- Baum's The Little Wizard Stories are reissued in one book
with the original John R. Neill illustrations by Books of Wonder and
William Morris and Company, New York.
- Baum's Dot and Tot of Merryland (1901) is reprinted under
the Emerald City Press imprint of Books of Wonder, New York. New
illustrations are provided by Don Abbott who successfully imitates
Denslow's style in this book as he has in his own original Oz stories
for the publisher (How the Wizard Came to Oz, 1991, The
Magic Chest of Oz , 1993, Father Goose in Oz, 1994). This
publication marks the return of a rare Baum title that has been out of
print for 50 years, and the book's first ever paperback edition.
- Volshebnik Izumrudnago Corodo, a live action version of Volkov's
first Oz book, is produced in Russia.
- The class schedule from Syracuse University has on Oz theme.
Denslow and Neill illustrations, local festival photos, a photo of an
Oz board game from the Museum Collection, and essay on Baum and Oz are
included. The bulk of the University's Oz collection had been a gift
from Russell P. MacFall.
- A German traslation of The Wizard of Oz, Der Zauberer Von Oz,
is published by J. F. Schreiber, Esslingen, Germany. Sybil
Grafin Schonfeldt provided the translation.
1995
- Jan. 12 - The Oz collection of Chuck Boller is auctioned at
Pacific Book Auction Galleries in San Francisco, Calif.
- March 28 - Jean Shirley, co-author of L. Frank Baum: Royal
Historian of Oz (1992) dies.
- Summer - The Columbian Museum in Wamego, Ks., exhibits the Oz
collection of Tod Machin. More than 3,000 books, toys, posters and
other memorabilia are displayed in chronological order. Considered the
most comprehensive Oz exhibit to date, "A Century of Oz" attracts
national attention from the press.
- Rhino records releases a compact disc of MGM's The Wizard of
Oz as an original motion picture soundtrack. A 48-page booklet by
John Fricke accompanies the five hours of material.
- June - The Judy Garland Museum in Grand Rapids, Minn., acquires
the carriage drawn by the Horse of a Different Color in the Emerald
City sequences of MGM's classic Oz film. The carriage had originally
been commissioned by a group of New York businessmen for President
Abraham Lincoln and was used by the President during the Civil War. It
appeared in nearly 200 motion pictures including MGM's The Wizard
of Oz.
- June 28 - Oz-story Magazine, No. 1 published by Hungry
Tiger Press, Bloomfield, N.J. It includes "Percy and the Shrinking
Violet, " a new short story by Rachel Cosgrove Payes with illustrations
by Eric Shanower, and Baum's Sam Steeles Adventures on Land and Sea
(1906) with illustrations by John R. Neill. David Maxine edits the
magazine.
- June 2 - "One Hundred Years of Children's Book Illustrations," an
exhibit of original artwork, opens at the Chrysler Museum of Art,
Norfolk, Va. Among the collection are drawings by Maxfield Parrish for
Baum's Mother Goose in Prose (1897); W.W. Denslow for Baum's The
Wonderful Wizard of Oz (1900); John R. Neill for The Road to Oz
(1909); and Charles Santore for The Wizard of Oz (1991 Jelly
Bean Press version). A catalog is issued to accompany the exhibit. The
collection moves to The Memphis Brooks Museum of Art, Memphis, Tenn.
(Nov. 3-Jan. 6, 1997); and the Delaware Art Museum, Wilmington, Del.
(Feb. 15-April 15, 1997).
- Sept. - "The Wizard of Oz on Ice," a $9-million spectacular opens
in Florida and begins to tour the United States. The full-
length skating program is produced by Kenneth Feld (CEO of Irvin Feld
& Kenneth Feld Productions, Inc., and owners of Ringling Bros and
Barnum & Bailey Circus) and choreographed by Robin Cousins, a 1980
Olympic Gold Medal skater. Singer Bobby McFerrin provides all the
speaking and singing voices except for Dorothy; Laurnea Wilkerson is
the voice of Dorothy - a role familiar to the actress since her
national tour as Dorothy in The Wiz. Skating in the role of
Dorothy is Jeri Campbell, a US National Championship skater and member
of the US International Team. The show includes spectacular sets and
costumes. A wide variety of Oz merchandise is available.
- Oct. - A nine-foot sculpture of the Tin Woodman is erected in
Chicago's Oz Park. The 900-pound sculpture is made entirely of chrome
auto bumpers by John Kearney.
- Nov. 5 - A concert version of MGM's The Wizard of Oz is
presented by Turner Network Television to benefit the Children's
Defense Fund at Lincoln Center's Avery Fisher Hall in New York City. It
featured an all-star cast including recording artist Jewel as Dorothy;
Jackson Browne as the Scarecrow; Roger Daltrey as the Tin Woodman;
Nathan Lane as the Cowardly Lion; Debra Winger as the Wicked Witch of
the West; Joel Grey as the Wizard; Natalie Cole as Glinda; Lucie Arnaz
as Aunt Em. The Harlem Boys Choir sang the Munchkin numbers. Special
appearances included Ronnie Spector, Phoebe Snow, Ry Cooder, Dr. John,
and David Sanborn. The event was filmed for boradcast Thanksgiving eve.
- Nov. - A 35-foot long Oz float is featured in the Detroit
Thanksgiving Day parade. The float's sponsor, Hudson's department
store, bases it's holiday exhibit on The Wizard of Oz with a
walk-through display of 21 vignettes.
- Dec. - Dave Hardenbrook begins "The Oz Digest," an on-line
publication of Oz commentary and information distributed free over the
Internet to interested subscribers.
- Dec. 9 - The Oz Kids World opens in Tokyo. The store is devoted
entirely to merchandise featuring characters from The Oz Kids
(a.k.a. The Little Wizard Stories) animated series by Hyperion
Animation, Los Angeles.
- Wicked: The Life and Times of the Wicked Witch of the West,
by Gregory Maguire, is published by HarperCollins, New York, with
illustrations by Douglas Smith. This book relays the adventures of
Elphaba, who becomes known as the Wicked Witch of the West, and
presents the land of Oz from her unique perspective. The novel, which
is written for adults, shows considerable knowledge of Baum's Oz.
- Dorothy and Alice (an adaptation of two classics) is
presented on stage at the Glassboro, New Jersey Center for the Arts.
- The Oz Kids (a.k.a. Little Wizard Stories) are
produced by Hyperion Animation, Inc., Los Angeles. The
twenty-six 23-minute episodes are a made-for-television series
following the adventures of second-generation "Oz kids" such as Dot,
Tin Boy, Scarecrow Jr., Boris and Bella (children of the Cowardly
Lion), and Toto 2.
- The Runaway in Oz by John R. Neill (1877-1943), edited and
illustrated by Eric Shanower, is published by Books of Wonder, New
York. This previously-unpublished Oz adventure is the fourth manuscript
by the illustrator of 35 Oz books.
- Baum's The Patchwork Girl of Oz (1913) is issued in the
"Books of Wonder classics" series by Books of Wonder and William
Morris, New York. This volume reproduces the book's original color
illustrations and color endpapers for the first time in more than 50
years. The publisher makes a few minor edits to material, including
removing one illustration, considered racist by contemporary standards.
The edits spark debate among Oz fans.
- Nancy Tystad Koupal's research into Baum's Aberdeen years is
published by the University of Nebraska Press, Lincoln, as Our
Landlady, by L. Frank Baum. The book includes all 48 installments
of Baum's "Our Landlady" columns for the Aberdeen Saturday Pioneer
along with an extensive introduction and annotated notes. Koupal's
findings further discredit the 1964 Littlefield theory that proposes
Baum wrote The Wonderful Wizard of Oz as a parable on Populism
and establish Baum's political opinions on various issues of the day,
such as suffrage, the Ghost Dance Movement and prohibition.
- Roger Baum, a great grandson of the original author who now
writes his own original Oz stories, announces The Yellow Brick Road Oz
Club.
- Actors and actresses who appeared as Munchkins in the 1939 MGM
film of The Wizard of Oz continue to appear around the country to
attract fans to various Oz events. Jerry Maren reports a memorable
moment at one of his appearances; he was approached by a man
representing Michael Jackson, the pop star who was cast as the
Scarecrow in the film version of The Wiz. Marren agrees to meet
Jackson and is whisked away in a limousine to meet and exchange
autographs with him.
1996
- Feb - "America's Smithsonian" a traveling exhibition of more than
300 items opens in Los Angeles. A pair of Ruby Slippers worn by Judy
Garland in the MGM classic film The Wizard of Oz, is included.
As background information, the exhibit sponsors further perpetuates the
1964 Littlefield theory that The Wizard of Oz is a parable
about the Populist political movement by presenting that information as
fact. It is eventually dropped following complaints
- Feb. 27 - "The Wizard of Oz On Ice," a made-for-television
version of the touring ice skating show, airs on CBS. Bobby McFerrin is
the host and narrator. The show features Olympic gold medalists Oksana
Baiul as Dorothy and Victor Petranko as the Scarecrow.
- March 1 - The Fox television network airs an episode of Sliders
that mirrors the plot of The Wizard of Oz.
- March 16 - A comprehensive one-man exhibit of the work of the
first Oz illustrator, W.W. Denslow, opens at the Brandywine River
Museum in Chadds Ford, Pa. Curated by Michael Patrick Hearn, "W.W.
Denslow, The Other Wizard of Oz" features original drawings from Baum's
Father Goose, His Book (1899) and The Wonderful Wizard of Oz,
as well as books, letters, photographs, comic strips, prints and
posters relating to his work with Baum.
- April - "Remember," a nostalgia magazine, includes an article
about Oz. Judy Garland as Dorothy from MGM's classic 1939 film is
featured on the cover.
- April 1 - The television program "High Incident" includes an
episode that attempts to present how Baum wrote The Wizard of Oz. The
facts of the matter are quite confused.
- May 20 - "Time" magazine mentions the Totable Tornado
Observatories in an article about tornadoes. These devises are referred
to as Totos for short. A popular film in theaters presents the same
device named "Dorothy" that has Judy Garland as Dorothy painted on its
side.
- June 2 - "One Hundred Years of Children's Book Illustrations," an
exhibit of original artwork, opens at the Chrysler Museum of Art,
Norfolk, Va. Among the items on display are drawings by Maxfield
Parrish for Baum's Mother Goose in Prose (1897); W.W. Denslow for
Baum's The Wonderful Wizard of Oz (1900); John R. Neill for The Road to
Oz (1909); and Charles Santore for The Wizard of Oz (1991, Jelly Bean
Press). A catalog is issued to accompany the exhibit. The collection
moves to The Memphis Brooks Museum of Art, Memphis, Tenn. (Nov. 3-Jan.
6); and the Delaware Art Museum, Wilmington, Del. (Feb. 15-April 15,
1997)
- June 2 - Parade magazine writer Marilyn Mach Vos Savant discusses
the Pythagorean Theorem that is scrambled by Ray Bolger in his MGM role
as the Scarecrow. She explains that the brains provided in Baum's book
(where the Scarecrow does not spout mathematical theorems at all) were
a mixture of bran, pins and needles that tended to stick out of his
head when he thought hard -- "proof that he is sharp," according to the
Cowardly Lion in Baum's text.
- June 7 - Peter Glassman is featured on "Personal Fx, The
Collectible Show" in a discussion of proper care of books. He uses
copies of Baum's The Scarecrow of Oz and Sea Fairies
and Ruth Plumly Thompson's The Hungry Tiger of Oz to illustrate
his points.
- Eric Shanower receives the L. Frank Baum Memorial Award from the
International Wizard of Oz Club.
- July - Books of Wonder again relocates to a larger space at 16
West 18th Street in New York. The collectible book store
offers many rare Oz volumes in addition to facsimiles and reprints.
- Sept. Matilda Joslyn Gage, Baum's Mother in law, is inducted into
the National Woman's Hall of Fame in Seneca Falls, N.Y. for her role in
the Woman's Suffrage movement.
- Sept. - "All That," a sketch comedy on the Nickelodeon channel,
presents a parody of the MGM film version of The Wizard of Oz
called the Wizard of Cos. A Bill Cosby imitator is cast as the Wizard.
In this version, Dorothy meets a toad-man and a man made of pasta.
- Lyricist Harold Arlen is included in a set of four songwriter
stamps, the Legends of American Music Series, issued by the United
States Postal Service.
- Sept. 30 - John Lahr's article for the New Yorker about his
father Bert's career includes references to his work on the 1939 MGM
film of The Wizard of Oz.
- Oct. - "Journey to the West," an ancient Chinese tale, is adapted
from an English translation for the stage. The theme's parallels to
Baum's original Oz story are so strong that the local reviewer, Ed
Siegel, opens his article with "We're off to get the scriptures, the
wonderful scriptures of Buddha…" Marketing materials also promote the
Oz undertones.
- Nov. - "Locus" features Oz collector, dealer and publisher Peter
Glassman and the Oz books.
- Nov. - An exhibit about lyricist Yip Harburg opens at the New
York Public Library. His role in the 1939 MGM film of The Wizard of
Oz is included.
- Nov. 26 - American Home Entertainment releases a boxed set of
early Oz films on video with soundtracks. The Patchwork Girl of Oz
(1914), His Majesty The Scarecrow of Oz (1914), The Magic
Cloak of Oz (1914) and the Chadwick production of The Wizard of
Oz (1925) are included. A competitor soon releases the same set at
a slightly lower price.
- The cartoon Super Friends includes an episode in which Superman,
Wonder Woman and Aquaman are transformed into the Tin Woodman, Cowardly
Lion and Scarecrow.
- Baum's Tik Tok of Oz (1914) with all its color plates and
its original color map end papers, in issued by Books of Wonder and
William Morris, New York.
- Dave Hardenbrook, an Oz fan and astronomy enthusiast, mounts an
effort to name geologic features on Pluto's newly discovered moon
Charon after names and places in Oz. He learns in New Worlds by
Heather Couper and Nigel Henbest that astronomer James Christy's first
choice for the moon name on his discovery of it was Oz. The
astronomical community, however, limits the names of new moons to those
found in Greek mythology.
- Maureen 'McGovern records two Harold Arlen songs from MGMs The
Wizard of Oz (1939), ""Over the Rainbow" and "Ding Dong the Witch
is Dead," on her CD "Out of This World: McGovern sings Arlen."
- The Wizard of Oz is illustrated by Lisbeth Zwerger and published
in English, Dutch (Translated by Ernst Van Altena and published by De
Vier Windstreken) and German (published by Michael Neugebauer Verlag
AG, Gossau-Zurich).
- Esperanto language editions of The Wonderful Wizard of Oz
and The Marvelous Land of Oz are translated by Don Broadribb
and become available over the Internet. He plans to continue
translating the series into this international language based on
Indo-European languages.
- American Fairy Tales: From Rip Van Winkle to the Rootabagan
Stories includes Baum's "Glass Dog." Compiled by Neil Philip, the
book is published by Hyperion books, New York.
- Jim Henson's Mother Goose Stories (1990), which are based
on Baum's Mother Goose In Prose (1897), are commercially
available. An advertisement for them is added to the Muppets
Treasure Island Sing-Along Tape.
- A Greyhound bus tours the country with a small Oz museum aboard
to promote sales of the 1939 MGM film of The Wizard of Oz on
video. MGM costumes and replicas, videos and costume character
appearances are included. The exterior of the bus is completely wrapped
o Oz graphics.
- An adult comic, Lost Girls, deals with the erotic
adventures of Alice Liddell, Wendy Darling and Dorothy Gale after
they've grown up.
- Oz characters are used to illustrate co-workers and inter-
office relationships in Alicia Williams's The Scarecrow, The Lion
and The Tin Man.
1997
- Jan. 24 - Sally Roesch Wagner lectures on the topic "The
Intellectual Connection Between the Onondaga and the Land of Oz" at the
Wellwood Middle School I Fayetteville, N.Y.
- Jan. 26 - The Columbus Dispatch includes an article by critic
Michael Grossbery comparing The Wizard of Oz to Star Wars.
- Jan. 29 - Dan Mannix, a noted Oz scholar dies. In addition to
writing books as diverse The Fox and the Hound (1967) on which Disney
based an animated feature, All Creatures Great and Small (1963), The
History of Torture (1986) and Black Cargos: a History of the Atlantic
Slave Trade 1518-1865, Mannix had been a professional swallower of
swords, lighted tubing and fire, and an award-
winning naturalist.
- March 31 - Rosie O'Donnell's television talk show features
Jessica Grove. The young Hilliard, Ohio, actress has been cast as
Dorothy in a New York stage production of The Wizard of Oz
scheduled to open in May.
- April 24 - The Tarpon (FL) Operetta Company stages a revival
of the 1902 Baum/Tietjens “Wizard of Oz” musical.
- May - A Broadway production of The Wizard of Oz based on
the MGM screenplay opens in New York City at Madison Square Gardens.
The role of the Wicked Witch of the West is played by television
actress Roseanne.
- June - Jim VanderNoot receives the L. Frank Baum Memorial Award
from The International Wizard of Oz Club.
- Aug. 8-10 - Aberdeen, S.D., hosts its first annual L. Frank Baum
festival. A chautauqua on Baum's Dakota Heritage, theater presentations
of The Wizard of Oz and "Scraps the Ragtime Girl of Oz,"
children's activities, storytelling, an arts fair, and other activities
are included. Costumed characters based on Baum's character
descriptions wander through the site which is adjacent to Wylie Park.
In the park's Storybook Land, a Land of Oz area is under construction.
The Mitchell Library publishes a catalog of its extensive Oz
collection, and an additional publication serves as a walking tour
program for those interested in visiting Baum sites.
- Radio Free Oz, streaming audio comedy from Peter Bergman, is
available on the Internet. Bergman claims he had a radio show of the
same name 30 ears ago.
- Mad magazine features another Oz parody, "The Buzzard of
Oz."
- Roger Baum, the original author's great grandson, publishes his
latest Oz book, The Lion of Oz and the Red Badge of Courage.
- Oz: The American
Fairyland, video documentary exploring the Oz saga, is released by
Sirocco
Productions.
- Leonard Swann of Sirocco Productions produces a 90-minute video
biography of L. Frank Baum and the Oz saga. During interviews for it,Oz
illustrator Charles Santore provided Swann with so much interesting
footage that he completes a second production about the illustrator's
Oz work.
- Oz and Beyond: The
Fantasy World of L. Frank Baum, by Micheal O. Riley is published by
University of Kansas
Press.
- Jill C. Wheeler’s biography L. Frank Baum: Young at
Heart is published by Abdo & Daughters
1998
- March 28 – New York
“Fashion Week” includes an MGM Wizard of Oz theme fashion show by
designer Isaac Mizrahi
- April 4 – newspaper readers in USA Today
vote for “There’s no place like home” as “the best, most
quotable line from a movie.”
- May 16 – a tribute concert to Judy Garland opens at Carnegie
Hall
- June - Ruth Berman receives The L. Frank Baum Award
from the
International Wizard of Oz Club
- July 13 – Pacific Book Auction Galleries auctions the
collection of Rob Roy McVeigh, including a first edition Emerald
City of Oz in dust jacket that sold for $12,650.
- Aug. 13 – Oz Club member and MGM
film dancer Dorothy Nitch dies.
- Sept. 12 – “A Tribute to the Wizard of Oz”,
a commemoration of the make-up artists of the MGM
film, is hosted by Scott Essman in Hollywood.
- Oct. 10 – Rachel Cosgrove Payes, author of The
Hidden Valley of Oz (1951), The Wicked Witch of Oz
(1993) and
numerous non-Oz books, passes away.
- Nov. 6 - MGM’s
The Wizard of Oz is digitally remastered
and re-released in theatres across the country.
- Dec. 12 – an auction
at the Pacific Design
Center includes the
Cowardly Lion
costume ($250,000) and Wicket Witch’s hat ($50,000) from the MGM
film.
- An exhibit titled “The Science of Oz!” tours science and
technology museums
- Film director Tim Burton is reportedly developing Lost in Oz, a TV drama series; the show
was not produced.
- Robert Halmi, producer of numerous fantasy TV specials and
min-series (“Gulliver’s Travels”, “The 10th Kingdom”,
“Dinotopia”)
is reported to be working on a live-action TV special “The Land of Oz”,
in
which the Nome Kingdom wages war against the Ozites; the show was not
produced.
- Actor Rod Steiger (“In the Heat of the Night”, “On the
Waterfront”, “Doctor Zhivago”) is reported to be working on a script
involving
60-year old Dorothy retuning to Oz, and Elizabeth Taylor is rumored to
be
interested in the lead role; the film was not produced.
- The Oz Club publishes Dick Martin’s
“Oz Sketchbook”
- The Wizard of Oz:
Shaping an Imaginary World by Suzanne Rahn is published by Twayne
Publishers as part of their Twayne’s Masterworks Studies series.
- Visitors from Oz
by Martin Gardener is published by St. Martin’s
Press.
- Dr. Gita Dorothy Moreno, great-granddaughter of L. Frank
Baum, writes The Wisdom of Oz. This
study of spiritual growth using themes from Oz is published by Inner
Connections Press.
1999
- Jan. 1 – A float depicting Munchkinland from the MGM
Wizard of Oz film is included in the
Pasadena Rose Bowl Parade and wins the Grand Marshall’s trophy.
- June -
Michael Gessel receives The L. Frank Baum
Award from the International Wizard of Oz Club.
- June 9 - “Over the Rainbow: Yip Harburg’s America”,
the first musical review of the MGM
Oz lyricist, premiered in Philadelphia.
- June 16 – Judy Garland is ranked as the #8 female “greatest
screen legends of all time” by the American Film Institute (AFI).
- Oct. 10 – Ozma Baum Mantele, granddaughter of L. Frank Baum
and to whom The Lost Princess of Oz
was dedicated, passes away.
- Oct. 19 – Warner Brothers releases the digitally restored
1939 MGM Wizard
of Oz on DVD.
- Nov. 9 – Mabel King, who played the Wicked Witch in both the
stage and film musical versions of The
Wiz, passes away.
- Dec. 10 - One of Judy Garland's gingham dresses used in the
1939 MGM Wizard
of Oz is sold for $324,000 at a Christie's (London)
auction to Garland
collector Michael
Benson.
- The Wizardry of Oz:
The Artistry and Magic of the 1939 M-G-M Classic by Jay Scarfone
and
William Stillman is published by Gramercy Books.
- 100
Years of Oz: A Century of Classic Images from the Wizard of Oz
Collection of
Willard Carroll
by John Fricke is published by Stewart, Tabori & Chang.
- Cooking
in Oz : Kitchen Wizardry and a Century of Marvels from America's
Favorite Tale
by Elaine Willingham and Stephen Cox is published by Cumberland House.
- Susan Ferrara’s
The Family of the Wizard: the
Baums of Syracuse
is published by Xlibris.
© 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