100th Anniversary of Oz & 150th Birthday of L. Frank Baum
2000
- Jan. 14 – Girl,
Interrupted, a film in which a character played by Angelina Jolie
is a
devoted reader of Oz books, premiers.
- Jan. 30 – During the broadcast of
Super Bowl XXXIV, FedEx
debuts their TV commercial showing a delivery truck landing in
Munchkinland.
- April 24 - The Library of Congress opens a major exhibit “The
Wizard of Oz: An American Fairy Tale”, attended by at least 70,000
people and
featured on ABC World News Tonight.
- May 15 - The 100th Anniversary of the publication of The Wonderful Wizard of Oz.
- May 24 – a pair of ruby slippers from
the 1939 MGM Wizard of
Oz are sold for $666,000 to
David Elkouby at auction by Christie’s East; the slippers had
previously been
on display at the great Movie Ride at the Disney/MGM
Studios Theme Park (FL)
- June – The New York Public Library host an exhibit “100
Years of the Wonderful Wizard of Oz” in the Children’s Room.
- June 17 – an exhibit of Oz memorabilia titled “A Century of
Oz” opens at the Des Plains (IL) Historical
Museum.
- June 29 - A unique miniature Oscar statuette that was
given
to Judy Garland for her performance in the 1939 MGM
Wizard of Oz is offered for sale for
$3 million by L.A.
autograph dealer
Nate Sanders. Garland's
ex-husband Sid Luft denies involvement in consigning the award, the
sale of
which was eventually blocked by a judge.
- July 19 – a copy of The
Wizard of Oz book signed by all the principal cast members of the
1939 MGM
film sells at auction for $49,300.
- July 20-23 – The Oz Club hosts the “Centennial Convention”
at the University of Indiana
- Bloomington, with over
400
attendees and four days packed with Oz programming ranging from
scholarly to
popular. The New York Times
featured the convention on their front page.
- June 22 – Jane Albright receives The L. Frank Baum Award from
the International Wizard of Oz Club at the Centennial Convention.
- Oct. – Chicago
hosts a month-long celebration commemorating the centennial of the
publication
of The Wonderful Wizard of Oz in
their city.
- Nov. 4 – “A Century of Oz”, and exhibit of more than 500
items from the collection of Willard Carroll, opens at the Los Angeles
Central
Library.
- Nov. 30 – Royal Historian of Oz Eloise Jarvis McGraw, author
of Merry Go Round in Oz and The Forbidden
Fountain of Oz passes
away.
- Baum’s “The Life & Adventures of Santa Claus” is
produced as an 80 minute animated film.
- “Lion of Oz” animated adaptation of the story by Roger S.
Baum is released on video by Sony Wonder.
- The Annotated
Wizard of Oz Centennial Edition by Michael Patrick Hearn is
published by W. W.
Norton.
- Baum's Road to Oz: The Dakota Years by
Nancy Tystad Koupal is published by the South
Dakota State Historical Society Press.
- The Hidden Prince of Oz by Gina Wickwar
and
illustrated by Anna-Maria Cool wins the Baum centennial manuscript
contest from the International Wizard of Oz.
- Oz :
The Hundredth Anniversary Celebration by Peter Glassmen is
published by Harper Collins.
- Oz
Before the Rainbow : L. Frank Baum's The Wonderful Wizard of Oz on
Stage and
Screen to 1939
by Mark Evan Swartz is published by Johns Hopkins University Press.
2001
- Feb. 25 –Life with
Judy Garland: Me and My Shadows, a
television special starring Judy Davis and Tammy Blanchard in the title
role,
airs.
- March 8 – “Somewhere Over the Rainbow” is ranked as the
number 1 song of the 20th century by the National Endowment
of the
Arts and the Recording Industry Association of America.
- March 28 – George Gibson, scenic art director of the 1939 MGM
Wizard of Oz dies.
- May - John Kearney’s sculpture of the “Cowardly Lion” is
installed in Chicago’s Oz
Park.
- June – Willard Carroll and Michael O. Riley receive The L.
Frank Baum Award from the International Wizard of Oz Club.
- July 3 – Memories of
Oz, a half-hour documentary on the 1939 MGM
Wizard of Oz, airs on Turner Classic
Movies cable channel.
- Oct. 11 – a copy of a first-edition of The Wonderful
Wizard of Oz, inscribed with four lines of verse from
Baum to his “sweetheart” Beth, sold for $152,500 in Christie's (NY)
"Masterpieces
of Modern Literature" auction.
- Nov. 4 – Emmy Awards are given to Judy David for lead
actress and Tammy Blanchard for best supporting actress, both for
portraying
Judy Garland in Life with Judy Garland: Me
and My Shadows
- I, Toto: Autobiography of Terry,
the Dog Who Was Toto by Willard
Carroll is published by Stewart, Tabori & Chang.
- Eloise Jarvis McGraw’s Rundelstone
of Oz is published by the Hungry Tiger Press.
2002
- Jan. 5 – The Judy Garland biopic Life with Judy
Garland: Me
and My Shadows is recognized with an American Film Institute award.
- Jan. 11 – The Ryan Adams music video Answering Bell,
which evokes imagery of the 1939 MGM
Wizard of Oz, is shot in Long Island
City (NY).
- Jan. 26 - an Oz puppet
show titled Munchkin Holiday,
produced by Rob Papineau and the Pippin Puppets, opens at the Theatre
Guild in Livonia-Redford, MI
- March – The Oz Club’s Centennial Convention (July 20-24, 2000) wins an Exemplary
Program Award from the University Continuing Education Association.
- April 7 – A multimedia dance production of The Patchwork
Girl of Oz is staged by Louise Reichlin and Dancers at the Los
Angeles Theater Center.
- April - The Matilda Joslyn Gage Foundation purchases the
Fayetteville (NY) house in which Maud Gage and L. Frank Baum were
married.
- May 14 – “Adrian: American Glamour”, an exhibit of fashion
work of the 1939 MGM Wizard
of Oz costume designer Gilbert Adrian, opens at the
Metropolitan Museum of Art.
- May 16 – The extensive collection of Oz Club member Irene
Fisher is auctioned by Swann Galleries (New York)
- June 6 – “Judy Garland: Princess of Oz”, an exhibit of
memorabilia on the star of the 1939 MGM
Wizard of Oz, opens at the Hollywood
Entertainment Museum and runs for 3 months.
- June 22 – Robert A. Baum, Jr. receives The L. Frank Baum
Award from the International Wizard of Oz Club.
- June 29 – “Lisbeth Zwerger’s Land of Oz”, an exhibit on the
Austrian illustrator’s watercolors and drawings for her interpretation
of The
Wizard of Oz, opens at the Normal Rockwell Museum in Stockbridge,
MA.
- June 14 – the TV soap opera Passions begins a
week-long “Wizard of Oz” storyline.
- July 4 – The Sing-Along
Wizard of Oz is broadcast on Turner Classic Movies cable TV
- Sep 21 – Robert Sabuda is awarded the Meggendorfer Prize by
the Movable Book Society for his centennial pop-up edition of The Wonderful Wizard of Oz.
- The Historian's Wizard of Oz: Reading L. Frank Baum's
Classic as a Political and Monetary Allegory by Ranjit S. Dighe is
published by Praeger Publishers.
- Katherine M. Rogers’ biography L.
Frank Baum: Creator of Oz is published by St. Martin's
Press.
- The Woggle-Bug - The Complete Sheet Music of
the 1905 Musical Comedy is published by Hungry Tiger
Press.
2003
- Jan. 10 – Evelyn Copelman Spivak, whose illustrations for The Wizard of Oz in 1956 were the first
published since W. W. Denslow’s 1900 originals, passes away at the age
of 83.
- April – a pair of Oz-inspired ruby-encrusted sandals go on
sale for $1,590,000 at Harrods London.
- May 28 –Wicked, a
Stephen Schwartz musical based on the novel by Gregory Maguire,
previews in San Francisco’s
Curran Theatre.
- June 3 – The Wicked Witch of the West, as portrayed by
Margaret Hamilton in the 1939 MGM Wizard of Oz is voted as the 4th
worst movie villain by the American Film Institute.
- June 21 – Peter Glassman receives The L. Frank Baum Award from
the International Wizard of Oz Club.
- July 11 – the first known stage production of Dot
and Tot of Merryland, written by
Jennifer Kirkeby with music and lyrics by Michael Pretasky, opens at
the Stages
Theatre Company in Hopkins, MN.
- Sept. 11 – actor John Ritter, whose sensitive portrayal of
L. Frank Baum in the 1990 TV biopic Dreamer
of Oz, passes away.
- Oct. 30 – the musical Wicked
opens on Broadway at the Gershwin Theatre.
- Nov – The Oz Museum in Wamego, KS
opens its doors.
- Linda Sunshine’s All Things Oz :
The Wonder, Wit, and Wisdom
of The Wizard of Oz is published
by Clarkson N. Potter.
- The International Wizard of Oz Club
publishes Sissajig and Other Surprises, a collection of writings by Ruth Plumly Thompson.
2004
- Jan. – The Boulder (CO) Public Library holds an “Oz Films of
the Silent Era” film festival.
- Jan. 26 – the Oz collection of Club member Jane Albright is
featured on the Sunflower Broadband Channel’s TV show Home
and Away.
- Jan. 31 – The Chicago Public Library exhibit “Theatre That
Works: A Chicago Story” features materials from the 1902 Wizard
of Oz musical and images of actors Montgomery and Stone in
the advertising.
- Feb. – The Lawrence (KS) Public Library featured The
Wonderful Wizard of Oz in its
month-long “Reading Across Lawrence” events program.
- Feb. 7 – The Cleveland (OH) Home and Garden Show features a
tribute to The Wizard of Oz.
- Feb. 13 – artist, Oz Club member and L. Frank Baum award
winner Irene Fisher passes away.
- Feb. 25. - Judy
Garland: By Myself, featuring the words and performances of the MGM
Wizard of Oz star, is broadcast on
the PBS as part of the American Masters series.
The film is produced by former Oz Club President John Fricke.
- March 6 – The exhibit Wizard
of Oz Collectibles by Janie Stowers Craddock opens at the Bob
Evans Farm
Homestead Museum
in Rio Grande, OH.
- April – The Wonderful
Wizard of Oz is the center of the “Steamboat Reads” project of the
Community
Libraries of Steamboat Springs (CO).
- May 24 – Edward Wagenknecht, author of the pioneering Oz
assessment Utopia Americana (1929),
dies at the age of 104.
- June 6 – Wicked
wins three Tony Awards, given to Idina Menzel (Best Performance by a
Leading
Actress), Eugene Lee (Best Scenic Design), and Susan Hilfert (Best
Costume
Design).
- June 19 – Patrick Maund receives The L. Frank Baum Award from
the International Wizard of Oz Club.
- June 19 – Oz Club charter member, Club Secretary, and Royal
Historian Fred M. Meyer passes away.
- June 22 – “Over the Rainbow” is selected as the best film
song of all time by the American Film Institute, while “Ding, Dong, the
Witch
is dead earns the #82 spot.
- Sept. 6 – Tiny Doll, Munchkin actress in the 1939 MGM
Wizard of Oz, passes away at age 90.
- Sept. 19 - Judy
Garland: By Myself, produced by former Oz Club President John
Fricke, wins
3 Emmy Awards.
- Oct. 10 – The NASCAR Nextel Cup race at the Kansas Speedway
(Kansas City, KS)
features cars decorated with Wizard of Oz
images. Collectible die cast model cars
are issued.
- Oct. 14 – a musical version of Was, based on the
Oz-themed novel by Geoff Ryan, is staged by the
Human Race Theatre Company in Dayton, OH.
- Dec. 10 – The Life and
Adventures of Santa Claus, a new musical adaptation by Greg Atkins
and
Diane King Vann, premiers at the Laguna (CA) Playhouse.
2005
- Jan. 6 – An exhibit of many Oz collectibles from the
collection of Club member David Kempel opens at the Monroe (WI) Arts
Center.
- Feb. 10 – Cynthia Baum Tassini, niece of L. Frank Baum, dies
at the age of 95. The Emerald
City of Oz is dedicated to her, as “Her Royal Highness,
Cynthia the II of Syracuse”.
- Feb. 13 – The original cast album for Wicked
wins the Grammy award for “Best Musical Show Album”.
- April 1 – An auction by Profiles in History includes the
Wicked Witch hat worn by Margaret Hamilton and a Winged Monkey
figuring, which
sold for $54,625 and $14, 950 respectively.
- April 27 - The blue and white gingham dress worn by July
Garland in 1939 MGM “Wizard of Oz”
is sold
for $252,000 by Bonhams & Butterfield auction house.
- April 28 – the U.S. Postal Service releases a 37-cent
postage stamp featuring E. Y. “Yip” Harburg, lyricist for the 1939 MGM
Wizard of Oz.
- May 19 – Syracuse (NY) celebrates the 150th birthday
of L. Frank Baum with a new Oz festival called “OZ-MANIA”.
- May 20 - The Muppet’s
Wizard of Oz, a 2-hour TV special, premiers on ABC.
- June 3 - John Kearney’s cast bronze sculpture of the “Scarecrow”
is installed in Chicago’s Oz Park.
- June 11 – Angelica Carpenter and David Maxine receive The L.
Frank Baum Award from the International Wizard of Oz Club.
- June 16 – “Unauthorized Magic in Oz”, a theatre and puppet
show by Edward Einhorn, premiers at St. Ann's Warehouse theatre in
Brooklyn,
NY.
- June 24 – The Adirondack Scenic Railroad offers “The
Wonderful Weekend of Oz!”, with a train trip from Utica (NY) “to Oz”.
- Aug. 28 – a pair of ruby slippers from the 1939 MGM
Wizard of Oz are stolen from the Judy
Garland Museum in Grand Rapids, MI.
- Sept. 2 – the public radio show “The Riverwalk” features
music from the 1939 MGM film in
“Silver
Shoes & Green Spectacles: A Jazz interpretation of The
Wizard of Oz”.
- Oct. 25 – The Wizard
of Oz Three-Disc Collector’s Edition DVD
of the MGM musical is released from
Warner
Home Video, and includes commentary by John Fricke and interviews with
many
other Oz Club members.
- Oct. 28 – The village of Chagrin Falls (OH) holds their
first Wizard of Oz Festival.
- Oct. 29 – John Fricke hosts a “Wizard of Oz Symposium” at
Loew’s Lincoln Square Theatre in Manhattan.
- Nov. 4 – Northwestern University holds a symposium titled
“From the Wonderful World. . . to WAS” focusing on Baum and Oz stage
adaptations.
- Nov. 25 – The Life and
Adventures of Santa Claus, a new musical premiers at the First
Stage
Childrens’ Theater in Milwaukee, WI.
- Daniel Kinske and Meinhardt Raabe
author Memories Of A Munchkin: An Illustrated Walk Down The Yellow
Brick
Road, published by Backstage Books.
- Gregory Maguire’s Son of a Witch,
a sequel to Wicked, is published by William
Morrow.
- Wicked: The Grimmerie - A
Behind-the-Scenes Look at the Hit Broadway Musical
is published by Hyperion.
2006
- April 10 – Gonzaga University's
Foley Center
library opens an exhibit
“Beyond Oz: Highlights from the Collection of Currie Corbin”.
- April 12 – Inver Hills Community College (MN) hosts an L.
Frank Baum Sesquicentennial Conference.
- May 2 - The Wizard Of
Oz is honored with a Saturn Award by the Academy
of Science Fiction,
Fantasy, and
Horror Film for being the “Best DVD
Classic
Film Release” of the year.
- May 15 - L. Frank Baum's 150th Birthday.
- June 10 – The U. S. Postal Service releases a Judy Garland
stamp as part of their “Legends of Hollywood” series, on the day that
would
have been the actress’s 84th birthday.
- June – David Moyer receives The L. Frank Baum Award from the
International Wizard of Oz Club.
- June – The Daily Ozmapolitan debuts at
http://ozmapolitan.spaces.live.com
- June 14 – premier of Babylon Heights,
a new play set in Hollywood
during the filming of the 1939 MGM
Wizard of
Oz and exploring the urban legend of the “hanging man” on the set.
- July 7 – The New Century Opera Company of Tarpon Springs
(FL) restages the 1902 Wizard of Oz
musical.
- July 11 – “The Wonderful Art of Oz” exhibit, featuring 72
works of numerous Oz illustrators and artists, opens at the Eric
Carle Museum
in Amherst, MA.
- July 12 – a Land of Oz section opens in the Universal
Studios Japan (Osaka)
amusement
park
- Sept. 8 – “The Writer's Muse: L. Frank Baum and the Hotel
del Coronado”, and exhibit of Baum and Oz items, opens at San
Diego State University.
- Dec. 15 - The Cowardly Lion outfit worn by Bert Lahr in the
1939 MGM Wizard
of Oz is sold for $700,000 at a Profiles in History’s Hollywood
Memorabilia
auction.
- Dec. 18 - Judy Garland's 1935 childhood recordings failed to
sell at a Los Angeles
auction Bonhams
and Butterfields, with the high bid of $22,500 falling well short of
the
$40,000 expected price.
- The International Wizard of Oz Club
publishes The Collected Stories of
L. Frank Baum.
2007
- Mar. 9 – Orange Park, FL,
is the latest town to host an Oz festival with their “Southeast Wizard
of Oz
Festival”.
- April 6 - A winkie guard costume from the 1939 MGM
film (one of only two known to still exist) sold at auction for
$115,000.
- May 7 – “The Wonderful Wizard of Song”, a multimedia
production of Harold Arlen music, begins a twenty-city tour.
- May 18 - John Kearney’s sculpture of “Dorothy and Toto” is
installed in Chicago’s Oz
Park.
- July 7 – Nancy
Tystad Koupal receives The L. Frank Baum Award from the
International
Wizard of Oz Club.
- July 27 - William Tuttle, who worked as an (uncredited)
assistant makeup artist on the 1939 MGM
Wizard of Oz passes away in Santa Monica
(CA) at the age of 95.
© 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