Showing posts with label The Wizard of Oz. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Wizard of Oz. Show all posts

Sunday, August 17, 2014

75 Years of Dorothy Gale


"For nearly forty years this story has given faithful service to the Young in Heart; 
and Time has been powerless to put its kindly philosophy out of fashion. 
To those of you who have been faithful to it in return...and to the 
Young in Heart...we dedicate this picture."

Do you remember the first time you saw The Wizard of Oz? I know I don't. It's one of those movies that has always been there, a staple of most peoples' childhood. Growing up in the 90s, it was a big deal when TBS or whatever station would play The Wizard of Oz on TV. It only happened once, maybe twice, a year! I grew up a little girl in Kansas, mostly living in the country & tornadoes were just a part of life. It was fun to see Dorothy growing up in Kansas on my television, with the Hollywood version of a tornado. Are you shocked that's not quite how they look, how the twister looks on The Wizard of Oz? While it's been fun being a real life version of Dorothy (okay, in my head I am), trust me when I tell you the The Wizard of Oz references I hear from people when I tell them where I am from are so overplayed and totally not funny. But my fake laugh has gotten pretty believable!



An early costume test for Dorothy


A Scarecrow makeup test


Flying monkey costume test


Buddy Ebsen in a Tin Man costume test.
He was the original Tin Man but was allergic to the aluminum
makeup, therefore replaced by Jack Haley.


Dorothy and her sidekick, Toto


Judy Garland looks stunning in this photo


 "A place where there isn't any trouble.
Do you suppose there is such a place...?"


"What makes the elephant charge his tusk in the misty mist, 
or the dusky dusk? What makes the muskrat guard his musk? Courage!"


"Some people without brains do an awful lot of talking, don't they?"


"I'll see you reach the Wizard, whether I get a heart or not."


"And now, my beauties, something with poison in it, I think."


"Don't get excited. Obstacles make a better picture."
-Director Victor Fleming


The Wizard of Oz is said to be the most watched film
in history.


The Wizard of Oz premiered at Grauman's in Hollywood on August 15, 1939.
It was released nationally on August 25, 1939.


It was not a box office success, contrary to belief.
It wasn't until it's re-release in 1949.


Walt Disney originally wanted to make The Wizard of Oz into a movie after
the success of his Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs.
However, MGM owned the rights to the book.


This issue of Movie Life was released prior to the release
of The Wizard of Oz. It featured photos of Judy Garland's
early life.


"Gaiety! Glory! Glamour!"
That pretty much sums it up in this 1939 movie poster.


A 1970 reunion of Ray Bolger, Jack Haley, and Margaret Hamilton.
At the time, they were the last remaining main characters from the film.


They still had it.

The best thing about The Wizard of Oz is how timeless it is. Here we are, 75 years after its initial release, and I can sit with my toddler and watch it, and he is thoroughly entertained. I know it will continue on for generations. It's so easy to get lost in that wonderful Technicolor land of Oz with Dorothy and all her friends. We feel Dorothy's sadness when she can't get home to Aunt Em and Uncle Henry on their farm in Kansas. We feel elated along with her when she finally clicks her heels together and wakes up in her own bed. 

My love for Oz will never end.

Until next time,

Sunday, June 22, 2014

...away above the chimney tops, that's where you'll find me.

It's been 45 years since Judy Garland passed away. Instead of focusing on her tragic end, I want to celebrate the joy she brought to Old Hollywood and to millions of people throughout the decades. 

Judy was born Frances Ethel Gumm on June 10, 1922 in Grand Rapids, Minnesota. She was the youngest of three girls, and her family nicknamed her "Baby". The three Gumm sisters started performing song and dance routines as young girls in their Episcopal Church and in their father's movie theater. In 1926, the Gumm family moved to California, where it didn't take long for the girls to get started in motion pictures. In 1934, the sisters changed their name to Garland, and they appeared together until 1935 when oldest sister Mary Jane was married.


Mary Jane, Dorothy Virginia, and Frances Ethel, 
1920s


The Gumm Sisters

Judy eventually signed a contract at age 13 with Metro Goldwyn Mayer. Judy would soon garner attention by singing her rendition of You Made Me Love You (I Didn't Want To Do It) to Clark Gable at his birthday party. It would lead to a part in Broadway Melody of 1938 where she would sing the same song to a photo of Gable. 


Judy, age 13. Judy always felt out of place & not as beautiful
as the girls she went to school with at MGM, including Ava Gardner, Elizabeth
Taylor, and Lana Turner. 


Judy c. 1935 

Judy would soon start her series of musicals with fellow MGM star and lifelong friend, Mickey Rooney, in 1937, starting with Love Finds Andy Hardy. The pair would go on to appear in 13 films together. However popular the Andy Hardy series was, Judy's life would change when she was cast as the lead character, Dorothy, in 1939's The Wizard of Oz. It's one of the all time greats, a film every child has seen. I was born and raised in Kansas, just like Dorothy, so The Wizard of Oz means a great deal to me. 


Mickey and Judy in Love Finds Andy Hardy.

"I'm not a witch at all! I'm Dorothy Gale, from Kansas."

The 1940s were a plethora of musicals for Judy Garland. Standing under 5 feet tall, the little girl with the big voice delighted audiences in musical films such as For Me and My Gal (with Gene Kelly), Babes on Broadway (with Rooney), Meet Me In St Louis, and Easter Parade (with Fred Astaire), among many others. 


"I was born at the age of twelve on the MGM lot."
-Judy Garland


Judy was so gorgeous in the 1940s.




"I made all these great musicals with Judy Garland. It was all
about me going into a barn and saying, 'Let's put
on a show.' That's what me and Judy did."
-Mickey Rooney


Gene Kelly and Judy in For Me and My Gal, 1942


Presenting Lily Mars, 1943
  

Publicity still as Esther Smith in Meet Me In St. Louis, 1944


With Meet Me In St. Louis co-star Tom Drake


Judy and friend Frank Sinatra. Frank would be Judy's 
daughter Lorna Luft's godfather.


With Easter Parade (1948) co-star, Fred Astaire

Judy met her first husband, Vincente Minnelli, on the set of her 1944 picture Meet Me In St. Louis. Vincente was the director, and they began a romantic relationship during filming. The couple married on June 15, 1945. Their only daughter, Liza, was born in March 1946. The pair divorced in 1951.


Vincente and Judy married in her mother's backyard.


Judy and baby Liza.


“It was no great tragedy being Judy Garland's daughter.

 I had tremendously interesting childhood 

years -- except they had little to do with being a child.”

-Liza Minnelli




Judy and Vincente divorced in 1951. Soon after, Judy employed Sid Luft as her manager, and would soon begin a relationship. They were married in 1952. Sid and Judy had two children together, Lorna and Joey. They divorced in 1963 after a seemingly rocky relationship. Judy would marry three more times in her life.


"When we got married in the early '50s, Judy was still very beautiful. 
She was only 5-foot tall -- just a shrimp of a girl, really -- but she 
had a very sensuous body, and up close, her skin was 
like porcelain, pure white. I was crazy about her. 
She had incredibly kissable lips."
-Sid Luft


Judy and Sid with Liza, Joey, and Lorna, 1960s

Unfortunately, Judy succumbed to pill addiction while living in London in 1969. She died in the early morning hours of June 22. It is said that there was a tornado around the same time she died near Salina, Kansas (which is right near my hometown) late at night on June 21. Maybe it's true, maybe it isn't, but I like to believe it is. Judy was a tornado of a woman, in a good way, and her presence and voice are missed terribly. 

 
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