The Wizard of Oz

Das zauberhafte Land, Der Zauberer von Oz

Regie: Victor Fleming, Richard Thorpe, King Vidor, George Cukor, USA, 1939

USA, 1939
Plakatmotiv The Wizard of Oz, © Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM), Fleming Film


Stab und Besetzung

Produktion Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM)
Victor Fleming Film
Produzent Mervyn LeRoy
Arthur Freed [Assistant]
Regisseur Victor Fleming
George Cukor [(Nicht genannt )]
Richard Thorpe [(Nicht genannt )]
King Vidor [(Nicht genannt )]
Regieassistent Al Shenberg
Wallace Worsley
Drehbuch Noel Langley
Kamera Harold Rosson
Musik Herbert Stothart
Harold Arlen
Schnitt Blanche Sewell
Architekt Cedric Gibbons
Set Decoration Cedric Gibbons
Kostümbild Adrian
Optische Effekte Arnold Gillespie
Darsteller Judy Garland [Dorothy [Gale]]
Frank Morgan [Professor Marvel [/The Wizard of Oz/Doorkeeper of Emerald City/The coach dr]
Ray Bolger [Hunk, die Vogelscheuche]
Bert Lahr [Zeke, der Löwe]
Margaret Hamilton [Frl. Gulch / die böse Hexe]
Charley Grapewin [Onkel Henry]
Clara Blandick
Billie Burke [Glinda]
Harry Earles [Lollipop Guild Member]
Jack Haley [Hickory, der Zimmermann]
Jack Haley

Technische Angaben
Drehzeit: 13 Oct 1938--16 Mar 1939
Technische Info: Format: 35 mm - Farbfilm Technicolor,Länge: 101 Minuten, 9167 Fuss, 10 Akte, 24 Bilder pro Sekunde
Tonsystem: mono
Premiere: 12. August 1939 in Oconomowoc
Szenenphoto aus The Wizard of Oz, © Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM), Fleming Film

Szenenphoto aus The Wizard of Oz, © Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM), Fleming Film
Kritiken : "Over the last half century or so, the story of Dorothy and her friends on the Yellow Brick Road to the Emerald City has stamped itself indelibly on the national psyche, thanks to the 1939 film version of The Wizard of Oz. It is, perhaps, the closest thing we have today to a universal fairy tale. Stand outside when a strong wind kicks up and someone is likely to yell out, "Auntie Em! Auntie Em!" The theme music for Miss Gulch's demonic bicycle ride or the march of the Wicked Witch's palace guards come easily to everyone's lips. A scary situation will often be faced with someone saying, "Lions and tigers and bears, oh my!" And the phrase "I have a feeling we're not in Kansas anymore," has become part of everyday parlance and even literary reference as an expression of the strange and wonderful encounters in life. It has been remade, sequeled, prequeled, spoofed, and referenced in dozens of movies, television shows, books (Wicked by Gregory Maguire [Harper Collins, 1996] tells the story from the witch's point of view), and music (notably Elton John's 1973 release Goodbye Yellow Brick Road), but none have had the imaginative power or lasting imprint of the original.

All of this was doubtless unforeseen by L. Frank Baum when he wrote The Wonderful Wizard of Oz (1900), the first of his 16 successful books employing the characters and setting of the fantasy land beyond the rainbow. Baum was a devoted family man and dreamer who had little success at his various vocations ­ store owner, stamp collector, newspaper publisher and actor. His lack of business sense brought just about every venture to ruin, and he filed for bankruptcy only a year before the first Oz book appeared. In writing children's fantasies, he at last found his calling.

The film's producer, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, probably had no clue to its eventual impact, either, although no expense was spared in bringing the story to the screen. Two early silent versions were made in 1910 and 1924, neither of which were particularly successful, and the 1939 version initially lost money, roughly a million dollars on its first release ­ it was expensive to make, there was not a huge market for children'' movies, and the onset of World War II dried up foreign markets for Hollywood product. It took more than a decade for the movie to go into the black, thanks largely to repeated showings on television beginning in the 1950s and video sales years later.

The making of the The Wizard of Oz wasn't exactly smooth sailing. Although the characters of Dorothy and her friends have become forever linked with the actors who created the roles, particularly Judy Garland, the film might have looked very different if original casting plans had been followed. W.C. Fields was the first choice to play the Wizard, but a disagreement between the studio and the notoriously difficult comic actor squelched that deal. Character actress Gale Sondergaard, memorable that same year as the Empress Eugenie in Juarez, was tested for the Wicked Witch. Sondergaard was an accomplished actress (whose career was halted for 20 years thanks to the Hollywood Blacklist), but her exotic beauty was bypassed in favor of Margaret Hamilton's more traditionally "witchy" look. Buddy Ebsen, best known today as Jed Clampett from TV's The Beverly Hillbillies began shooting as the Tin Man, but he was hospitalized with a near-fatal reaction to the silver paint used for the character's make-up and was replaced by Jack Haley (father of producer Jack Haley, Jr., who was once married to Garland's daughter Liza Minnelli).

And, of course, there was the central character herself, a part some sources say MGM head Louis B. Mayer was desperate to give reigning child star Shirley Temple, then under contract to Fox. With Temple unavailable, MGM contract player Judy Garland was brought in to the role that made her a star, won her a special juvenile-performer Oscar, and became an integral part of her legend. The memorable Harold Arlen/E.Y Harburg tune "Over the Rainbow" (which was almost cut from the picture) became Garland's theme and a song that has attained cult status in American music.

Casting was not the only problem. The script was labored over by 16 writers, 13 of whom went uncredited ­ including cast members Jack Haley and Bert Lahr, poet Ogden Nash, and screenwriter Herman J. Mankiewicz, who authored Citizen Kane (1941). The picture went through three directors, weathered legendary mayhem created by its 116 Munchkin extras (a story chronicled in the 1981 Chevy Chase-Carrie Fisher comedy Under the Rainbow), and almost fried Margaret Hamilton in the effects created for the Wicked Witch's fiery exit. Yet despite the difficulties, and the initial lackluster box office, The Wizard of Oz was Oscar-nominated for Best Picture, Color Cinematography, Interior Decoration, and Special Effects and won awards for Best Song ("Over the Rainbow") and Original Score. It also placed tenth on the list of the Greatest American Films of All Time, compiled in 1977 by 35,000 members of the American Film Institute." (Rob Nixon, Turner Classic Movies)
Szenenphoto aus The Wizard of Oz, © Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM), Fleming Film

General Information

The Wizard of Oz is a motion picture produced in the year 1939 as a USA production. The Film was directed by Victor Fleming, Richard Thorpe, with Judy Garland, Frank Morgan, Ray Bolger, Bert Lahr, Margaret Hamilton, in the leading parts. We have currently no synopsis of this picture on file;

Preise und Auszeichnungen
Academy Awards for Best Art Direction (1939): (nominated)
Academy Awards for Best Cinematography (1940): (nominated)
Academy Awards for Best Picture (1939): (nominated)
Academy Awards for Best Score (1939): (won)
Academy Awards for Best Song (1939): (won)
Academy Awards for Best Special Effects (1940): (nominated)

Szenenphoto aus The Wizard of Oz, © Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM), Fleming Film

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