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  1. braids: Dorothy (uncredited) Cecil Holland ... makeup department head (uncredited) Jack Kevan ... assistant makeup artist (uncredited) Lou LaCava ... assistant makeup artist (uncredited) George Lane ... assistant makeup artist (uncredited) Beth Langston ... hair stylist (uncredited)

  2. Box office. $29.7 million. The Wizard of Oz is a 1939 American musical fantasy film produced by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM). An adaptation of L. Frank Baum 's 1900 children's fantasy novel The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, it was primarily directed by Victor Fleming, who left production to take over the troubled Gone with the Wind.

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  4. The Wizard of Oz: Directed by Victor Fleming, King Vidor. With Judy Garland, Frank Morgan, Ray Bolger, Bert Lahr. Young Dorothy Gale and her dog Toto are swept away by a tornado from their Kansas farm to the magical Land of Oz, and embark on a quest with three new friends to see the Wizard, who can return her to her home and fulfill the others' wishes.

    • (417K)
    • Adventure, Family, Fantasy
    • Victor Fleming, George Cukor, Mervyn LeRoy
    • 1939-08-25
    • The Wizard Is Here to Delight The Kids
    • The Wizard of Oz Fun Facts
    • Behind The Scenes of The Wizard of Oz: Making A Classic Movie
    • ‘Wizard of Oz’ Star Judy Garland Is An Old Trouper
    • Fantasy in Fashion: The Wizard of Oz Costumes

    Oldsters, too, should enjoy Dorothy’s adventures with the scarecrow, Tin Woodman and the Cowardly Lion in the Wondrous Land of Oz By Kaspar Monahan – The Pittsburgh Press (Pennsylvania) August 19, 1939 “We’re off to see the Wizard, the wonderful Wizard of Oz, ta-da-de-da-te-tah-de-dum-de-dee –” Dancing along a higyhway of golden bricks, the “main s...

    It’s true! That truth is stranger than fiction! IT’S TRUE! that the largest number of midgets ever gathered together anywhere in the world, were assembled to play the Munchkins in M-G-M’s ‘The Wizard of Oz’,” says Wiley Padan . . . “Sixty-two shades of all possible colors were used in the large Munchkin Village set. “The screen version of L. Frank ...

    By Dixie Willson, Photoplay – August 1939 And so M-G-M’s art department was given a script labeled “Wizard of Oz”; a movie script of that wondrous book, that grave and gay mixture of nonsense and philosophy which for forty years has been a juvenile best seller. At last it was to be breathed into life in as miraculous fashion as ever story or pictur...

    They call Judy Garland a new film star. She is — with eight years’ vaudeville behind her By Lucie Neville – Salt Lake Tribune (Utah) January 21, 1940 SOME of the cinema debutantes descended of footlight ancestry have an awfully hard time these days recalling their A B C’s were learned from headlines in Variety and that their earliest play-mates wer...

    by Gwenn Walters The influences that sway the world of fashion have been many, ranging from the brilliant colors of a Van Gogh masterpiece through the surrealism of Salvador Dali, the discoveries of archaeologists in ruined temples, cataclysmic world events, famous books, the primitive attire of hula dancers! In 1939, some of the major fashion infl...

  5. Dorothy is a young girl from Kansas and the novel’s protagonist. She lives with her Aunt Em and Uncle Henry, who are surprised that Dorothy can live so cheerfully on the gray Kansas prairies. When a cyclone carries her (and her dog Toto) to the strange Land of Oz, Dorothy immediately resolves to find a way back home.

  6. Dec 23, 2023 · Ashfaan. December 23, 2023. In the 1939 movie The Wizard of Oz, Dorothy was played by Judy Garland, who received an Academy Juvenile Award for her performance. Since she was sixteen years old at the time of filming, Garland's maturing figure was bound into a figure-hiding corset. Takedown request View complete answer on en.wikipedia.org.

  7. The third screen Dorothy may be seen here at the far left in the penultimate moment of Baum’s fantasy feature. Among those to her left: Frank Moore (the Scarecrow), Mildred Harris (Button-Bright), Pierre Couderc (the Tin Woodman), Vivian Reed (Princess Gloria), and J. Charles Haydon (credited as J. Charles Hayden; The Wizard of Oz).]