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L. Frank Baum: The Man Behind The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, Study notes of Printing

An insightful look into the life of L. Frank Baum, the author of the beloved children's book, The Wonderful Wizard of Oz. From his childhood in Chittenango, New York, to his experiences in Aberdeen, South Dakota, and Chicago, Baum's imagination and determination led him to create one of the most iconic stories in literature. Discover how Baum's personal experiences, including his failed business ventures, his love for science and technology, and his strong-willed wife, influenced the creation of his magical land of Oz.

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Written by: L. Frank Baum
Illustrated by: W.W. Denslow
Screenplay by: Noel Langley,
Florence Ryerson, and Edgar Allen
Woolf
Directed by: Victor Fleming
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Written by: L. Frank Baum

Illustrated by: W.W. Denslow

Screenplay by: Noel Langley, Florence Ryerson, and Edgar Allen Woolf

Directed by: Victor Fleming

L. Frank Baum

  • Born: Chittenango, New York on May 15, 1856
  • Benjamin Ward Baum was a successful businessman and oil speculator. They lived in a large estate east of Syracuse, called Rose Lawn.
  • Frank and his brothers played in lush fields and nearby woods between being tutored by traveling teachers. Frank’s imagination flourished. A scarecrow he once saw, inspired, Scarecrow in his stories.
  • Frank’s father bought him a printing press. He printed his own paper called: The Rose Lawn Home Journal.
  • Frank begin writing plays and managed theatre companies his father owned.

L. Frank Baum

  • Frank was inspired by the technology and beauty of the Chicago World Fair. He saw bright electricity, the first Ferris wheel, and a moving camera prototype.
  • In 1877, he published his first book, Mother Goose in Prose. It was followed by Father Goose, His Book.
  • Frank was telling a story about characters named, Dorothy, the Scarecrow, and the Tin Woodman when he discovered the name of the magic land they would travel to. He looked at the bottom of a filling cabinet draw, it said: O-Z.

The Wonderful Wizard of Oz

  • Written by L. Frank Baum and illustrated by W. W. Denslow.
  • Published: 1990
  • Baum and Denslow wanted the book in color. The publisher was concerned about the cost to print the color plates. Baum and Denslow paid for the additional cost to include color plates.
  • Adding color helped make the book a huge successes.
  • The Wonderful Wizard of Oz was considered America’s first original fairy tale.
  • There were 13 written sequels.

L. Frank Baum, the Real Wizard

  • Baum’s child home was surrounded by flowers, just like the lavish and colorful plants describe in the book.
  • Baum saw a scarecrow that later became one of his major characters.
  • Baum wrote about a tornado that picked up a house in his newspaper. This story was featured many times.
  • The gray dark Dakota years inspired the grayed description of Kansas.
  • Baum’s mother-in-law was an advocate for women’s right, and inspired the strong-willed Dorothy.
  • Baum loved science and technology. We he went to the Chicago World Fair, the beautiful sparkling city inspired his creation of Emerald City.

The Wizard of OZ (1939)

  • Screenplay by: Noel Langley, Florence Ryerson, and Edgar Allen Woolf
  • Directed by: Victor Flemming
  • Starring: Judy Garland (Dorothy). Frank Morgan (The Wizard), Ray Bolger (The Scarecrow), Bert Lahr (The Cowardly Lion), Jack Haley (The Tin Man), Billie Burke (Glinda) , Margaret Hamilton (The Wicked Witch of the West) , and Toto.
  • Release Date: MGM Studios, August 25, 1939
  • Re-released: TV, CBS, 1959-

The Wizard of OZ (Technicolor)

  • In 1939, color film stock still had not been invented. However, The Wizard of OZ used the very expensive Technicolor company cameras which incorporated a 3-strip color process.
  • Technicolor did not film in color. It used red, green, and blue filters that recorded the same scene through each different filter. When placed together, the film strip created vibrant colors.
  • Prior to Technicolor, film makers would have to individually color film strips by hand. This was very expensive.
  • For the colors to be more visible, the film needed intense lighting. MGM used 150 36-inch arc lamps. It cost the film over $220,000.
  • The temperatures on the set sometimes reached over 100 degrees F. The lights also caused sometimes permanent eye damage.

The Wonderful Wizard of Oz (Book)

vs.

The Wizard of Oz (Film)

Emerald City

  • In Baum’s book, Emerald City was inspired by Baum’s 1893 visit to the White City at the Chicago World’s Fair.
  • Also in the book, characters had to wear glasses that made everything appear to be green. However, the city was not green. It was a trick Oz crafted so people would believe their city was different than other cities.
  • “No more than in any other city,” replied Oz; “but when you wear green spectacles, why of course everything you see looks green to you” (Baum 137).
  • To make Emerald City seem beautifully different than other cities, everything is color—even the horses are a different color.
  • The cabby in the Emerald City says, “No—and never will again, I fancy. There’s only one of him, and he’s it. He’s the Horse of a Different Color, you’ve heard tell about” (Langley, Ryerson, Woolf 156).

The Two Dorothy’s

Book: Dorothy was inspired and

representational of the strong pioneer

woman. She was often rescuing characters

rather than be rescued.

Film: Dorothy is the damsel in distress, and

often saved by other (Male) characters

Book: Dorothy is a young girl.

Film: Dorothy is a teenager. Judy Garland

had to wear a corset to make her look

younger.

Book/Film: Dorothy is an orphan. She

follows the traditional hero myth of having

to overcome being parentless.