![]() ![]() I have begun with these personal reminiscences because “The Wizard of Oz” is a film whose driving force is the inadequacy of adults, even of good adults a film that shows us how the weakness of grownups forces children to take control of their own destinies, and so, ironically, grow up themselves. It took me half a lifetime to work out that the Great Oz’s apologia pro vita sua fitted my father equally well-that he, too, was a good man but a very bad Wizard. And when the curtain fell away and his growing offspring discovered, like Dorothy, the truth about adult humbug, it was easy for me to think, as she did, that my Wizard must be a very bad man indeed. My father, Anis Ahmed Rushdie, was a magical parent of young children, but he was prone to explosions, thunderous rages, bolts of emotional lightning, puffs of dragon smoke, and other menaces of the type also practiced by Oz, the Great and Powerful, the first Wizard De-luxe. The Wizard, however, was right there in Bombay. It may be hard to believe, but England seemed as wonderful a prospect as Oz. More than that: I remember that when the possibility of my going to school in England was mentioned it felt as exciting as any voyage beyond the rainbow. I remember that “The Wizard of Oz”-the film, not the book, which I didn’t read as a child-was my very first literary influence. My bad memory-what my mother would call a “forgettery”-is probably just as well. I have forgotten almost everything about his adventures, except for an encounter with a talking pianola, whose personality is an improbable hybrid of Judy Garland, Elvis Presley, and the “playback singers” of Hindi movies, many of which made “The Wizard of Oz” look like kitchen-sink realism. The rainbow is broad, as wide as the sidewalk, and is constructed like a grand staircase. It was about a ten-year-old Bombay boy who one day happens upon a rainbow’s beginning, a place as elusive as any pot-of-gold end zone, and as rich in promises. Maybe he didn’t really find the story, in which case he had succumbed to the lure of fantasy, and this was the last of the many fairy tales he told me or else he did find it, and hugged it to himself as a talisman and a reminder of simpler times, thinking of it as his treasure, not mine-his pot of nostalgic parental gold. Shortly before my father’s death, in 1987, he claimed to have found a copy moldering in an old file, but, despite my pleadings, he never produced it, and nobody else ever laid eyes on the thing. Prints and Photographs Division, Library of Congress.I wrote my first story in Bombay at the age of ten its title was “Over the Rainbow.” It amounted to a dozen or so pages, dutifully typed up by my father’s secretary on flimsy paper, and eventually it was lost somewhere on my family’s mazy journeyings between India, England, and Pakistan. ![]() ![]() Hamlin's "musical extravaganza," "The Wizard of Oz,"ġ903. Lithograph Company, "The Tin Man," poster for Fred Motion Picture,īroadcasting and Recorded Sound Division, Library of Congress.Ĭ. Credit: Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, "Publicity still showing main charactersįrom 1939 version of 'The Wizard of Oz' ," 1939. Prints and Photographs Division, Library of Congress.ī. Credit: Carqueville Litho Company, "The Wonderful Wizard of Oz", 1900. Visit the site and explore the wonders of Oz.Ī. In celebration of the Wizard's 100th anniversary, the Library of Congress has created an online exhibition, The Wizard of Oz: An American Fairy Tale. ![]() Of Depression-era audiences as well as the subsequent generations that Which quickly became a Hollywood sensation, capturing the imagination Movie screen and in 1939 Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer released its film version, It was a hit and moved on to New York in 1903 to become one of The Oz books were so well loved that Baum's publishers continued By the time he died in 1919, Baum had writtenġ3 other books set in Oz, including the Ozma of Oz and TheĮmerald City of Oz, as well as many other books for children andįor adults. The Wizard of Oz was published in 1900 when its author, L. The Wizard of Oz is a distinctly American fairy tale and, a century after it was first published, one of the longest-running mass media sensations. It started with one book in 1900 and grew into a series of 40 books, stage shows, several movies, and related novelties. ![]()
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