When the movie The Wizard of Oz premiered in August 1939, 85 million Americans watched movies in theaters and spent $659 million every week. In 2021, spending at movie theaters and streaming content at home and on mobile devices reached $36.8 billion.
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On August 11–12, 1939, the movie The Wizard of Oz premiered in Dennis, MA, Kenosha, WI, and Oconomowoc, WI. Fearing the film would be unpopular, movie studio executives chose these cities to debut the movie to better gauge audience reaction. Much to their delight, the film was a hit as moviegoers packed theaters. On August 15, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios hosted a star-studded, "official" premiere replete with searchlights, movie props, and sidewalk bleachers for fans at Grauman's Chinese Theater in Los Angeles, CA. More than 8 decades later, movie critics, adults, and children still consider The Wizard of Oz to be one of the greatest movies in film history.
L. Frank Baum published The Wonderful Wizard of Oz in 1900. It was adapted into an Academy Award-winning motion picture that debuted on August 11–12, 1939.
The Wizard of Oz (1939) is based on L. Frank Baum's popular 1900 children's novel The Wonderful Wizard of Oz. When published, the novel proved far more popular than Baum and his publisher anticipated and the first printing of 10,000 copies sold out in a few weeks. Additional printings, a musical stage play, and a revised novel suitable for adult readers followed. Over the next 20 years, Baum published 13 more Oz-themed novels, with the last two books—The Magic of Oz (1919) and Glinda of Oz (1920) published posthumously.
Following the success of Walt Disney's 1937 book-to-film adaptation of Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, Metro Goldwyn-Mayer purchased the rights to Baum's novel The Wonderful Wizard of Oz in January 1938. Screenwriters followed Baum's storyline closely. Movie audiences watched as a farm girl played by Judy Garland is swept away by a tornado from the black and white plains of Kansas to dazzling color in the Land of Oz. Her house accidentally landed on the Wicked Witch of the East, freeing the enslaved Munchkins and giving her ownership of the witch's coveted ruby slippers. Told that only the Wizard of Oz could help her get back home, she follows the Yellow Brick Road to the Emerald City with actress Margaret Hamilton playing the Wicked Witch of the West in pursuit. Dorothy is accompanied on her journey by her dog Toto, the Scarecrow played by Ray Bolger, a Tin Man portrayed by Jack Haley, and Bert Lahr's Cowardly Lion. After arriving at the Emerald City, the "Wizard of Oz"—played by Frank Morgan—tells Dorothy he will only help Dorothy return to Kansas if she destroys the Wicked Witch of the West and brings her flying broomstick back to him. (Morgan also played a fortune telling character named Professor Marvel in scenes before Dorothy was swept away by the tornado. The coat he wore was actually owned by L. Frank Baum!)
Dorothy and her friends succeed in destroying the witch and returned to the Emerald City only to learn that the Wizard of Oz is a fraud and does not have any special powers to help Dorothy return home. Thanks to the magical ruby slippers she received when she first arrived in Oz, Dorothy learns that she always had the power to return home on her own. With three taps of her heels, Dorothy repeats "There's no place like home," and is soon back with her family and friends in Kansas.
With a $2.8 million budget, The Wizard of Oz was Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer's most costly production to date. Studio executives worried that the film would be a box office flop, so they decided to "quietly" premiered the movie at theaters in Oconomowoc, WI, Kenosha, WI, and Dennis, MA. Much to their relief, the movie studio executives were able to incorporate these audiences' reactions into the movie's worldwide advertising. The Hollywood premier of the film followed on August 15, and its August 17 New York City, NY, debut was followed by a live performance by Judy Garland. The film opened nationwide on August 25, 1939. Although theaters were packed, The Wizard of Oz barely broke even, earning only $3 million during its original 1939 release. The Wizard of Oz faced fierce competition at the box office and awards ceremonies, as 1939 is considered to be one of the finest years for movies. Despite this competition, The Wizard of Oz received five Academy Awards, winning the Best Original Score Oscar for the song, "Over the Rainbow." The Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences also granted actress Judy Garland an Oscar for Best Juvenile Performance.
Millions more of L. Frank Baum's Oz-themed novels have sold since the 1939 premier, and the books and movie remains very popular as new generations are introduced to the story. Metro Goldwyn-Mayer re-released the film in theaters in 1949 and broadcast The Wizard of Oz on television for the first time in 1956. Home movie audiences had an opportunity to purchase the movie on video tape for the first time in 1980. Today, the movie remains a staple of the holiday television schedule with families planning to view the movie together at Thanksgiving and the Winter Holidays. The Wizard of Oz remains so popular that the 2019 theatrical release of the movie commemorating its 80th anniversary grossed more than $1.2 million!
You can learn more about the Wizard of Oz and its cast using census data and records. For example:
The 1939 movie The Wizard of Oz was filmed at the Metro Goldwyn-Mayer studios (above) in Culver City, CA, and in Liberal, KS.
From 1790 through 1820, the decennial census was conducted as of the first Monday in August.
President John Quincy Adams recommended moving Census Day from August to June in his December 1828 address to Congress believing the move would give the U.S. marshals (who conducted the 1790 to 1870 censuses) more time to complete the enumeration.
Censuses were conducted in June through 1900.
In 1910, Congress moved Census Day to April 15 and January 1 in 1920.
Since 1930, Census Day has been as of April 1. Our most recent census counted 331,449,281 people as of April 1, 2020.
The red sequined "ruby slippers" Judy Garland wore in the 1939 movie The Wizard of Oz are perhaps the most famous footwear in American popular culture. More than 8 decades since the movie's release, the sparkling red shoes still attract excited crowds to the Smithsonian's Museum of American History in Washington, DC.
Footwear often plays an important role in film, music, sports, and historic events. For example, Carl Perkins (1955) and Elvis Presley (1956) sang about their Blue Suede Shoes.
Movie audiences were aghast when Charlie Chaplin played a starving miner who ate his boot in 1925's Gold Rush. In Walt Disney's 1950 film Cinderella, the prince finds his princess thanks to the glass slipper she left behind at a ball, while John Wayne's Lucchese cowboy boots manufactured in San Antonio, TX, added to the actor's western bravado. More recently, Nike's "Cortez" sneakers played a "supporting role" in 1994's Academy Award-winning movie Forest Gump.
In the sports world, track and field star Jesse Owens wore spiked athletic shoes manufactured by Adolf and Rudy Dassler during the 1936 Summer Olympics. The brothers later separately founded the Adidas and Puma athletic shoe and apparel companies.
Famous footwear has even left a "lasting imprint" on the moon! On July 20, 1969, Apollo 11 astronaut Buzz Aldrin captured the now famous image of his footprint in the lunar dust while wearing specially designed boots made by ILC Dover of Newark, DE.
Today, thousands of people in the United States continue to produce footwear for stage, screen, sports, the office, and outdoor adventures. The 2021 Annual Survey of Manufactures found that American footwear manufacturing establishments (NAICS 3162) had annual sales, value of shipments, or revenues of more than $1.6 billion and employed 10,379 people nationwide.
L. Frank Baum's popular children's book The Wizard of Oz became one of the most beloved motion pictures in history thanks to a talented cast of lovable characters.
The movie stars Grand Rapids, MN, native Judy Garland as Dorothy Gale, a Kansas farm girl who is transported to the Land of Oz by a tornado. Garland became world famous in the decades after The Wizard of Oz, earning Academy, Golden Globe, Grammy, and Tony awards for her work. Today, the American Film Institute ranks her as the 8th greatest actress in film history.
Dorothy "follows the Yellow Brick Road" to meet the Wizard of Oz played by actor Frank Morgan. Along the way, she is joined by the Scarecrow, Tin Man, and Cowardly Lion played by Ray Bolger, Jack Haley, and Bert Lahr. The three were vaudeville performers in the 1920s before appearing on New York's Broadway stages and later in Hollywood films.
In a LA Times interview Scarecrow actor Bolger said that in the decades after the film's release, "Little moppets come up to me and punch me to see if I'm made of straw." Despite the abuse of young admirers, the actor added, "How many can say 'I belong to a great American classic?'"
Another of the films stars was often recognized by children who ran away crying!
Margaret Hamilton played the Wicked Witch of the West who chased, taunted, and kidnapped Dorothy as she tried to take her ruby slippers. In a 1975 episode of Mister Rogers Neighborhood, Hamilton said of the Wicked Witch, "Sometimes, Mister Rogers, I'm a little unhappy because lots of children are quite scared by her."
Hamilton continued acting until 1982 and used her notoriety to speak at schools and raise money for charitable causes until her death in Salisbury, CT, in 1985.
Photo courtesy of The Library of Congress