5047210
9781593082215
From J. T. Barbarese's Introduction toThe Wonderful Wizard of Oz For readers who come to the novel after having grown up with the movie, the biggest shock is to find in the novel none of the film's comforting, gap-filling backstory. Some of the cinematic revisions, such as the snowstorm that wakes the sleepers in the poppy field and that replaces their rescue by the Queen of the Mice in chapter IX, were cost-efficient alternatives to special effects that might have proven impossible or inadequate to the illusion.5 The change from Silver Shoes to Ruby Slippers in the 1939 movie, as most people know, was dictated by technical considerations (red showed up more vividly on the film stock of the period than silver); and American culture would be poorer without some of its memorable dialogue. But the principal changes are in the overall characterization and in retrospect seem less defensible. In the book Uncle Henry and Auntie Em never really emerge from the background and appear together only in chapter I, Auntie Em appearing alone in the very brief closing chapter. The film, however, shows them as loveable (if two-toned) representatives of a loveable Kansas home. Margaret Hamilton's Wicked Witch turns out to be one more ripple in Dorothy's concussed subconscious and the Kansas prototype of the Wicked Witch of the West, who even has anameAlmira Gulch. Auntie Em is hardly the "thin and gaunt," childless old woman whose eyes had lost their sparkle and were as gray as Kansas. She is an all-American original with a tongue and a personality to match. "Almira Gulch," she says on hearing of Almira's plan to destroy Toto, "just because you own half the county doesn't mean you have the power to run the rest of us!" Perhaps the biggest change is in Dorothy herself, who is actually a feistier child in the novel than on film. Consider the witch's death. The film stages the event as an accidentDorothy aims a bucket of water at the burning Scarecrow and douses the witch instead. But the novel makes it no accident. The witch tricks Dorothy and obtains one of her Silver Shoes. Dorothy gets "so very angry that she picked up the bucket of water that stood near and dashed it over the Witch." Judy Garland's Dorothy is tearfully apologetic; Baum's is outspoken and "angry."6 The screenwriters (Noel Langley, Florence Ryerson, and Edgar Allan Woolf)also expanded the roles of the three companions and turned the Scarecrow, Tin Woodman, and Lion into metamorphosed versions of farmhands named Hunk, Hickory, and Zeke. Professor Marvel (Frank Morgan), the genial fraud who watches Dorothy head off as the tornado prepares to descend, reenters her dream vision as the Wizard (as well as, once in the City of Oz, the doorman of the Emerald City, a cabdriver, and the Wizard's guard). These were more than touches of simple psychological realism. Like the technical stroke to shift to color from black and white when Dorothy arrives in Munchkin Land and the suddenly indispensable musical score, these permanent contributions to the Oz mythology are also improvisations that may not necessarily constitute improvements.7 They blur the clarity of the original, superimposing a second relational network on a clearer original. Dorothy and her companions each lack something and venture to the Emerald City to request it of the Wizard to find it, but in the novel neither the companions nor their deficiencies have reciprocal counterparts in the "real" world of Kansas. Oz is no Purgatory or compensatory educational experience, and it is definitely no metaphor for unconsciousness. Yet the film persuades the audience of a nearly allegorical symmetry between Kansas and Oz and raises uniquBaum, L. Frank is the author of 'Wonderful Wizard of Oz ' with ISBN 9781593082215 and ISBN 1593082215.
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