Pancho Villa and the Mexican Revolution (Volume 4, Episode 12) Part Two

Of the many political and military figures  involved in Mexico’s 1910 Revolution, Pancho Villa remains the most famous and charismatic.

Felipe Angeles

Villa formally requested that Felipe Angeles be permitted to officially join Villa’s military staff. Angeles was a traditional army officer with an expertise in artillery.  He served during the Diaz government but was in France when the revolution broke out.  Ultimately, he decided that the populist concepts of the revolution were more to his liking and felt Villa best embodied these ideas.

John “Black Jack” Pershing, in Mexico

Public outrage over Villa’s Columbus, New Mexico attack prompted Woodrow Wilson to launch a rapidly deployed military expedition under the leadership of the commandant of Fort Bliss, Texas and experienced Apache antagonist, John “Black Jack” Pershing.  Commanding six thousand men, split into two separate columns, Pershing crossed the border, without the permission or even cooperation of the Carranza government, which was sensitive to any American incursion.  Fleeing south, Villa, attacked any appropriate smaller targets along the way but suffered a serious leg wound at Guerrero on March 28.  Pershing’s force quickly located the Villistas and successfully attacked Guerrero but Villa escaped into the mountains where he hid for six weeks, recovering from his gunshot injury.  Although Villa was no longer popular in Mexico, the American expedition was considered an invasion and an incident at Hidalgo Parral in which several American soldiers and numerous Mexicans were killed prompted an agreement between the two governments that the Pershing expedition would gradually withdraw

Alvaro Obregon

Although at the height of his military effectiveness and power, Pancho Villa was now confronted with fundamental logistical issues.  Although the path to the capital was wide open, Carranza ordered the cut off of any resupply, especially of coal which limited the rebel general’s railway mobility.  Foreign hostility caught up to Villa personally when the Wilson administration tailored an arms embargo designed specifically for the Villistas.  Any attempt to patch up an agreement between Carranza and Villa failed and it became clear that Pancho would never make it to Mexico City before another general, loyal to Carranza, Alvaro Obregon.  Obregon, approaching initially from the western state of Jalisco, marched unopposed into Mexico City on August 18, 1914.  Carranza joined him two days later.  Villa had no choice but to retreat northward back to the state of Chihuahua to regroup, resupply and recruit more soldiers.

Columbus, New Mexico Post Office after the Villa attack.

On January 19, 1916 a group of Villistas stopped a train heading to Chihuahua City, from the United States.  They executed 17 American employees, an act that outraged US citizens living in the towns on the Mexican border.  Although Villa denied involvement, officially the Carranza government apologized to the Wilson administration and vowed to bring the murderers and Villa to justice.  One of the formerly most powerful political forces in Mexico was now a mere criminal.  Villa’s response was even more audacious.  He proceeded to cross the border near the tiny and isolated town of Columbus, New Mexico.  At one in the morning, a firefight broke out between the Villistas and the US soldiers stationed in the town.  The Mexican rebels looted the local general store and destroyed a hotel but after some initial confusion, US cavalry and even local townspeople organized a response that drove the invaders out of the town.  As dawn broke, the cavalry chased Villa fifteen miles into Mexico before breaking off the counterattack. The Columbus attack killed eight soldiers and ten civilians and wounded several others.  Although he was able to seize some nominal amounts of weapons and livestock, Villa never even explained much less justified this wanton and foolhardy provocation. 

Luz Corral, Mrs. Pancho Villa

One wife, Luz Corral, who he married legally in 1911, was recognized by Mexican courts as his heir, but two other women who claimed to be married to him were eventually granted government pensions acknowledging their claim.  Officially, Villa had five children but most likely, considering his reputation as a ladies man, there were many more.

Pancho Villa’s car in which he was assassinated.

Amidst this atmosphere, life went on at Villa’s hacienda.  On July 20, 1923 he was returning to Canutillo in a large Dodge automobile, with cash he picked up in Parral for his employees.  An aide had recently cautioned him about the expense incurred by a huge entourage accompanying him on his trips to the city.  In response, Villa limited his latest bodyguard to five additional individuals crammed into his car.  With Villa at the wheel, the Dodge made its way slowly through the streets of Parral.  When it reached an intersection that required a turn, a street vendor began shouting Viva Villa, the general’s former rallying cry but on this day a signal to seven assassins who quickly stepped into the street with high powered rifles.  They fired over forty rounds of hollow point bullets, nine hitting Villa and killing him instantly.  Only one member of the entourage survived.

Memorial a la Revolucion, Mexico City

Over time, Francisco “Pancho” Villa has assumed a larger than life profile in Mexican popular culture.  His stature increased to the extent that in 1976, his remains were transferred from Parral to the massive national mausoleum in Mexico City, El Monumento a la Revolucion where he joined such luminaries as Madero and Carranza.  In life, Villa was feared and reviled as a volatile killer, bandit and criminal.  Today he enjoys  widespread international status as a proud nationalist revolutionary and a man of the people  long after most of his adversaries and contemporaries have been completely forgotten.

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Pancho Villa and the Mexican Revolution (Volume 4, Episode 12) Book and Music Information

The books used in this podcast included:

“The Life and Times of Pancho Villa,” by Friedrich Katz and

“Villa, Soldier of the Mexican Revolution,” by Robert L.Scheina.

The Intro music in Part One and Two is:

“Latin Lover,” by Quincas Moreira.

The  Outro in Part One is:

“Amor Chiquito,” by Quincas Moreira.

The Outro in Part Two is:

“Vera Cruz,” by Quincas Moreira

 

 

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Leonard Seppala and the Alaskan hero dogs Balto and Togo (Volume 4, Episode 11) Part One

In 1925, a diphtheria epidemic threatened to wipe out the town of Nome, Alaska. Hear the incredible story of the men and dogs who saved the day.

Leonard Seppala and his team with Togo (far left) and Fritz (far right.

Seppala was employed by Hammon Gold as its main dog driver and the supervisor of freight logistics into the remote areas and mining camps that the company operated.  But Seppala was also known as the premier dogsled racer in the region having won numerous competitions that were a high profile Alaskan pursuit.  A Norwegian and a friend of Jafet Lindberg, he emigrated to Nome in 1900, at the height of the Gold Rush that established the city.

Nome, during the 1900 gold rush.

The establishment of a town in such a remote and forbidding location was actually an unplanned spontaneous event that resulted from gold being discovered in the area in mid-September, 1898.  Rich deposits of the metal were discovered initially by three individuals who were eventually nicknamed the Three Lucky Swedes, Eric Lindblom, John Brynteson and Jafet Lindberg who was actually Norwegian.  This group located these valuable sites in the Anvil Creek and Snake River waterways a few miles off of the coast of the Bering Sea. They legally registered their claims before word of the find became public knowledge elsewhere.  However, news of this discovery quickly made it to the outside world and especially to the Klondike region where a previous 1897 gold rush had drawn over 100,000 potential prospectors. 

 
Balto

To fill out the new team of drivers Summers contacted another one of his employees, a dog driver who also worked for Leonard Seppala, Gunnar Kaasen.  Summers told Kaasen to put together another team and head for the village of Bluff, about forty miles east of Nome.  When he got to Bluff he was supposed to get the roadhouse keeper there, Charles Olson, to put together his own team and head 25 miles east to the town of Golovin and wait there.  Kaasen was not completely surprised by Summer’s request to assemble a team.  Before his boss  Seppala left, he made precautionary recommendations to Kaasen as to how to position another subsequent team.  Kaasen went along with these recommendations placing the dog Fox as one of the leads.  But for the other dog he chose an animal that Seppala did not particularly hold in high esteem, an unusually colored Siberian who was solid black except for a white right paw.  The dog’s name was Balto, named after an associate of Norwegian explorer Fritdtjof Nansen.  At the time, Kaasen did not think about the choice very much.  He had always liked working with the dog and figured that the animal could certainly get the job done.  Once the run was completed and the serum got to Nome what difference would it make anyway?

Gunnar Kaasen with Balto.

The serum relay remained a huge story across the United States with local journalists getting hired by national wire services to provide eyewitness accounts.  Only hours after his actual arrival, Gunnar Kaasen reenacted his arrival, ambling down the main streets of Nome for photographers and motion picture cameras.  Newspaper articles focused on Kaasen as he was the only participant present and because journalists wanted to focus on one dog, Balto was anointed as the main canine hero of the serum run. 

Togo

During his successful racing career, Seppala’s lead dog was named Suggen and this part Malemute, part Siberian huskie subsequently sired many puppies for Seppala.  By 1925, Suggen had been replaced by his son Togo, a diminutive animal, initially a runt believed too small to have any future as a sled dog.  Named after the victorious Japanese admiral at the battle of Tsushima, at age six months, Seppala gave the dog away, its new owner maintaining the canine as a pet.  Within a few weeks, Togo escaped from his new home by leaping through a glass window and returning to Seppala’s kennel, a journey of several miles that impressed the dog trainer enough to prompt Seppala to keep the dog.  But the puppy proved difficult to train, frequently breaking out of the kennel to follow Seppala when left behind and off of the team. On the trail, Togo would distract the group to the extent that Seppala finally decided to harness the dog, if only to control him.  Immediately, the younger dog responded, able to keep up with older, larger animals on runs that frequently totaled seventy-five miles a day.  Seppala came to believe that Togo, 48 pounds at his heaviest weight, was a once in a life time prodigy that he quickly trained and ultimately designated as a lead dog.  By 1925, Togo, aged 12, was so respected by Seppala that he frequently placed the dog by himself, with a long lead in front of the other dogs.

 

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Leonard Seppala and the Alaskan Hero Dogs Balto and Togo (Volume 4, Episode 11) Part Two

In 1925, a diphtheria epidemic threatened to wipe out the town of Nome, Alaska. Hear the incredible story of the men and dogs who saved the day.

Balto in news footage during re-enactment.

Within days Kaasen got an offer from a Hollywood film producer to appear in a movie with his dog team.  Kaasen and Balto were soon standing on the steps of Los angeles’ city Hall with the mayor and Mary Pickford.  Although Leonard Sepalla was annoyed by the attention Kaasen was getting, he did give his employee permission to take the dogs, who he considered inferior anyway, and make the film.  In conjunction with the movie deal, a vaudeville style tour was developed and suddenly Gunnar Kaasen was a full blown American celebrity.

Balto’s statue, Central Park, New York, NY

An indication of the level of Balto’s profile came when it was announced by the city of NY that a statue to honor all of the participants in the serum drive would be placed in Central Park, a statue of Balto deposited on top of its base.  On December 15, 1925 both Balto and Kaasen were present when the statue was dedicated, a monument that remains very popular even today.

Balto, preserved in the Cleveland Museum of Natural History

Kaasen and his wife soon grew tired of the vaudeville life and the frequent squabbles with Hollywood producers and the tour operator over money.  As their celebrity faded they decided to head back home to Alaska, at this point the tour operator having somehow gained ownership of the dog team and sled.  How this process unfolded remains unclear but the animals were transported back to Los Angeles where proprietor of a typical side show of oddities and amusements named Sam Houston acquired the dogs.  For months they were on display in a small enclosure in dreadful conditions, neglected by their new owner.  It was not until a visiting Cleveland businessman, George Kimball, saw the dogs and wanted to rescue them from their plight.  Houston agreed to sell the team for $2,000 but gave Kimball only two weeks to raise the money.  Kimball returned home and through newspaper publicity and after an overwhelming public response, Balto and his team were extricated and brought to Cleveland and their permanent home, a popular attraction at the city’s zoo.  There he and the rest of the team lived in relative tranquility, until Balto, blind and arthritic, was euthanized on March 14, 1933, aged fourteen.  His body was preserved and today it is on display at the Cleveland Museum of Natural History.

Togo, Iditarod Museum, Wasilla, Alaska

The serum run was Togo’s last long distance endeavor and even then at age 12 he was considered old for a sled dog.  By age sixteen the dog was partially blind and could only move with great difficulty.  On December 9, 1929 the decision was made to euthanize Togo at his kennel in Maine.  He was also preserved and after a lengthy stay in Yale’s Peabody Museum and the Shelburne Museum in Shelburne, Vermont he was returned to the Iditarod Museum in Wasilla, Alaska, where he can be seen today. 

Togo, Seward Park, Lower East Side, Manhattan, New York City, NY
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Leonard Seppala and the Alaskan Hero Dogs Balto and Togo (Volume 4, Episode 11) Book and Music Information

Publications used to make this podcast included:

“The Cruelest Miles,” by Gay Salisbury and

“And You Thought We Have Vaccine Issues?” by Jon Wertheim, Sports Illustrated, January 13, 2021

The intro in part one and outro in part two was, “Floating Home,” by Brian Bolger and the outro in part one and intro in part two was, “The Empty Moons of Jupiter,” by DivKid.

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Ambassador Kenneth Taylor and the Canadian caper (Volume 4, Episode 10) Part one

Risking his own freedom, Canadian ambassador Kenneth Taylor upheld diplomatic decorum and the international rule of law in the face of a tyrannical and dangerous regime.

Mohammed Mossadeq, right, meeting with American Secretay of State Dean Acheson

The Shah of Iran appointed a popular veteran politician, Mohammed Mossadeq, in April of 1951.  Mossadeq quickly announced his intention to nationalize the Anglo-Iranian oil company, prompting the Anglo-Iran hierarchy to withdraw refinery operatives and block Iranian oil from the world market.  The resulting economic downturn was unpopular but the embattled Mossadeq refused to waver.  By 1953, the British were no longer the imperial power that could crush such a quasi-colonial upstart.  But the US, under the newly installed Eisenhower administration, was already involved in Cold War conflicts in Korea and elsewhere and Iran, with a viable domestic Communist party and geographic proximity to the Soviet Union was another country run by an unpredictable individual who might embrace Moscow.  This, and Mossadeq’s October, 1952 severing of all British diplomatic ties, precipitated clandestine US intelligence activity. 

Jimmy Carter, King Hussein of Jordan, the Shan of Iran and his wife.

By 1978, even with the advent of the Carter administration and its focus on human rights, the Shah remained an important game piece of American international geopolitics and the US government’s tone deaf attitudes toward the growing national revulsion toward the Shah only intensified the anger of the Iranian people.

Cora Lijek, Mark Lijek, Robert Anders, Joseph Stafford, Kathleen Stafford and Lee Schatz were the six American diplomats who eluded capture when Iranian militants seized the american embassy.

All of the American escapees were eventually able to watch television and see footage of their comrades.  Blindfolded, their hands bound, it was clear that the hostages were under great duress.  Although spokesmen for the Student dissident group maintained that the detainees were being treated humanely, actually they were all subjected at minimum to physical restraints and verbal abuse and some, those suspected of being intelligence operatives were harshly interrogated, beaten, forced to endure mock executions and placed in solitary confinement in actual prison cells.

Iranian militants scaling the walls of the US embassy in Tehran

On the morning of November 4, 1979 a boisterous mob of protesters gathered in front of the US embassy in Teheran, Iran.  Such demonstrations were frequent occurrences, the result of the political upheaval that marked the transition of Iran from an absolute, western aligned monarchy to an unaligned Islamic republic.  On this day, the behavior of the crowd was markedly different with individuals, initially mostly women to discourage armed embassy Marine sharpshooters, beginning to deliberately scale the walls of the embassy compound.  Some of the invaders carried bolt cutters which were used to sever the locks securing the embassy entrance and soon hundreds of individuals were pouring into the 27 acre embassy enclosure. 

The embassy gates today, now an Iranian museum.
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ambassador kenneth taylor and the canadian caper (Volume 4, Episode 10) Part Two

Risking his own freedom, Canadian ambassador Kenneth Taylor upheld diplomatic decorum and the international rule of law in the face of a tyrannical and dangerous regime.

The Ayatollah Khomeini returns to Iran in triumph.

Less than three weeks later, the Ayatollah landed at Tehran’s Mehrabad Airport, the city greeting him with a crowd of over three million people.  Khomeini’s political attitudes were made immediately clear.  Any appointments by the shah were invalid, the result of an illegal government.  Of Bakhtiar and others, Khomeini commented, “I will kick their teeth in, I decide on the government.”  He also stated that although he would appoint his own Prime Minister, his long term intention was to construct a republic based on Islamic fundamentalism and sharia law.  He routinely vilified the United States as, “The great Satan,” and mocked the Soviet Union as “The Lesser Satan.” 

The Shah, in exile, in Cuernavaca, Mexico

By October of 1979, the Shah of Iran was languishing in Mexico.  After Egypt, he made stops in Morocco and the Bahamas before proceeding to Cuernavaca.  His doctors advised that treatment in the US for an obviously seriously spreading lymphoma was crucial but the Carter administration was wary of admitting the Shah, not wishing to worsen relations with the new Iranian government.

Anwar Sadat and the son of the Shah at the Shah’s funeral in Egypt.

The death of the shah in July, the Iraqi invasion of Iran in late September and the landslide victory of Ronald Reagan either sidetracked the hostage talks or prompted the Iranians to prolong the process. 

Fake ad used in Hollywood trade publications to promote the fictitious, “Argo.”

Mendez hastily went to Los Angeles where he spent $10,000 renting an office, staffing it with enough bodies to make sure there was someone at the end of a phone in case the Iranians checked on the ruse.  With a Hollywood contact, make-up man John Chambers, Mendez actually selected a film off the slush pile, an unproduced sci-fi fantasy called Lord of Light.  It could certainly utilize the exotic locations but Mendez changed the title to something with more of a Middle-Eastern ring to it; Argo.

Jimmy Carter congratulates Tony Mendez, whose role remained secret until 1997

The CIA role in the Canadian Caper was declassified in 1997.  Tony Mendez wrote about it extensively, initially in an-house CIA journal, and then then in his own books.  The story remained under the radar until 2007 when Wired Magazine published an account of the Argo aspects of the rescue.

Ronald Reagan presents Ken Taylor with American Congressional Gold Medal

In the immediate aftermath of the Canadian Caper, Ken Taylor was given the plum assignment of Consul General in NY.  But by 1984, despite both Canadian political parties encouraging to run for office, Taylor left the public sector to accept a key position with RJ Nabisco from a Canadian friend, Ross Johnson.  This would place Taylor front and center for the wild leveraged buyout struggle over Nabisco, a struggle Johnson eventually and famously lost.  Ken Taylor then started his own worldwide consulting firm that he operated for two decades and served as a chancellor at the University of Toronto.  He died of cancer on October 15, 2015.  Kenneth Taylor remains the only Canadian to receive the American Congressional Gold Medal, the highest civilian award the US government can bestow.

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Ambassador kenneth taylor and the canadian caper (Volume 4, Epiode 10) Book and Music Information

The two books used in this podcast included:

“Our Man In Tehran,” by Robert Wright and

“Argo: How The CIA and Hollywood Pulled Off the Most Audacious Rescue in History,” by Antonio Mendez and Matt Baglio.

The intro in part one and outro in part two is, “Icelandic Arpeggios,” by DivKid and the outro in part one and intro in part two is, “Guava Juice,” by Aaron Lieberman

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the creators of the wizard of oz (volume 4, episode 9) part one

According to the Library of Congress, The Wizard of Oz is the most viewed film in the history of motion pictures.

Still photo with the Wizard of Oz’ major characters

Most of the other roles were plugged in with various MGM contract players or veteran character actors who got salaries lasting only a few weeks.  Ray Bolger was initially asked to play the Tin Man although he had his heart set on the Scarecrow.  Buddy Ebsen didn’t really care who he played and his agreement to swap roles with Bolger and play the Tin Man had dire consequences.  A second tier actor Bert Lahr, better known for his Broadway comedic ability was cast as the Cowardly Lion.

Publicity photo of Toto (Terry) and Judy Garland

The dog, Toto, depicted by Denslow seemed a straightforward small terrier but finding such an animal able to function in a soundstage environment amidst the typical commotion, lighting and sound effects became a formidable project in itself.  Dozens of visually suitable dogs were auditioned by LeRoy personally, none were even close to what the role technically required.  This process grew so unproductive that consideration was even given to dressing up an actor in a dog costume.  Finally, a professional dog trainer with previous experience providing animals to the motion picture industry heard about this unique talent search.  Carl Spitz was a German immigrant operating a ten acre kennel, dog boarding and training facility in the San Fernando Valley who occasionally padded his income with a movie role for one of his own trained pets.  The St. Bernard used in Clark Gable’s 1933 Call of the Wild was to date Spitz’ most famous canine movie star. Upon hearing about MGM’s difficulty in finding just the right animal, Spitz took a gamble on a small female Cairn terrier he owned named Terry.  Initially a dog dropped off by a customer for traditional training, Spitz kept the dog when the patron couldn’t afford to pay the bill and never came back to retrieve the animal.  Terry was so shy that Spitz figured he could never train it to work in films but, in 1934, an MGM director familiar with Spitz’ kennel was desperate enough to try and use Terry in a Shirley Temple film.  The dog performed beautifully and appeared in several subsequent movies but Spitz wasn’t sure the small, still somewhat timid animal could handle such a massive production.  Upon entering MGM studios with the dog, Spitz was immediately escorted to the Thalberg building, where the entire pre-production crew was attempting to get the Wizard of Oz into filming as quickly as possible.  Terry was practically cast on sight, with Spitz using non-verbal commands to get what became America’s most famous Cairn terrier through its usual tricks.  Spitz’ only regret was that he did not realize how desperate MGM was, agreeing to a weekly salary of a mere $125 a week.

Ray Bolger as the Scarecrow

Bolger’s wrinkled burlap face was provided by a specially molded rubber mask that covered his head and neck with the exception of his nose, mouth and eyes.  The mask had to be glued on daily, makeup then manually added to his visible nose and mouth.  This process took two hours, necessitating Bolger’s studio arrival at 6:15 AM.

Bert Lahr as The Cowardly Lion

Lahr’s lion costume and makeup was even worse.  The padded body suit he wore weighed ninety pounds, prosthetic devices were glued to his face that prevented him from eating anything that he couldn’t ingest through a straw.

Louis B. Mayer

Born Lazar Meir in the vicinity of Minsk, Russia, most likely on July 12, 1884, Meir emigrated to St. John’s, New Brunswick, Canada, with his parents and siblings, anglicizing his name to Louis Burt Mayer.  A high school dropout at age 12, Mayer worked within his father’s junk and scrap metal business, crisscrossing St. John’s in a wagon and salvaging any scrap of value.  At age 20, in 1904, Mayer moved to Massachusetts and continued in the scrap metal trade, subsidizing his meager income by hustling various odd jobs.  Even as a young man in New Brunswick, Mayer was fascinated by vaudeville and show business, perhaps as an escape from an impoverished and gloomy existence.  He scraped together enough money to buy a seedy burlesque house in Haverhill, Massachusetts and transformed it into a movie theater. Sensing that the motion picture business was on the cusp of widespread popularity, Mayer bought up additional theaters and formed a partnership to distribute films throughout New England.  He paid D. W. Griffith $25,000 for the exclusive regional rights to show “Birth of a Nation,” typically without ever seeing the film himself, a deal which brought in four times the rights fee.  Mayer also was interested in the production side of the film industry, establishing production entities first in New York and then in Los Angeles in 1918, where he formed his first production company, Louis B. Mayer Productions.

L. Frank Baum

Long before the Wizard of Oz was produced as a film, the children’s novel written by L. Frank Baum had already achieved immense popularity.  Born in 1856 in upstate New York, Baum’s background was typical of many American journeyman attempting to eke out a living in late 19th century America.  Although interested in writing from an early age, he initially spent his twenties as both a member of a touring acting troupe as well as a salesman for his uncle’s carriage lubricant, Baum’s Castorine.  Eventually tiring of these financially unproductive efforts, in 1888, Baum and his wife made the decision to move from Syracuse to present day Aberdeen, South Dakota.  Initially a shopkeeper, when his store went bankrupt, he acquired and then began publishing and editing the local newspaper, The Aberdeen Saturday Pioneer.  As a columnist, Baum expressed his views on various issues, including politics and current events but this venture was also a failure and Baum and his family returned to Chicago, where he was employed as a reporter for a large daily, the Chicago Evening Post.  He also again supplemented his income as a salesman, but his enterprising mind continued to produce ideas involving creative writing.

First edition of the Wizard of Oz

Baum made a deal with W. W. Denslow to illustrate the book, a 50-50 split, and the illustrations again broke new ground in children’s literature.  By October of 1900, the book was well into sales of its second edition and a runaway success and Baum’s first royalty check in December of 1900 was for $3,000, approximately $100,000 today. The Wonderful Wizard of Oz remained the best-selling child’s book for more than two years after its release.   

Victor Fleming on the set of Gone With the Wind

Oz resumed production on November 4, 1938, with director Victor Fleming.  Fleming already had a reputation as MGM’s fixer of problem productions.  His experience dated back to silent films, working for various directors including D. W. Griffith.  He made stars out of Gary Cooper, Clark Gable, Spencer Tracy and Jean Harlow in the late twenties and early thirties.  Having made a good living in motion pictures for many years, Fleming lived the high life on his twenty acre horse ranch in Bel Air, riding a motorcycle years before it was fashionable.  As good looking as the men he directed he also carried on affairs with many of his leading ladies ranging from Clara Bow to Ingrid Bergman, finally marrying at age 34 in 1933.  Although considered a breach of studio etiquette and the star system, Clark Gable routinely ate lunch with Fleming at the studio commissary, such was his respect for the director, also a close friend.

Mervyn LeRoy on the set with Edward G. Robinson

In an effort to bolster MGM talent behind the camera, Mayer poached one of Warner Brothers most esteemed producer-directors in Mervyn LeRoy.  He secretly paid Leroy $6,000 a week, practically double what any other producer was making, although his salary did not remain secret for long.  But LeRoy was a veteran of nine years at Warner Bros and well known as both a quality filmmaker and efficient professional.

Ozcot

Baum always envisioned Oz as the perfect backdrop for an amusement park and to pursue such a venture he moved permanently to Los Angeles, acquiring land in central Hollywood in what was then mostly orange groves, building an elaborate two story home he christened “Ozcot,” where he lived for the rest of his life.

Publicity photo of Judy Garland.
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the creators of the wizard of oz (Volume 4, episode 9) part two

According to the Library of Congress, The Wizard of Oz is the most viewed film in the history of motion pictures.

One of the original pairs of the Ruby Slippers.

Even the magical slippers, a major plot device in both the novel and film are changed from silver to ruby, to take advantage of the Technicolor film process used for the Wizard of Oz.

Dorothy, over the rainbow

Judy Garland faced challenges of a different kind.  Playing the part of a twelve year old required that any appearance of breasts were eliminated by a constrictive corset that forcibly flattened her chest.  Between her mother and the studio, every aspect of Judy’s life was choreographed especially when it came to diet.  She was encouraged to smoke tobacco and drink coffee, practices that inhibited appetite.  Her mother had already exposed her to amphetamines at a young age, again as a diet inhibitor and energy booster. 

Billie Burke and Judy Garland, in Munchkinland

Another production challenge was the preparation and choreography of the Munschkinland scenes, frequently involving over a hundred individuals.  One blessing was that besides Judy Garland and Billie Burke who played Glinda, all of the other voices were lip synched and ultimately recorded by several voiceover artists associated with Disney productions. Their voices were then sped up to varying degrees to get the appropriate sound for a tiny person.

The terrifying Wicked Witch of the West, played by Margaret Hamilton

One such effort involved The Wicked witch of the West, Margaret Hamilton and her fiery exit from Munschkinland in a cloud of red dust and flame.  Seemingly she magically disappears into thin air, actually her escape was set in motion by an elevator that lowered her beneath the sound stage.  Hamilton had to back her way into an exact spot on the stage with perfect timing to escape any flames as she was lowered out of sight.  If her legs were even slightly unaligned, she could break one or both as she fell through the opening.  Two stagehands were ready to grab her as she came down the elevator.  Hamilton rehearsed the scene and process endlessly, getting to the correct spot, tightening her elbows next her sides so they did not slam on the edge of the pit, keeping her costume behind her and clutching the broomstick close to her chest so it did not get caught on the opening.  The first take was so good that when Hamilton returned to the soundstage from below, the usually stern Fleming was actually smiling.  However, he typically demanded another take as a precaution.  As it was lunch time the entire crew left for a break and when they returned, nothing went right, and after four takes with mistakes, Fleming returned to his typical drill sergeant demeanor.  After demanding that everyone pull themselves together and get the scene done, Hamilton proceeded.  This time the flame effect started way too early, the witch’s broomstick and hat ignited and by the time Hamilton was grabbed off of the elevator below, her eyelashes and one eyebrow were gone and upper lip and one eyelid badly burned.  Her right hand was also severely injured and the toxic copper based makeup had to be removed manually, alcohol painfully applied to a large and essentially open wound.  Hamilton was in agony, claiming subsequently that she had never experienced such pain.  Ointment was also applied to her face and covered with gauze, only her eyes, nose and mouth left uncovered.

Luckily, Hamilton was not needed for filming for six weeks and when she returned, she was told she would have to ride on a mechanical device that simulated her flying above the Emerald City as part of the “Surrender, Dorothy,” scene.  The device also spewed smoke from a pipe concealed by her broomstick.  Hamilton absolutely refused to have anything to do with the smoke device, agreeing only to closeups with a wind machine and the broomstick rocking back and forth.  She told Victor Fleming that he could fire her if he wanted but she would not get near any fire related special effects again.

Ray Bolger, Margaret Hamilton and Jack Haley in a 1970 reunion photo

Of all of the actors associated with the film, perhaps the strangest outcome was experienced by Margaret Hamilton, the Wicked Witch of the West.  Despite her permanent association with the role, she successfully avoided typecasting and enjoyed a lengthy career in film, television, where she appeared on the Addams Family and was a regular on the soap opera, the Secret Storm, and even in television commercials where in her seventies she portrayed the kindly merchant Cora praising Maxwell House coffee.  But, especially as the Wizard of Oz reached nationwide prominence in the sixties and seventies, she received large amounts of mail from fans obsessed with every aspect of her role in the film. 

Jerry Maren, Munchkin, also member of the Lollipop Guild, the last surviving member of the Munchkins. He passed away in 2018

Although the Munschkinland numbers are among the most impressive musical and dance songs ever filmed in Hollywood, it was the alleged off screen antics of these unique actors that eventually added to the Oz legend.  On the Jack Paar show in 1967, to much laughter, Judy Garland described the acting troupe as a “bunch of drunks” “who got smashed every night,” and one even propositioned her.  She also claimed that if a Munschkin became too intoxicated to navigate their way back to their Culver City hotel, they would be picked up with butterfly nets.  Although Garland was known to exaggerate, screenwriter Noel Langley referred to the group collectively as, “The wildest, little whoring rascals you ever saw.”  Mervyn Leroy’s 1974 autobiography recollected truly depraved behavior: “They had sex orgies in the hotel, we had to have police on just about every floor.”  By the time these urban legends became engrained any contradictions from actual surviving Munschkins themselves were typically ignored.

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Of Some Very Famous People You've Never Really Heard Of…In Less Than An Hour.