The Wizard of Oz


1h 11m 1925
The Wizard of Oz

Brief Synopsis

In this silent film, a farm girl learns she is a princess and is swept away by a tornado to the land of Oz.

Film Details

Genre
Silent
Adaptation
Comedy
Fantasy
Release Date
Apr 1925
Premiere Information
New York showing: ca12 Apr 1925
Production Company
Chadwick Pictures
Country
United States
Screenplay Information
Based on the novel The Wonderful Wizard of Oz by Lyman Frank Baum (New York & Chicago, 1900).

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 11m
Sound
Silent
Color
Black and White
Theatrical Aspect Ratio
1.33 : 1
Film Length
6,300ft (7 reels)

Synopsis

Nearing her 18th birthday, Dorothy learns from her "aunt" that she is a foundling, left on the doorstep as an infant. The aunt then produces a letter, found with the baby, that is to be opened when she becomes 18. Before they can read the letter, a cyclone descends and sweeps Dorothy, her uncle, and two hired men into the Kingdom of Oz. Dorothy's letter proves that she is the Queen of the Realm, and Prince Kynde and his followers duly hail her as such. Prime Minister Kruel asks the wizard to put a spell on Dorothy's followers, but the wizard, who has no real magical powers, is unable to do so. The two hired men obligingly disguise themselves, changing into a scarecrow and a tin woodsman. They are put in jail but manage to escape, only to encounter a lion in his den. The men climb a high tower, and the scarecrow seizes a ladder hanging from an airplane. The ladder breaks, and the scarecrow tumbles. ... The whole adventure turns out to have been a child's dream.

Videos

Movie Clip

Wizard Of Oz, The (1925) -- (Movie Clip) Open, Townsfolk Of Oz Opening and scarcely resembling the 1939 approach or the novel, director and star Larry Semon comments, then appears un-credited as the toymaker, introducing the story device with grand-daughter Jean Johnston, and in Oz, Josef Swickard, Virginia Pearson and Otto Lederer, all unfamiliar characters, in The Wizard Of Oz, 1925.
Wizard Of Oz, The (1925) -- (Movie Clip) There Once Bloomed A Rose Director and star Larry Semon as the toymaker is reading the famed novel to his unhappy granddaughter, who prefers he jump to Kansas, thus we meet Dorothy Dwan as Dorothy, Aunty Em and Uncle Henry (Mary Carr, Frank Alexander) then Oliver Hardy as a farmhand and suitor (and later the Tin Woodsman), in The Wizard Of Oz, 1925.
Wizard Of Oz, The (1925) -- (Movie Clip) Thoughts Of Lollypops Again in Kansas, fuller exposition regarding the two nameless farmhands (director Larry Semon, and Oliver Hardy) who are both suitors to Dorothy (Dorothy Dwan), and who will later appear as the Scarecrow and Tin Woodsman, though they’re only disguises, not characters, in Semon’s off-beat 1925 silent, The Wizard Of Oz.
Wizard Of Oz, The (1925) -- (Movie Clip) You Doubt My Powers? Now in Oz and in trouble with unsympathetic authorities, the Wizard (Charles Murray), who freely admits he’s only a mortal huckster, hopes to demonstrate his value by his fake transformation of two Kansas farmhands, director Larry Semon as the Scarecrow, and Oliver Hardy the Tin Woodsman, in The Wizard Of Oz, 1925.

Hosted Intro

Film Details

Genre
Silent
Adaptation
Comedy
Fantasy
Release Date
Apr 1925
Premiere Information
New York showing: ca12 Apr 1925
Production Company
Chadwick Pictures
Country
United States
Screenplay Information
Based on the novel The Wonderful Wizard of Oz by Lyman Frank Baum (New York & Chicago, 1900).

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 11m
Sound
Silent
Color
Black and White
Theatrical Aspect Ratio
1.33 : 1
Film Length
6,300ft (7 reels)

Articles

The Wizard of Oz (1925)


In the 1925 silent, Wizard of Oz, director/comedian Larry Semon offers a substantial reworking of L. Frank Baum's classic 1900 fairy tale The Wonderful Wizard of Oz and a precursor to the more commonly known 1939 M-G-M/Victor Fleming adaptation of The Wizard of Oz about the innocent Kansas farm girl Dorothy (Dorothy Dwan) and her adventures over the rainbow with a scarecrow, tin man and cowardly lion (minus a little dog named Toto).

The bracketing story of Wizard of Oz involves a toy maker (Semon) who reads Baum's story to his granddaughter. Semon then alternates between scenes of Dorothy down on the farm, and the coup d'etat underway in the magical fantasy land of Oz where the citizens are demanding the return of their queen.

In Oz, the evil despot Prime Minister Kruel (Josef Swickard) who has overthrown the beloved Prince Kynd (Bryant Washburn) rules over the objections of his irate subjects.

Back in Kansas as she nears the eve of her 18th birthday, Dorothy learns that she was left on the doorstep of the caretakers she has assumed were her relatives, Aunt Em (Mary Carr) and Uncle Henry (Frank "Fatty" Alexander) as a baby. The baby Dorothy was placed in their care along with a sealed letter, not to be opened until she turns 18.

Before she can learn the secret of that letter, Dorothy and Aunt Em and Uncle Henry's three Kansas farmhands (Larry Semon, as the scarecrow, Oliver Hardy as the tin woodsman and African-American actor Spencer Bell as the lion) are caught up in a twister and land in the magical land of Oz where Dorothy is declared Queen.

Wizard of Oz was not popular with audiences and some critics disdained its "custard pie atmosphere," as Picture Play noted. The slapstick was overplayed and contemporary audiences will undoubtedly recoil at the film's crude racist caricatures.

African-American actor Bell, unfortunately, comes off the worst in Semon's hopelessly dated and often offensive comic vision. His character is introduced in a crude vignette, eating a watermelon. Semon's unpleasant characterization of Bell continues, missing few opportunities to propagate racist stereotype by billing the actor as "G. Howe Black."

L. Frank Baum's son was a writer on Semon's Wizard of Oz though that didn't seem to compel the filmmakers to stick very closely to Baum Sr.'s story. Making the film was a lifelong ambition of Semon's and he paid a large amount to the Baum estate to secure rights to the book. Dorothy was played by director Semon's soon-to-be-wife who married Semon just before the film's release.

Wizard of Oz was to be the highlight of Semon's comic and directorial career, a career that left him almost as well-compensated as fellow comedian Charlie Chaplin, though he was never able to establish as engaging and consistent a comic character as that comedian's Little Tramp.

The son of traveling vaudeville performer Zera the Great, as a young man Semon worked as a newspaper cartoonist. His comic skills eventually led to a job in 1916 writing gags for Vitagraph films where his rollicking, manic comic style eventually became one of the studio's top-grossing products. By 1917 he had been promoted to a director of the Hughie Mack series of comedies. He would later produce, write, direct and star in the silent comedies he made at Vitagraph's newly established West Coast operation, where newly discovered comedians Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy appeared in his films.

Unfortunately, Semon's Wizard of Oz helped usher in the comedian's film descent. The film exhibited his tendency to recycle the same jokes and slapstick bits in film after film without sticking to consistent characters and a cohesive story, an especially annoying tendency when Semon was dealing with such a well known and beloved story as The Wizard of Oz.

Released by the Poverty Row Chadwick Pictures, the film was exhibited as a special road show engagement. But the film was booked into many theaters that never even received a print of Wizard of Oz because Chadwick Pictures went bankrupt, along with Semon's career.

Semon's own story ended unhappily. His attempt at a comeback after the disastrous Wizard of Oz in Josef von Sternberg's Underworld (1927) proved unsuccessful. Bankruptcy eventually forced Semon back into performing on Vaudeville tours. He ended up in a sanitarium after suffering a nervous breakdown and tuberculosis and died soon after, under mysterious circumstances, at age 39.

Director: Larry Semon
Producer: Larry Semon, I.E. Chadwick
Screenplay: Larry Semon and Leon Lee from the book by L. Frank Baum
Cinematography: Frank B. Good, H.F. Koenenkamp, Leonard Smith
Production Design: Robert Stevens
Music: Robert Israel
Cast: Larry Semon (Scarecrow/Toymaker/Farmhand), Bryant Washburn (Prince Kynde), Dorothy Dwan (Dorothy/Princess Dorothea), Virginia Pearson (Lady Vishuss), Charles Murray (The Wizard), Oliver Hardy (The Woodsman/Knight of the Garter/Farmhand), Josef Swickard (Prime Minister Kruel), Mary Carr (Aunt Em), G. Howe Black (Cowardly Lion/Rastus), Otto Lederer (Ambassador Wikked), Frank Alexander (Prince of Whales/Uncle Henry).
BW-72m.

by Felicia Feaster
The Wizard Of Oz (1925)

The Wizard of Oz (1925)

In the 1925 silent, Wizard of Oz, director/comedian Larry Semon offers a substantial reworking of L. Frank Baum's classic 1900 fairy tale The Wonderful Wizard of Oz and a precursor to the more commonly known 1939 M-G-M/Victor Fleming adaptation of The Wizard of Oz about the innocent Kansas farm girl Dorothy (Dorothy Dwan) and her adventures over the rainbow with a scarecrow, tin man and cowardly lion (minus a little dog named Toto). The bracketing story of Wizard of Oz involves a toy maker (Semon) who reads Baum's story to his granddaughter. Semon then alternates between scenes of Dorothy down on the farm, and the coup d'etat underway in the magical fantasy land of Oz where the citizens are demanding the return of their queen. In Oz, the evil despot Prime Minister Kruel (Josef Swickard) who has overthrown the beloved Prince Kynd (Bryant Washburn) rules over the objections of his irate subjects. Back in Kansas as she nears the eve of her 18th birthday, Dorothy learns that she was left on the doorstep of the caretakers she has assumed were her relatives, Aunt Em (Mary Carr) and Uncle Henry (Frank "Fatty" Alexander) as a baby. The baby Dorothy was placed in their care along with a sealed letter, not to be opened until she turns 18. Before she can learn the secret of that letter, Dorothy and Aunt Em and Uncle Henry's three Kansas farmhands (Larry Semon, as the scarecrow, Oliver Hardy as the tin woodsman and African-American actor Spencer Bell as the lion) are caught up in a twister and land in the magical land of Oz where Dorothy is declared Queen. Wizard of Oz was not popular with audiences and some critics disdained its "custard pie atmosphere," as Picture Play noted. The slapstick was overplayed and contemporary audiences will undoubtedly recoil at the film's crude racist caricatures. African-American actor Bell, unfortunately, comes off the worst in Semon's hopelessly dated and often offensive comic vision. His character is introduced in a crude vignette, eating a watermelon. Semon's unpleasant characterization of Bell continues, missing few opportunities to propagate racist stereotype by billing the actor as "G. Howe Black." L. Frank Baum's son was a writer on Semon's Wizard of Oz though that didn't seem to compel the filmmakers to stick very closely to Baum Sr.'s story. Making the film was a lifelong ambition of Semon's and he paid a large amount to the Baum estate to secure rights to the book. Dorothy was played by director Semon's soon-to-be-wife who married Semon just before the film's release. Wizard of Oz was to be the highlight of Semon's comic and directorial career, a career that left him almost as well-compensated as fellow comedian Charlie Chaplin, though he was never able to establish as engaging and consistent a comic character as that comedian's Little Tramp. The son of traveling vaudeville performer Zera the Great, as a young man Semon worked as a newspaper cartoonist. His comic skills eventually led to a job in 1916 writing gags for Vitagraph films where his rollicking, manic comic style eventually became one of the studio's top-grossing products. By 1917 he had been promoted to a director of the Hughie Mack series of comedies. He would later produce, write, direct and star in the silent comedies he made at Vitagraph's newly established West Coast operation, where newly discovered comedians Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy appeared in his films. Unfortunately, Semon's Wizard of Oz helped usher in the comedian's film descent. The film exhibited his tendency to recycle the same jokes and slapstick bits in film after film without sticking to consistent characters and a cohesive story, an especially annoying tendency when Semon was dealing with such a well known and beloved story as The Wizard of Oz. Released by the Poverty Row Chadwick Pictures, the film was exhibited as a special road show engagement. But the film was booked into many theaters that never even received a print of Wizard of Oz because Chadwick Pictures went bankrupt, along with Semon's career. Semon's own story ended unhappily. His attempt at a comeback after the disastrous Wizard of Oz in Josef von Sternberg's Underworld (1927) proved unsuccessful. Bankruptcy eventually forced Semon back into performing on Vaudeville tours. He ended up in a sanitarium after suffering a nervous breakdown and tuberculosis and died soon after, under mysterious circumstances, at age 39. Director: Larry Semon Producer: Larry Semon, I.E. Chadwick Screenplay: Larry Semon and Leon Lee from the book by L. Frank Baum Cinematography: Frank B. Good, H.F. Koenenkamp, Leonard Smith Production Design: Robert Stevens Music: Robert Israel Cast: Larry Semon (Scarecrow/Toymaker/Farmhand), Bryant Washburn (Prince Kynde), Dorothy Dwan (Dorothy/Princess Dorothea), Virginia Pearson (Lady Vishuss), Charles Murray (The Wizard), Oliver Hardy (The Woodsman/Knight of the Garter/Farmhand), Josef Swickard (Prime Minister Kruel), Mary Carr (Aunt Em), G. Howe Black (Cowardly Lion/Rastus), Otto Lederer (Ambassador Wikked), Frank Alexander (Prince of Whales/Uncle Henry). BW-72m. by Felicia Feaster

Quotes

Trivia

First broadcast on television in a three-part serial on 8, 9, and 10 June 1931, by W2XCD, an early broadcaster owned by the DeForest Radio Company and based in Passaic, New Jersey.

Oliver Hardy makes a rare film appearance away from his comedy partner, Stan Laurel.

Many theatres that booked the film never received it because its production caused Chadwick Pictures to go bankrupt and distribution ceased long before it was intended to.

Notes

For information on other films based on the Oz stories of L. Frank Baum, please consult the entry for the 1939 M-G-M production of The Wizard of Oz, directed by Victor Fleming and starring Judy Garland and Ray Bolger in AFI Catalog of Feature Films, 1931-40.