The Wizard of Oz Essay

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    The Wonderful Wizard of Oz by L.Frank Baum has been an excessively popular fairy tale among the kids and adults. It has provided us with great plays and musical comedies. As most of us do not tend to relate a fairy tale with the political movements happening around us, Henry Littlefield was the first to write an outstanding article “The Wizard of Oz: Parable on Populism” in which he made a bold inference that the Wizard of Oz was a book that portrayed the United States of America as it entered the

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    ask to the powerful wizard of Oz who lived in the Emerald City. On her journey, she met a scarecrow who wishes to have brains, a Tin Woodman who ask to have a heart and a cowardly Lion whom admitted that he has no courage and wanted to ask the Oz. They have encountered several obstacles one of those is when they were saved by a thousands of mice. When they arrive at the Oz, the Guardian at the gate of the sparkling green city was surprised to hear that they wanted to see the Oz, as no one had requested

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    Wizard Of Oz Monologue

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    Other than that “Stay in the dressing room for all I care.” was how Mr. Wilson felt which was fine by me. Less time on stage was what I wanted. Our first day was finding out the title of the play. We thought it would be a play we all knew like Wizard Of Oz or something common like that, but no, it was Anything Goes. No one knew what that was. We had never heard of it. Basically we were all going to play passengers on a ship and were going to follow a love story of a man who sneaks on the ship to

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    Wizard of Oz as a Fairytale This question is deceptive in its apparent simplicity as it raises some problematic issues, which extend beyond the text right across fairytale scholarship. The term "fairytale" itself is a contentious one and is unpopular with many folklorists (see Luthi, Warner, Luke). Often epithets like "wondertale", "magic tale" are employed. Even in some English translations of European works the more semantically accurate Russian or German terms

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    The Wizard of Oz is a well known children’s novel written by Frank Baum in 1899. It later then became a movie in 1939 and still to this day is very popular. But what many people do not know is that behind both the movie and novel there lays a hidden message about the economic problems during the early 20th century. Baum was knowledgeable about what was going on in the 1990’s and put them into his work for a purpose. Over the years both the movie and the novel have stirred up multiple theories behind

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    In the “Wizard of Oz,” the film ends with Dorothy realizing that while Oz has shown her an entirely new and possible world that exists beyond her imagination, her heart still yearns for her home in Kansas. The film’s main message is that “there is no place like home.” Although this sentimental message connects with its audience, Salman Rushdie argues that the ending is rather limiting for Dorothy’s character. He claims that Dorothy accepting her life in Kansas without any desire to branch out and

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    The Wizard of Oz is the first in the Oz series by Frank Baum. From the other books, we learn that the word Oz has one meaning for the Wizard and another for the residents of the beautiful and magical world. The most common meaning for OZ is for the Wizard: Oz refers to the initials of his first two names, Oscar Zoroaster. However, there are additional meanings, as well. For the residents, Oz is the name of their “God,” the being that they look up to that can do all. Also, for the residents, Oz is

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    Wizard Of Oz Theme Essay

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    themes consistently in The Wizard of Oz. The Wizard of Oz depicts the struggles of the main character Dorothy wanting to go back home and her meeting friends who would want to change things about themselves. They all work together on a fantastic adventure to go find the Wizard to help fulfill what they want for themselves. In the beginning of The Wizard of Oz starts off with Dorothy. She lives on a farm in Kansas with her Uncle Henry and Aunt Em. (“The Wizard of Oz” Ch.1, par 4.) It was an unusual

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    The 1939 MGM production of The Wizard of Oz, mainly directed by Victor Fleming, is a horrendous motion picture based on the best seller, classic novel The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, written by L. Frank Baum and illustrated by W. W. Denslow. But what makes MGM 's production sheer filth and putrefaction? The Wizard of Oz is a horrible movie because of innumerable audio problems, terrible continuity editing skills, and copious cockamamie mistakes. Primarily, The Wizard of Oz focuses on Dorothy (Judy Garland)

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    of goal and journey in their books. Among them, The Wonderful Wizard of Oz has outstandingly implicated the goal and journey. In the book, it has emerged

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