Ha ha! The workers who built my horse barn pretty much did that! Took them MONTHS to get done, working about three hours a day total. They'd come for an hour or so, leave for an hour our so; bring back lunch and eat it; work for an hour, and then leave.......
did you know that there where 4 different color horses they were colored with different food dyed like orange, grape , lemon and strawberry. also did you know that the carriage the 4 friends were riding in was Lincolns carriage . the aspca did not want the four horses too be painted so they used flavored powdered gelatin and the horses kept licking it because the horses love it so much
Where on earth did you get the idea the carriage had belonged to Lincoln? I mean, why would they use something so old? No, that was built for the movie, or at least built for another movie and reused here.
@@MaskedMan66 i read it on google and the the carriage was in the Abraham Lincoln museum . it was built in 1864 by the wood brothers and they move the the carriage too Judy Garland Museum, and Children’s Discovery Museum which in is grand rapids Minnesota and if you want to see the carriage its too look at the museum of judy garland
@@headlesspiper936 I've seen that it's at the museum; there's a video of someone's visit here on YT. It just seems so odd that they'd use something that old. Then again, it was built to last, no doubt. Very well, I accept what appears to be history. :--) It's just that it sounds a lot like the story of Prof. Marvel's frock coat having once belonged to L. Frank Baum, which it actually hadn't.
@Airworthy RC I agree, that was very funny how he said that like he was thinking "oh my, nobody is allowed to see the Wizard" and then said he will take them there but probably only said he will take them somewhere to get tidied up first as an excuse not to take them there since nobody was allowed to see the Wizard. Unless maybe he was waiting outside the "Wash & Brush Up Co." for them just to take them to the Wizard but got scared away when the witch came.
Since Frank Morgan is playing as five characters (Professor Marvel, the Gatekeeper, the Cabbie, the Guard, and the Wizard), it seems like after the doors were opened he quickly ran and got into his Cabbie costume over his Gatekeeper costume since his pants look the same as what he was wearing when he was the Gatekeeper. Otherwise they probably turned the camera off for him to put the jacket on, along with the beard and hat and different gloves since he had different colored gloves when he was the Gatekeeper and then the Cabbie.
No, that isn't how they did it. The gate scene and the interior scene were probably done on different days, and Morgan's costumes and make-up were too elaborate to have just been slapped on.
@@MaskedMan66 Sometimes they redo scenes on different days and sometimes people just slap on costumes over another costume. For here as the Cabbie, Morgan's beard didn't have to be too well put on because it was just a quick scene of him as the Cabbie.
@@afriendofbean Again, that's not they way they do things in movies, certainly not if they want them to be of any quality. Morgan spent many hours in the Cabbie costume while the scene was shot, and you may rest assured that it was not all done in one day. So no, the beard was not just thrown on, it was applied to Morgan's face using spirit gum while he sat in a make-up chair; incidentally, if you look closely, you'll see that he's wearing a different set of eyebrows as well. That "quick scene" took a long time to film.
@@MaskedMan66 I do believe you but, some movies I have seen have people quickly putting on a costume change over their past costume when they're playing as other characters. Some Christmas movies I have seen have a person dressed as Santa Claus have the beard attached to their Santa hats. Regarding his eyebrows, his eyebrows looks the same as both the Gatekeeper and the Cabbie. However, if you see his pants as the Cabbie, his pants looks the same as his costume as the Gatekeeper which make it look like he did a costume change from the Gatekeeper to the Cabbie.
@@afriendofbean All we see of the Guardian of the Gates is his head, shoulders, and arms; he never appears "full figure." For all we know, Morgan had on his own trousers for the filming of that part of the sequence. And name some of those Christmas movies.
About 6 years ago my junior high teacher said this was a horse of a different color and I was the only one that was able to connect it back to the wizard of oz
I am still so impressed by that special effect, considering the technology they had back then. From what I understand, they painted the celluloid filter on the film frame by frame. The time that would take to to it looking clean and natural is still so impressive to me
Witch west , witch east , witch north , witch south. Witch's of direction. Murder as a house drops on a witch... One side sees murderer . One side sees hero. The two magical witch's were fighting.... Magic conjured up Dorothy's house and the witch dropped it on the other witch.. Then , the witch takes the ruby family shoes. These shoes can teleport you. Gives them to Dorothy. But doesn't tell her. Now..it looks like Dorothy killed her and took ruby woman's shoes. The witch made it look like Dorothy killed her. Framed Dorothy for a murder and theft...
when i think of Emerald City, it depresses me because, of all the deleted scenes, outtakes from The Wizard of Oz, the reprise of Ding Dong the Witch is Dead in Emerald City, is the one deleted scene i wish had stayed in the film, or just wish the entirety of the footage still existed. the entire audio, soundtrack survives, aside from a few seconds, a snippet in the reissue trailer of 1949. The Scarecrow Dance is the only deleted scene from the final cut of the movie to have survived in full, the rest of the footage of the other deleted scenes, are believed to be long-gone, destroyed unfortuneately.
@@MaskedMan66 i will admit, there are times i wish i never learned about that deleted scene, wish i never found out about it, because when i was the movie now, it feels tragically incomplete
@@initiatorhater0688 A lot of people who worked on that scene were probably hugely disappointed by its removal. Mitchell Lewis, who played the Winkie Captain, had a second role as the High Priest of the Emerald City, for which he was regally decked out in elaborate robes that apparently weighed 100 pounds!
@@MaskedMan66 ya and i spoke to another user, he said that scene had the highest production value in the film, he said its just a guess, that scene might have been sacrificed to save Over the Rainbow, that scene was almost cut, the filmmakers had to fight very hard to save that scene, perhaps the executives made an ultimatum, its either over the rainbow or the triumphal return to emerald city
@@initiatorhater0688 Nobody is sure of the exact circumstances, but I doubt that it was taken out for the sake of Over the Rainbow, though Mervyn LeRoy, the producer, fought like heck to make sure Judy's starmaking song stayed in.
It's wild to think that MGM Studios treated a dog and horses better than their own actors! For example: 1.) The Wicked Witch - Suffered serious burns after she caught on fire 2.) Judy Garland: Forced to take amphetamines/diet pills/smoke 80 cigarettes a day to stay skinny. She was also wearing a very tight corset and had to have her breasts wrapped to make her appear flat bc she was portraying a young girl which made it almost impossible for her to breathe & even harder to sing or engage in any physical activity on set. Judy was also mocked on set and was told she was, "a fat little pig in pigtails" and was monitored on set by someone who would watch her eat and force her to severely limit her caloric intake - to the point where she wasn't allowed to eat almost anything other than soup and broth. Even though she was under 18, set directors often forced her to perform for 2 and even 3 days in a row! 3.) The Tinman: The original actor for The Tinman was essentially poisoned by the makeup, which was made of pure aluminum dust. Nine days after filming started he was hospitalized, sitting under an oxygen tent. As a result, he was replaced entirely bc even though it was MGM's fault, they blamed for their critical/almost fatal mistake. 3.) The actors who played the "Munchkins:" These actors were barely paid any money for their roles, they were constantly being bulled/harassed because of their height. They were also not specifically named in the credits; instead it just said, "The Munchkins: and this made them very angry considering that they were essentially being dismissed as human beings by MGM 4.) The actor who played the lion: This actor's lion costume weighed ALMOST 100 POUNDS and he had to carry that extremely massive lion suit and skip, run, jump, etc. He eventually passed out due to heat stroke and had to be hospitalized. And these are just a few examples! These people went through hell bc of MGM and their disgusting treatment of their own actors. Obviously the movie is a classic, but my god, no one should have been treated the way they were!
1. Old news, which Margaret Hamilton talked and joked about for decades afterward. In short, she got over it. 2. The only thing you got right was that Judy wore a corset. The rest is all BS. As a minor, she was only allowed to work for four hours, and the studio shut down at 7 or 8 in the evening so everyone could *go home and sleep.* 3. Buddy Ebsen was not poisoned. The aluminum kicked off a congenital bronchial condition he had. Nobody, including him, had the least idea he would have that reaction. After all, powders of all kinds have been used in makeup for centuries. 3. Did you realize you used 3 twice? The Singer Midgets were paid $100.00 a week, which was standard for extras. Mickey Carroll, on the other hand, got $500.00 a week thanks to Zeppo Marx. They were neither bullied nor harassed, and in case you did not notice, which you obviously did not, only the main cast were in the credits along with the Singer Midgets. None of the Winkies or Emerald City Citizens were listed. That is just how things were done in those days. Listing everyone who had the most miniscule connection to the movie, including the babies born during the making of a movie, is a relatively recent thing. 4, which should really be 5. The Lion suit was more like 70 lbs., and Bert Lahr neither got heat stroke nor had to be hospitalized. Actors have had to deal with far worse throughout entertainment history, long before movies began, and ever since then. It is work. Folks in other areas of industry have to deal with infinitely worse things, and far worse things have occurred during the making of other movies. Actors and crew have been maimed, paralyzed, irradiated, and even killed. The _Wizard_ cast and crew had it much easier than a lot of others.
1) From which she recovered. 2) All wrong, every word of it. 3) Buddy Ebsen was not poisoned, and he also recovered. 4) They were paid $100.00 a week, the standard for extras. They were credited as "The Singer Midgets," a name which carried a lot of clout in those days. And also in those days, movies did not list the names of each and every person involved in the making of them; that wasn't common practice until the 1970's. 4) Also all wrong.
1:04 “We get up at 12 and start to work at 1, take an hour for lunch and then at 2 we’re done.” That sounds nice.
I wish 😂😂😂😂
“JOLLY GOOD FUN”
@@MirandaIsTired beat me to it
Jolly Good Fun.
Ha ha! The workers who built my horse barn pretty much did that! Took them MONTHS to get done, working about three hours a day total. They'd come for an hour or so, leave for an hour our so; bring back lunch and eat it; work for an hour, and then leave.......
0:43 the horse is nodding his head like "I'm the horse of a different color."
Yep!
Trivia: *This carriage used in Wizard of OZ was originally owned by Abraham Lincoln.*
What? That's cool
If that's true it's amazing. But he even gets mentioned in the movie 😮 (when dorothy songs with the scarecrow)
How do you know
The IndependentLens..... How do you know
@@DouknoMann-vn3ct Sweets, it’s listed as one of the facts about this movie. It was probably used in other movies too.
One of my favorite scenes of the entire movie ❤️ such a special film, I will always adore it.
Mine too!
This was def one of my favorite scenes as a child!!
did you know that there where 4 different color horses they were colored with different food dyed like orange, grape , lemon and strawberry. also did you know that the carriage the 4 friends were riding in was Lincolns carriage . the aspca did not want the four horses too be painted so they used flavored powdered gelatin and the horses kept licking it because the horses love it so much
U can see they are different by their sizes
Where on earth did you get the idea the carriage had belonged to Lincoln? I mean, why would they use something so old? No, that was built for the movie, or at least built for another movie and reused here.
@@MaskedMan66 i read it on google and the the carriage was in the Abraham Lincoln museum . it was built in 1864 by the wood brothers and they move the the carriage too
Judy Garland Museum, and Children’s Discovery Museum which in is grand rapids Minnesota and if you want to see the carriage its too look at the museum of judy garland
@@headlesspiper936 I've seen that it's at the museum; there's a video of someone's visit here on YT. It just seems so odd that they'd use something that old. Then again, it was built to last, no doubt. Very well, I accept what appears to be history. :--)
It's just that it sounds a lot like the story of Prof. Marvel's frock coat having once belonged to L. Frank Baum, which it actually hadn't.
@@MaskedMan66 really, how does that even work
I almost died laughing when he goes “the wizeeeed the Wizzzeeeeed! 🤣😂🤣😂 right before they get on the carriage.
😂😂
Trinity and madison
@@debrathompson1785 Hollywood and Vine.
@Airworthy RC I agree, that was very funny how he said that like he was thinking "oh my, nobody is allowed to see the Wizard" and then said he will take them there but probably only said he will take them somewhere to get tidied up first as an excuse not to take them there since nobody was allowed to see the Wizard. Unless maybe he was waiting outside the "Wash & Brush Up Co." for them just to take them to the Wizard but got scared away when the witch came.
@@afriendofbean The Guardian was not the Cabbie.
Emerald city dazzles me every time those gates open.
White 0:10
Purple 0:24
Red 1:01
Yellow 1:08
Thank you, I couldn’t figure out what the fourth colour was ( I was forgetting white)
Thanos hore
Thank you. I was having trouble telling time and seeing colours.
In the very beginning the horse was licking the jello off
In the very beginning, the horse was its normal color.
It wasn't Jell-O, it was vegetable dye.
@@MaskedMan66 It’s “fruit flavoured gelatin powder” aka jello.
@@123Juissi123 It was vegetable dye mixed with make-up.
If you look carefully, you can see the horses licking at their lips, because of the Jell-O powder they were covered with.
It was not Jell-O, it was a mix of vegetable dye and makeup .
Wow… Quincy Jones’ mind. The horse changing colors is what inspired the emerald city sequence.
You sure?
Quincy Jones? ....Whaaat?
I LOVE Judy Garland;s smile!
Since Frank Morgan is playing as five characters (Professor Marvel, the Gatekeeper, the Cabbie, the Guard, and the Wizard), it seems like after the doors were opened he quickly ran and got into his Cabbie costume over his Gatekeeper costume since his pants look the same as what he was wearing when he was the Gatekeeper. Otherwise they probably turned the camera off for him to put the jacket on, along with the beard and hat and different gloves since he had different colored gloves when he was the Gatekeeper and then the Cabbie.
No, that isn't how they did it. The gate scene and the interior scene were probably done on different days, and Morgan's costumes and make-up were too elaborate to have just been slapped on.
@@MaskedMan66 Sometimes they redo scenes on different days and sometimes people just slap on costumes over another costume. For here as the Cabbie, Morgan's beard didn't have to be too well put on because it was just a quick scene of him as the Cabbie.
@@afriendofbean Again, that's not they way they do things in movies, certainly not if they want them to be of any quality. Morgan spent many hours in the Cabbie costume while the scene was shot, and you may rest assured that it was not all done in one day. So no, the beard was not just thrown on, it was applied to Morgan's face using spirit gum while he sat in a make-up chair; incidentally, if you look closely, you'll see that he's wearing a different set of eyebrows as well. That "quick scene" took a long time to film.
@@MaskedMan66 I do believe you but, some movies I have seen have people quickly putting on a costume change over their past costume when they're playing as other characters. Some Christmas movies I have seen have a person dressed as Santa Claus have the beard attached to their Santa hats. Regarding his eyebrows, his eyebrows looks the same as both the Gatekeeper and the Cabbie. However, if you see his pants as the Cabbie, his pants looks the same as his costume as the Gatekeeper which make it look like he did a costume change from the Gatekeeper to the Cabbie.
@@afriendofbean All we see of the Guardian of the Gates is his head, shoulders, and arms; he never appears "full figure." For all we know, Morgan had on his own trousers for the filming of that part of the sequence. And name some of those Christmas movies.
The Emerald City is truly an Art Deco marvel.
About 6 years ago my junior high teacher said this was a horse of a different color and I was the only one that was able to connect it back to the wizard of oz
The saying goes back much further than that.
No I was saying that my teacher made the reference 6 years ago
@@yamask1017 I know. I was just pointing out that it is a very old expression, and was old when the movie was made.
Oh
😎😎😎 "HE'S THE ONLY ONE, AND HE'S IT." 😎😎😎
I am still so impressed by that special effect, considering the technology they had back then. From what I understand, they painted the celluloid filter on the film frame by frame. The time that would take to to it looking clean and natural is still so impressive to me
Vixx Celacea lmao no.. they used jello to dye the horses.
Vixx Celacea they used geletin
Not much different than hand drawing and painting cartoon cells- thousands of them for a 2 or 3 minute cartoon!
No, they didn't; they had color film.
@@MaskedMan66 no, look it up, they used four different horses
Yay my favorite part of Wizard of Oz the movie lol.
Witch west , witch east , witch north , witch south.
Witch's of direction.
Murder as a house drops on a witch...
One side sees murderer .
One side sees hero.
The two magical witch's were fighting....
Magic conjured up Dorothy's house and the witch dropped it on the other witch..
Then , the witch takes the ruby family shoes.
These shoes can teleport you.
Gives them to Dorothy.
But doesn't tell her.
Now..it looks like Dorothy killed her and took ruby woman's shoes.
The witch made it look like Dorothy killed her.
Framed Dorothy for a murder and theft...
Sidewalk? That's a city street, pal! 😃
0:24 "Nice costume change" - Childhood impression
Ha ha ha......ho ho ho......💪😂👏
That's quite the welcoming committee, considering that they weren't expecting or encouraging visitors!
Who said they weren't?
*FUN FACT:* The carriage being pulled by the Horse Of A Different Color belonged to Abraham Lincoln...
That sounds unlikely.
@@MaskedMan66 findery.com/worldslongestroadtrip/notes/abraham-lincolns-carriage ...
@@mcgannahanskyjellyfetti6854 Fair enough!
@@MaskedMan66 yep, I think it is completely impossible
@@hello-sz7hp Actually, it turns out to be true!
Thank you!~ My actual(not Weekend at Bernies) favorite movie🎶💜🌟💜🎶~~~~~>💓°•○☆💕
0:34 lol
I love how obvious it is that they are diffo horses
What?
I honestly could never tell it was a different horse lol
No, they were two of the same breed.
Definitely differently built and moving horses.
when i think of Emerald City, it depresses me because, of all the deleted scenes, outtakes from The Wizard of Oz, the reprise of Ding Dong the Witch is Dead in Emerald City, is the one deleted scene i wish had stayed in the film, or just wish the entirety of the footage still existed.
the entire audio, soundtrack survives, aside from a few seconds, a snippet in the reissue trailer of 1949.
The Scarecrow Dance is the only deleted scene from the final cut of the movie to have survived in full, the rest of the footage of the other deleted scenes, are believed to be long-gone, destroyed unfortuneately.
That, as the saying goes, is showbiz.
@@MaskedMan66 i will admit, there are times i wish i never learned about that deleted scene, wish i never found out about it, because when i was the movie now, it feels tragically incomplete
@@initiatorhater0688 A lot of people who worked on that scene were probably hugely disappointed by its removal. Mitchell Lewis, who played the Winkie Captain, had a second role as the High Priest of the Emerald City, for which he was regally decked out in elaborate robes that apparently weighed 100 pounds!
@@MaskedMan66 ya and i spoke to another user, he said that scene had the highest production value in the film, he said its just a guess, that scene might have been sacrificed to save Over the Rainbow, that scene was almost cut, the filmmakers had to fight very hard to save that scene, perhaps the executives made an ultimatum, its either over the rainbow or the triumphal return to emerald city
@@initiatorhater0688 Nobody is sure of the exact circumstances, but I doubt that it was taken out for the sake of Over the Rainbow, though Mervyn LeRoy, the producer, fought like heck to make sure Judy's starmaking song stayed in.
You know, I like the way they enter the Emerald City and then all the people stop to look at them.
Well, wouldn't you? ;-)
1:09 놔! 이거 노란 말이야!
This n**** is crazy
Na they just let the computer do it now
The all-seeing eye. 👁
What all-seeing eye?
In my older age I now find it hilarious that Dorothy was asking to visit the wizard... Just a little sus Dorothy.
Explain.
@@MaskedMan66 what?
@@notyourfetish I was clear enough. Explain what you meant.
@@MaskedMan66 what?
The cabbie's stovepipe hat belonged to Abraham Lincoln. The put green gelatin on it!
Wrong.
They road the horse carriage like 2 feet.
Much farther than that; the sets in this movie were enormous.
It's wild to think that MGM Studios treated a dog and horses better than their own actors! For example:
1.) The Wicked Witch - Suffered serious burns after she caught on fire
2.) Judy Garland: Forced to take amphetamines/diet pills/smoke 80 cigarettes a day to stay skinny. She was also wearing a very tight corset and had to have her breasts wrapped to make her appear flat bc she was portraying a young girl which made it almost impossible for her to breathe & even harder to sing or engage in any physical activity on set. Judy was also mocked on set and was told she was, "a fat little pig in pigtails" and was monitored on set by someone who would watch her eat and force her to severely limit her caloric intake - to the point where she wasn't allowed to eat almost anything other than soup and broth. Even though she was under 18, set directors often forced her to perform for 2 and even 3 days in a row!
3.) The Tinman: The original actor for The Tinman was essentially poisoned by the makeup, which was made of pure aluminum dust. Nine days after filming started he was hospitalized, sitting under an oxygen tent. As a result, he was replaced entirely bc even though it was MGM's fault, they blamed for their critical/almost fatal mistake.
3.) The actors who played the "Munchkins:" These actors were barely paid any money for their roles, they were constantly being bulled/harassed because of their height. They were also not specifically named in the credits; instead it just said, "The Munchkins: and this made them very angry considering that they were essentially being dismissed as human beings by MGM
4.) The actor who played the lion: This actor's lion costume weighed ALMOST 100 POUNDS and he had to carry that extremely massive lion suit and skip, run, jump, etc. He eventually passed out due to heat stroke and had to be hospitalized.
And these are just a few examples! These people went through hell bc of MGM and their disgusting treatment of their own actors. Obviously the movie is a classic, but my god, no one should have been treated the way they were!
1. Old news, which Margaret Hamilton talked and joked about for decades afterward. In short, she got over it.
2. The only thing you got right was that Judy wore a corset. The rest is all BS. As a minor, she was only allowed to work for four hours, and the studio shut down at 7 or 8 in the evening so everyone could *go home and sleep.*
3. Buddy Ebsen was not poisoned. The aluminum kicked off a congenital bronchial condition he had. Nobody, including him, had the least idea he would have that reaction. After all, powders of all kinds have been used in makeup for centuries.
3. Did you realize you used 3 twice? The Singer Midgets were paid $100.00 a week, which was standard for extras. Mickey Carroll, on the other hand, got $500.00 a week thanks to Zeppo Marx. They were neither bullied nor harassed, and in case you did not notice, which you obviously did not, only the main cast were in the credits along with the Singer Midgets. None of the Winkies or Emerald City Citizens were listed. That is just how things were done in those days. Listing everyone who had the most miniscule connection to the movie, including the babies born during the making of a movie, is a relatively recent thing.
4, which should really be 5. The Lion suit was more like 70 lbs., and Bert Lahr neither got heat stroke nor had to be hospitalized.
Actors have had to deal with far worse throughout entertainment history, long before movies began, and ever since then. It is work. Folks in other areas of industry have to deal with infinitely worse things, and far worse things have occurred during the making of other movies. Actors and crew have been maimed, paralyzed, irradiated, and even killed. The _Wizard_ cast and crew had it much easier than a lot of others.
1) From which she recovered.
2) All wrong, every word of it.
3) Buddy Ebsen was not poisoned, and he also recovered.
4) They were paid $100.00 a week, the standard for extras. They were credited as "The Singer Midgets," a name which carried a lot of clout in those days. And also in those days, movies did not list the names of each and every person involved in the making of them; that wasn't common practice until the 1970's.
4) Also all wrong.
is anyone here from tik tok?
I am
😎😎😎 Yeah..let's get started...now that Israel is in Civil War.....let us begin...
How did they have to be
Painted Horse
Yes, painted with vegetable dye and make-up.
L
monitah!!
This is a terrible adaptation of the oz books by l frank baum. I advise everyone to read the oz books by l frank baum. They're way better.
Baum would not have thought so. His wife certainly enjoyed it.