Word: wizard
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Friday, September 8 OFF TO SEE THE WIZARD (ABC, 7:30-8:30 p.m.). Animated cartoon characters based on The Wizard of Oz will introduce child-oriented movies, beginning with Clarence, the Cross-Eyed Lion (MGM, 1965). Premiere...
...many homosexual members. It is not that they "gravitate toward superstars" or else they would surely flock to the Beatles' concerts; and it is certainly not that Judy Garland has "become masculine and powerful." The answer is simply that they identify with Dorothy in The Wizard of Oz, poor little unattractive, unwanted Dorothy who eventually had all her dreams come true in the magical Emerald City. You will notice that the majority of Garland fans in her audiences are just about her age, give or take a few years. This is an Ugly Duckling syndrome embodying wish fulfillment-identifying...
...most popular single film property in the history of U.S. television is MGM's 1939 The Wizard of Oz. When it was first presented on CBS-TV in 1956, Oz attracted 35 million viewers; last February the annual showing reached 44.6 million. Over the years, Oz has captured an average 53%~of all sets in use at the time (30% is considered high...
...psychedelic tour through the bent mind of Peter Fonda, which is evidently full of old movies. In a flurry of flesh, mattresses, flashing lights and kaleidoscopic patterns, an alert viewer will spot some fancy business from such classics as The Seventh Seal, Lawrence of Arabia, even The Wizard of Oz. Eventually, in a scene that is right out of 8%, Fonda perches on a merry-go-round while a robed judge gravely spells out his previous sins and inadequacies. The photographer's camera work is bright enough, and full of tricks, without beginning to suggest the heightened inner awareness...
...powerful friend and attentive reader, then-Attorney General Richmond Flowers, was out of office. (Flowers was interviewing a job applicant last year when his executive assistant recalled seeing the name in the Courier; he dug out the story--a series of chats with friends of Ku Klux Klan Wizard Robert Shelton--showed it to Flowers, and the interview ended abruptly.) A number of federal and state judges and other officials continue to subscribe (Alabama has two subscriptions--one for the state archives, the other for the anti-poverty office), but few are as avid followers of it as was Flowers...