The recent
release of the highly successful Disney film
Oz
The Great and Powerful has revived interest in the Oz tales and their
quirky author. Not that interest ever
really flagged. The 1939 classic The
Wizard of Oz remains the most popular film of all time, beloved by
every new generation exposed to it.
But both films,
however entertaining, obscure the raging Prairie
Populism and open feminism that
the creator of the stories espoused. Indeed
feminist critics lambasted the new film for refocusing the story on a man—the charlatan/wizard—at
the expense of the self-driven female characters at who drove the action in his
stories. Indeed two of the four main
female characters in the film—Theodora and
Evanora turn out to be hideous villainesses,
and one, the originally lovely and guileless Theodora, flips to evil with remarkable ease when faced with
nothing more than typical male thoughtlessness. A third character is literally a broken doll
that is mended by the hero. Sweet Glenda the Good is remarkably passive.
Those feminist critics
are right. The writer would not have
been pleased.
L. Frank Baum, one of America’s the most prolific and
enduring children’s authors, was born on May 15, 1856 in Chittenango, New York. His
father had made his fortune in the Pennsylvania
oil boom and manufactured lubricants.
His mother was an outspoken feminist.
The family lived comfortably in a large home.
Frank, one of ten children, was a sickly boy with a heart
condition. Protected from strenuous
activity, including usual childhood rough house play, he was tutored at home
and spent most of his time reading and playing fantasy games with his
sibling. Although enthralled with the
magic of fairy tales, he was repelled by the frightening violence of the Brothers Grimm and by the heavy
moralizing. At an early age he decided that
he wanted to create magical stories for modern children that dispensed with the
violence and stock characters and monsters of the European tales and which
reflected American attitudes and outlook.
After an unhappy two year brush with military school, Baum
dropped out and decided to make his own way in the world. He first took up journalism and quickly had
some success, becoming a reporter on the New
York World and shortly after founding a newspaper in Pennsylvania. He also took up raising exotic chickens,
edited a magazine for poultry farmers, and wrote a book on Hamburg breed in which he specialized.
At the age of 25 Baum went to New York to study acting and
appeared in several shows. Because of
his family’s wealth Baum was pursued by producers to invest in their shows with
promises of good roles. His life-long
interest in the theater brought him repeatedly to bankruptcy. Baum’s father built him his own theater, or
“Opera House” in Richberg, New York where
he founded his own company and began writing plays for it.
The Maid of Aaran was a modest success in 1882 which he wrote, produced, directed
and starred in. He also composed the
music. The songs were integrated into
the story, almost unheard of in American musical theater at the time. While touring with this show, the Richberg
theater burned down during a performance of another play, Matches.
The same year he married Maude
Gage, the daughter of Matilda Joslyn Gage, one of the leading Suffragists
and feminists and close associate of Elizabeth Cady Stanton who Baum
adored and who deeply influenced his political and religious thought—he was a
consistent advocate of women’s rights and became, like Matilda, a Theosophist.
With a new family to support,
Baum left the theater to try his hand at business. First he worked as an axle grease salesman
for his father, and then in rapid succession he tried and failed at other
businesses and occupations changing careers as “other men change their
shirts.” He opened a general merchandise
store in Aberdeen, Dakota territory where his willingness to extend
credit to drought strapped local farmers led to failure. He then returned to journalism as the editor
and publisher of a weekly newspaper which, though nominally Republican
was a staunch advocate for voting rights for women and was familiar with and
sympathetic to emerging Populism. His
mother in law lived with his wife and growing family—four children—during this
period.
When the newspaper failed in
1891 the family moved to Chicago where Baum wrote for the Evening
Post. He founded and edited a
journal for professional Window Dressers, published his first book—on
breeding Hamburg rabbits, and became a traveling salesman. Mathilda Gage encouraged Baum to write and
publish the tales he was already telling his own children.
His first effort in 1897, Mother Goose in Prose was a success
with illustrations by leading artist Maxwell Parish. With Parish in demand by leading national
magazines, Baum teamed up with artist W.W. Denslow for Father Goose, His Book, which became
the bestselling children’s book of 1898.
But it was his next book in1900
which really established him—The
Wonderful Wizard of Oz. It was a
sensation and the public demanded more.
And Baum gave it to them. Baum
collaborated with producer Fred R. Hamlin and composer Paul Tietjens on a “musical extravaganza” based on the book. It opened in Chicago then on to Broadway for a very successful
run. The show toured the country for ten
years.
Baum returned to Oz in 1904 with the publication of The Marvelous
Land of Oz and there after produced a new Oz book almost every year
until he died—a total of 16 titles in all, the last published
posthumously. Several times he tried to
end the series, but returned to it by popular demand or when one of his business
ventures failed again.
Meanwhile Baum wrote other children’s books under his own
name and various nom-de-plumes. In additions there were numerous short
stories, poetry collections, adult novels, and theater pieces, and screen
plays. The output was prodigious.
Braun moved his family to Hollywood in 1911 and was forced into bankruptcy the following year
by the expenses of an odd lecture, film and theater piece called The Fairylogue and Radio-Plays and weak sales of some of his non-Oz
books. He had to sell the rights to many
of his earlier works to recover and redoubled production of Oz books.
But the siren call of the
theater was irresistible to Baum. He
joined and wrote most of the material for Harry Marston Haldeman’s group The Uplifters, which also featured Will
Rogers. Baum’s last full scale play
was The
Tic Toc Man of Oz, which was successfully produced in Los Angeles but could not find a
producer in New York.
Baum also was interested in motions pictures and in 1914 founded
his own company, The Oz Film Manufacturing Company to produce Oz films. Several were made to critical acclaim, but
box office failure. An attempt to
re-orient the company to adult audiences as Dramatic Feature Films by
Baum’s son Frank Joslyn Baum ended
in failure by 1917.
The failure of his cinema dreams took a hold on Baum’s
always fragile health. On May 5, 1919 he
suffered a stroke and died just days short of his 63rd birthday.
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