Dorothy Gale (played by Judy Garland)
Her broom.
Nothing is what the Wizard does for Dorothy in "The Wizard of Oz."Specifically, the Wizard decides that he wants to go back home, in both the original 1900 book edition and the beloved 1939 film version of "The Wizard of Oz." He chooses to go back the same way he came to Oz: by hot-air balloon. He assures Dorothy Gale that she and her pet dog Toto can keep him company on the way back to Kansas, but takes off when Toto runs off and the two cannot get back into the balloon before take-off.
The songs 'Follow the Yellow Brick Road' and 'We're Off to See the Wizard' are what Dorothy Gale sings on her way to the Emerald City in the beloved 1939 film version of 'The Wizard of Oz'. The Yellow Brick Road leads her to the Emerald City, where the Wizard lives in his Emerald Palace. The Wizard needs to be seen, in order for Dorothy and her pet dog Toto to be able to get back home to Kansas.
Dorothy Gale and her pet dog Toto are left behind when the Wizard leaves the lands and peoples of Oz. At the last minute, Toto jumps out of the basket. Dorothy runs after and catches Toto. But the two of them can't get back inside the basket before the hot air balloon takes off. And so it's only the Wizard who manages to leave by hot air balloon.
Oz is where Dorothy Gale and her pet dog Toto are carried off to in "The Wizard of Oz."Specifically, Dorothy and Toto live with Dorothy's Uncle Henry and Aunt Em in Kansas. Kansas is prone to tornadoes, and one strikes while Dorothy is outside. Dorothy manages to get inside, but she and Toto do not get to the trap door down to the cellar in time. They therefore are carried away when the tornado uproots the Gale farmhouse, which it takes over the rainbow and into the beautiful, enchanted, magical lands of Oz.
Ruby red
Dorothy Gail, from The Wizard of Oz.
Yes, in the sense that Toto jumps out of the hot air balloon basket and Dorothy immediately jumps out too. Dorothy manages to catch Toto, but not in time to re-board the basket. The Wizard therefore takes off without his two passengers.
The song that had a similar title to the film's name was 'We're Off to See the Wizard'. Dorothy Gale's pet dog Toto doesn't speak in either the original 1900 book edition nor the 1939 film version of The Wizard of Oz. And so it's the other four of the five friends - Dorothy, the Lion, the Scarecrow, and the Tin Woodman - who one-by-one join in the singing as they trudge down the Yellow Brick Road to the Emerald Palace of the Wizard, in the Emerald City of Oz.
The thought that she may not get back home is what depresses Dorothy in "The Wizard of Oz."Specifically, Dorothy Gale wants to get back home to her family and life in Kansas. She is worried about her Uncle Henry and Aunt Em and as much as she likes her new friends in Oz, she ultimately does not fit in. Her depression gets worse when she is the prisoner of the Wicked Witch of the West and when the Wizard's balloon takes off for Kansas without her and her pet dog Toto.
Answer #1 That question makes no sense. Dorothy or Toto? Answer #2 Dorothy and Toto. The Wizard of Oz tells Dorothy that he can leave the land of Oz. For he sees the Scarecrow as an excellent candidate for taking over Supreme Rule of the country. He invites Dorothy and Toto to leave with him. For he originally is from Omaha, Nebraska. So he knows the part of the United States where they live with Uncle Henry and Aunt Em. Once inside the balloon basket, however, Toto jumps out at the last minute. Dorothy jumps out to catch Toto, and the balloon takes off with just the Wizard on board. She really wants to get back home, and manages to do so anyway. For Glinda the Good Witch of the South tells her about clapping the heels of the deceased Wicked Witch of the West's slippers together three times, and saying, "Take me home to Aunt Em!"
Like Dorothy in the Wizard of Oz, if the winds are suficient, then you may be lifted off your feet. Not a rare experience in cyclones.