In the original book by author and Oz series originator Lyman Frank Baum [May 15, 1856-May 5, 1919], the Leader of the Winged Monkeys remains nameless. In the posthumous 1939 movie, the credits at the film's end give the name of Nikko.
In the original book by author and Oz series originator Lyman Frank Baum [May 15, 1856-May 5, 1991], the Winged Monkeys remain nameless. In the posthumous 1939 film version, they likewise remain nameless other than the Leader who's given the name of Nikko in the credits at the end.
They're just called flying monkeys or winged monkeys and they aren't named.
Winged Monkeys
Nikko
Winkies
There was no name for flying bats in either the original 1900 book or the beloved 1939 film versions of 'The Wizard of Oz'. Instead, the Wicked Witch of the West had control over flying monkeys. The monkeys were called Winged Monkeys.
Flying monkeys exist in fantasy. Frank Baum, the author of "The Wizard of Oz," explained that he was writing fantasy. Flying monkeys only exist in imagination. But in the Wizard of Oz flying monkeys existed in the creepy forest hollow and the wicked witch of the west's castle.
Urs
The leader of the winged monkeys. The name isn't mentioned within the book, the 1939 film, or the 1902-1903 stage versions of The Wizard of Oz. But the name does appear at the end of the 1939 film, in the credits, as the leader of the flying monkeys.
She had those flying monkeys that went and snatched Dorothy and her friends and dog out of the forest...
There was no name for flying bats in either the original 1900 book or the beloved 1939 film versions of 'The Wizard of Oz'. Instead, the Wicked Witch of the West had control over flying monkeys. The monkeys were called Winged Monkeys.
Flying (or winged) monkeys are fictional - they appear in the Wizard of Oz.
Yes the are
No. Flying monkeys aren't real. The term flying monkeys were popularized by the movie and book-- The Wonderful Wizard of Oz.
Flying monkeys
Flying monkeys exist in fantasy. Frank Baum, the author of "The Wizard of Oz," explained that he was writing fantasy. Flying monkeys only exist in imagination. But in the Wizard of Oz flying monkeys existed in the creepy forest hollow and the wicked witch of the west's castle.
Urs
Flying monkey or winged monkey. In The Wonderful Wizard of Oz the only flying monkey that L. Frank Baum (the author of the Oz series) shows his name is a flying monkey that can talk who is the King Flying Monkeys named Chistery.
The leader of the winged monkeys. The name isn't mentioned within the book, the 1939 film, or the 1902-1903 stage versions of The Wizard of Oz. But the name does appear at the end of the 1939 film, in the credits, as the leader of the flying monkeys.
She had those flying monkeys that went and snatched Dorothy and her friends and dog out of the forest...
The flying monkeys, servants to the wicked witch of the west from the wizard of Oz.
Niko is the name that appears in the credits of the movie (but isn't mentioned in the book or the film) as the leader of the Flying Monkeys.