No, the line "Don't pay attention to the man behind the curtain" is not in "The Wonderful Wizard of Oz."
Specifically, the statement is found in the beloved 1939 film version but not the original 1900 book edition of "The Wizard of Oz." It is made by the Wizard when Toto pulls aside the curtain hiding the humbug magician from his visitors. It is said in a last-ditch effort to keep Dorothy, Toto and their three friends from connecting a little old man with a frightening, disembodied voice.
There is no place like home! Or if you were refering to the wizard himself, "The man behind the curtain", because he was really just a man and not a wizard. There was nothing any more special about him than anyone else. Great movie!
Well, darling, the actor who played the Wizard in The Wizard of Oz was Frank Morgan. He may have been hiding behind a curtain, but his performance sure wasn't hiding the fact that he nailed the role. So, there you have it, Frank Morgan was the man behind the curtain pulling all the strings.
Toto reveals the true identity of the Wizard in "The Wizard of Oz."Specifically, Dorothy Gale's pet dog Toto knocks over a screen in the book and pulls back a curtain in the film. The Wizard is hiding behind the screen in the book and the curtain in the film. He falls to pieces and confesses his scam of changing physical identities in the book and of the disembodied voice in the film.
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The movie gives the iconic image of Dorothy in her blue-and-white gingham dress and sparkling ruby slippers. In the book, however, Dorothy changes clothes several times. Her first outfit isn't described, but she changes into the gingham dress shortly after she lands in Oz, then puts on a green dress in the Emerald City that becomes white when she leaves (because it was never really green. Everyone wore green tinted glasses that made it look green). And her magic shoes are silver. They were changed to red in the movie to look better in Technicolor.
Pay no attention to that man behind the curtain.
The Wizard of Oz was actually a regular guy hiding behind a curtain and using a machine to create a mighty and powerful display of "The Wizard." Dorothy and her friends believed him the first time. After destroying the witch they came back to him, but he tried to deny their rewards. Dorothy's dog Toto sniffed him out behind the curtain and started pulling it away. When the wizard noticed they can see his real self, he tried commanding them to ignore that person.Horse Isle Answer: Wizard of OzCaptainQuiche Dun Server!~ i loves ya ;D
There is no place like home! Or if you were refering to the wizard himself, "The man behind the curtain", because he was really just a man and not a wizard. There was nothing any more special about him than anyone else. Great movie!
In "The Wizard of Oz" (1939), the Wizard is played by Frank Morgan. Of course the Wizard is not real in the film. It's controlled by the man behind the curtain.
Well, darling, the actor who played the Wizard in The Wizard of Oz was Frank Morgan. He may have been hiding behind a curtain, but his performance sure wasn't hiding the fact that he nailed the role. So, there you have it, Frank Morgan was the man behind the curtain pulling all the strings.
The full name of the Wizard Of Oz, or the man behind the curtain is Oscar Zoroaster Phadrig Isaac Norman Henkel Emmannuel Ambroise Diggs.
Behind the Curtain was created in 2006.
Behind That Curtain was created in 1928.
That was his projection on the screen, as he was a normal mortal behind a curtain working some thing-a-ma-boos.
Toto reveals the true identity of the Wizard in "The Wizard of Oz."Specifically, Dorothy Gale's pet dog Toto knocks over a screen in the book and pulls back a curtain in the film. The Wizard is hiding behind the screen in the book and the curtain in the film. He falls to pieces and confesses his scam of changing physical identities in the book and of the disembodied voice in the film.
In L. Frank Baum's novel "The Wonderful Wizard of Oz," the true identity of the wizard is revealed when Toto, Dorothy's dog, pulls back a curtain to expose the man behind the illusion. The wizard is actually a regular man from Omaha named Oscar Zoroaster Phadrig Isaac Norman Henkel Emmannuel Ambroise Diggs, who arrived in Oz by accident in a hot air balloon. This revelation highlights the theme of illusion versus reality in the story.
Behind the Curtain has 374 pages.