Summary

  • The infamous "Wizard of Oz hanging munchkin" is just an urban legend - there is no evidence to support the claim that an actor hanged themselves on set during filming.
  • The silhouette of a dead munchkin hanging from a rope in the film is actually a large bird, not a munchkin actor.
  • The production of "The Wizard of Oz" was plagued with accidents and unsafe conditions, including severe burns, toxic makeup, and dangerous special effects, making it a miracle that nobody died on set.

Contains discussion of suicide.

Despite being regarded as one of the greatest films of all time, Victor Fleming’s The Wizard of Oz secrets both on-screen and behind the camera are numerous - but none are more infamous than the "Wizard of Oz hanging munchkin" urban legend. Based on L. Frank Baum’s 1900 children’s fantasy novel of the same name, The Wizard of Oz has been the subject of much controversy, and one of the most nefarious tall tales surrounding the movie is that a lovelorn actor portraying a munchkin hanged himself on set during filming.

For almost as long as the movie has existed — nearly a century since The Wizard of Oz hit theaters in 1939 — rumors have persisted that the silhouette of a dead munchkin actor hanging from a rope is clearly visible during the Yellow Brick Road sequence. Since the dawn of the internet, the munchkin Wizard of Oz hanging story exploded, going viral on movie-focused blogs and websites like many Hollywood urban legends about "cursed films." The Wizard of Oz hanging munchkin has an explanation though, and it's not that one of the actors took their own life on set.

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The Wizard Of Oz Hanging Munchkin Theory

Wizard of Oz hanging munchkin myth

In The Wizard of Oz, Dorothy and her new friends have decided they will head off on their journey down the Yellow Brick Road. This happens around the 48-minute mark in the movie and Dorothy has met the Scarecrow and Tin-Man, but has yet to come across the Cowardly Lion. They turn and start walking down the Yellow Brick Road, on their journey, when people believe they saw what looked like someone hanging from a noose on a tree in the background. This led many people to believe that there was a Wizard of Oz hanging, and one of the actors who played a Munchkin had taken his own life by suicide on the set.

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There Isn't A Hanging Munchkin In The Wizard Of Oz

Munchkins in The Wizard of Oz

Despite how colorful and family-friendly The Wizard of Oz is, a myth about one of the actors dying by suicide on-set — with the evidence left in the final cut — isn't too off-base given the behind-the-scenes context of its production. An aura of darkness and mythmaking shrouds the production history of the movie, mainly due to the on-set accidents and substance abuse rife during the early years of Hollywood as well as the movie's place in culture (that The Wizard of Oz is the first color film is another misconception due to the movie's age). However, The Wizard of Oz hanging myth is just that — a myth. There is no dead munchkin in The Wizard of Oz.

However, there is an explanation for where the myth came from, and the silhouette The Wizard of Oz hanging legend is based on does actually exist. The dead munchkin urban legend stemmed from a specific scene that takes place around 45 minutes into the movie in which Dorothy, the Scarecrow, and the Tin Man walk off in the distance whilst singing “We’re Off to See the Wizard.” As the trio is seen walking away, the left side of the screen appears to feature a human form hanging from a tree. However, The Wizard of Oz munchkin hanging from the tree isn't a munchkin at all — the silhouette is of a bird in the studio, and it's not hanging.

The Wizard Of Oz Hanging Munchkin Is A Bird

Wizard of Oz Wicked Witch Hourglass

The hanging munchkin in Wizard of Oz is actually a large bird. Several birds of varying sizes were borrowed from the Los Angeles Zoo and allowed to roam the indoor set in order to grant it a more outdoorsy feel, adding to the magic that cemented Oz as a staple of pop culture. Another appearance of these borrowed birds is the live peacock outside the Tin Man’s shack while Dorothy and Scarecrow attempt to revive him. The figure wrongfully interpreted as a hanging body is, in fact, an emu or a crane.

The unusual movement of the bird in the background of the scene became a subject for speculation for those viewing the film on home video, as they were able to rewind and play the scene in slow-motion, birthing wild theories of an actor driven to despair over his unrequited love for a female munchkin. Despite the confirmation of the dead munchkin in The Wizard of Oz being a large bird, the myth still exists.

Furthermore, Jerry Maren, the last surviving actor who played a Munchkin, did an interview before his death, where he said that the rumors about the Munchkins being drunk, and disorderly the entire production were all overblown. He then went into detail about how the actors who played Munchkins were severely underpaid and only paid when needed (via Little White Lies).

"I got $50 a week [on the film].” And yet Terry, the Cairn Terrier that played Toto, was paid $125. Leo Von Singer, manager of popular vaudeville group ‘Singer’s Midgets’, was paid $100 for every little person he brought in. He pocketed 50 percent."

Maren also revealed the Munchkins actors didn't arrive on set until after the Tin-Man sequence which means there were no Munchkins on set during that scene. While the production team mostly said it was a bird, the two scenes don't look the same. The positioning of the bird is not the same as the perceived Wizard of Oz hanging scene, and it almost looks like a team went in and changed it after the fact before releasing the re-mastered version.

Where The Wizard Of Oz's Dead Munchkin Myth Came From

Dorothy and the Munchkins in The Wizard of Oz

The dead munchkin myth was folded into public consciousness during the heavy promotion and special video re-release of The Wizard of Oz on its 50th anniversary in 1989. This, in conjunction with the unfortunate practical circumstances that surrounded the cast, lent an aura of perceived credibility to the theory. Today, incidents like the tragic death of Warren Appleby on the Titans set are thankfully rare. But in the early 20th century, Health and Safety regulations basically didn't exist, so most movies from the era have a production history that's unsettling when revisited in a modern context.

However, even after The Wizard of Oz hanging myth was debunked, many continued to view the film as one with sinister undertones. This was exacerbated by the alleged presence of subliminal messaging associated with alter-programming and mind control. Several facts emerged since the original 1939 production of The Wizard of Oz that added to its reputation as a "cursed movie."

Buddy Ebsen, who was originally cast to play the Tin Man, ended up with an iron lung after using the requisite silver makeup on his skin as it contained toxic aluminum powder. Moreover, Margaret Hamilton, who played the Wicked Witch, suffered from second-degree burns on her face during filming. After that, her stunt double also experienced severe burns due to an exploding prop. Today, these incidents would have made news but in the 1930s, workplace deaths and injuries were par for the course in most professions, and Hollywood was no exception.

The gradual, decades-long drip-feeding of Wizard of Oz secrets — thanks to the contemporary media not really considering them newsworthy — has made the movie juicy fodder for Internet theorists and urban legend enthusiasts, especially the Wizard of Oz hanging munchkin scene. While these instances can be chalked to up mere coincidence and a run of bad luck, the severity of the accidents and the ease with which they were covered up lends a sinister aura to the film’s legacy. Not all Oz theories are sinister — some, like Dorothy being the Wicked Witch of the East, are standard hidden-plot fan speculation.

Irrespective of whether The Wizard of Oz film set was cursed or not, the hanging munchkin urban legend is unequivocally false. However, matters of a more serious, murkier kind haunt the fringes of the classic musical fantasy, namely the alleged instance of sexual abuse and harassment that then-16-year-old Judy Garland experienced whilst filming. This, arguably, is the nexus of unease evoked by the film, as its complete lack of acknowledgment paints a more chilling picture of Hollywood at that time (and, sadly, during many years since) than any misguided munchkin theories.

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It's A Miracle Nobody Died Making The Wizard Of Oz

Split Image Of Wizard Of Oz And Wicked Characters.jpg

The fake Wizard of Oz hanging aside, it's truly a miracle that no one actually died on the set. Early movies especially were a dangerous undertaking, as things like practical special effects hadn't been perfected yet. Even today there are stunt injury movie horror stories and tales of crazy accidents taking place on movie sets, but The Wizard of Oz is a special case.

The first scene in which Margaret Hamilton's Wicket Witch of the West disappears in a cloud of smoke went fine for the first take, but the director wanted a second and the special effects team set off the pyrotechnics before the actress could be dropped through the trap door. Her broom, hat, and cape all caught on fire, and she suffered second and third-degree burns on her face and hands. Her stunt double Betty Danko fared no better when during the "Surrender Dorothy" skywriting scene her broom was a smoking pipe that exploded and permanently injured her left leg.

Also in The Wizard of Oz, Buddy Ebsen's Tin Man was painted with a substance that contained aluminum dust, which coated the actor's lungs and sent him to the hospital where he had to spend two weeks in an oxygen tent. Many of the piano wires holding the flying monkeys snapped while stunt workers were in midair, causing numerous on-set injuries. The famously abused actress Judy Garland was given shots of adrenaline to help her "perform better."

In addition to the pyrotechnics accident, Margaret Hamilton's green face paint contained a toxic copper base that could've killed her if it had not been properly removed. Finally, the snow that covers the poppy field where Dorothy and her friends are is made of crystallized asbestos. So, while The Wizard of Oz hanging debacle was fake, there are plenty of ways actors could've actually died on set.

  • The Wizard of Oz Movie Poster
    The Wizard of Oz
    Summary:
    Dorothy Gale is swept away from a farm in Kansas to a magical land of Oz in a tornado and embarks on a quest with her new friends to see the Wizard who can help her return home to Kansas and help her friends as well.
    Release Date:
    1939-08-25
    Budget:
    $2.8 million
    Cast:
    Margaret Hamilton, Jack Haley, Judy Garland, Bert Lahr, Ray Bolger
    Director:
    Victor Fleming
    Genres:
    Musical, Fantasy, Family, Adventure
    Rating:
    PG
    Runtime:
    102 minutes
    Writers:
    Florence Ryerson, Noel Langley, Edgar Allan Woolf
    Studio(s):
    Warner Bros. Pictures
    Distributor(s):
    Warner Bros. Pictures