While we’ve covered Buddy Ebsen and his unfortunate allergy to the silver powder makeup of his character, the Tin Man, the Wicked Witch also struggled with the green makeup she was made to wear for the film.
The Wicked Witch’s makeup was in fact toxic. At one point, Mitchell accidentally swallowed some of her green makeup and got so sick she was on a liquid diet for quite a number of days. The makeup was made with copper-based ingredients that made it very very difficult to remove. Hamilton’s face remained tinged with green for weeks after filming of the picture had officially ended.
The Famous Dress
Dorothy Gale's blue and white gingham dress is one of the most recognizable costumes in Hollywood history. Beyond its look, the dress was designed with particular pockets for use in very specific scenes. In the seam of the skirt, for instance, there is a hidden pocket that held the handkerchief that Dorothy uses to wife away the Cowardly Lion's tears on screen.
Being one of the most recognizable costumes in the history of Hollywood certainly paid off when the dress itself went up for auction in November of 2012. The single blue checkered gingham dress fetched nearly half a million dollars at auction.
Margaret Hamilton As The Wicked Witch Of The West
Margaret Hamilton will always be most recognized for her roll as the Wicket Witch of the West in The Wizard of Oz. However, before being cast in the blockbuster, she lived a quiet life as a schoolteacher and character actress. She'd never done anything like playing the green meanie in the MGM Technicolor fantasy. The Wicked Witch remains a classic movie villain, recognizable all overthe world over. Hamilton will always be remembered for her role as one of the top 5 movie villains of all time.
Despite her evil doppelganger on film, Margaret Hamilton was actually very active in causes connected to the welfare of children and animals, and was a very prominent advocate for public education.
Poor Puppy
The set of The Wizard of Oz was fraught with dangers for the entirety of its cast, and not just the human actors who worked there. Terry, the Cairn terrier who played Toto also suffered an injury while working. While Terry fit perfectly in Judy Garland's prop basket, she was not carried about for the entirety of filming.
When roaming around out of the basket the poor tiny puppy had her paw trod on by one of the Wicket Witch's guardsmen. The paw was soon deemed broken. Terry, our famous Toto, did recover and go on to star in over 15 films.
The Yellow Brick Road
The Yellow Brick Road, unlike the Silver Slippers of the original book, was translated as described to the screen. It is one of the most iconic images from either Baum's book or MGM's movie. Sometimes, however, things are a bit clearer in the imagination. Due to MGM's insistence on using Technicolor industrial-grade paint had to be brought in to repaint the yellow on the set.
In Technicolor the original road came through with a green tint on camera. While clear in his colorful description Baum could not have imagined the trouble his colorful world would give 20th century moviemakers.