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Magic & Wonder Show

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Magic & Wonder Show
Magic & Wonder Show
Magic & Wonder Show
Magic & Wonder Show
Magic & Wonder Show
Magic & Wonder Show
Magic & Wonder Show
Magic & Wonder Show
Magic & Wonder Show
Magic & Wonder Show
Magic & Wonder Show
Magic & Wonder Show
Magic & Wonder Show
Magic & Wonder Show
Magic & Wonder Show
Magic & Wonder Show
Magic & Wonder Show
Magic & Wonder Show
Magic & Wonder Show
Magic & Wonder Show
Magic & Wonder Show
Magic & Wonder Show
Magic & Wonder Show
Magic & Wonder Show
Magic & Wonder Show
Phone:
+1 800-790-4069

Address:
2760 Old Philadelphia Pike, Bird in Hand, PA 17505, USA

The fictional Land of Oz is a magical country first introduced in the classic children's novel The Wonderful Wizard of Oz . Oz consists of four vast quadrants, the Gillikin Country in the north, Quadling Country in the south, Munchkin Country in the east and Winkie Country in the west. Each province has its own ruler, but the realm itself has always been ruled by a single monarch. After The Marvelous Land of Oz, this monarch is Princess Ozma. Originally, Baum did not intend for The Wonderful Wizard of Oz to have any sequels, but it achieved a greater popularity than any of the other fairylands he created, including the land of Merryland in Baum's children's novel Dot and Tot in Merryland, written a year later. Due to Oz's worldwide success, Baum decided to return to it four years after The Wonderful Wizard of Oz was published. For the next two decades, he described and expanded upon the land in the Oz Books, a series which introduced many fictional characters and creatures. Baum intended to end the series with the sixth Oz book The Emerald City of Oz , in which Oz is forever sealed off and made invisible to the outside world, but this did not sit well with fans, and he quickly abandoned the idea, writing eight more successful Oz books, and even naming himself the Royal Historian of Oz.In all, Baum wrote fourteen best-selling children's books about Oz and its enchanted inhabitants, as well as a spin off-series of six early readers. After his death in 1919, author Ruth Plumly Thompson, illustrator John R. Neill and several other writers and artists continued the series. There are now over 50 novels based upon Baum's original Oz saga. Baum characterized Oz as a real place, unlike MGM's 1939 musical movie adaptation, which presents it as a dream of lead character Dorothy Gale. According to the Oz books, it is a hidden fairyland cut off from the rest of the world by the Deadly Desert.The canonical demonym for Oz is Ozite. The term appears in Dorothy and the Wizard in Oz, The Road to Oz, and The Emerald City of Oz. Elsewhere in the canon, Ozmie is also used. In the animated 1974 semi-sequel to the MGM film, Journey Back to Oz, Ozonian is used. The term Ozian appears in the script for the Royal Shakespeare Company's stage adaptation of the MGM movie and in the non-canonical modern work Wicked. Ozmite was used in Reilly & Lee marketing in the 1920s, which has suggested to some critics that Ozmie may have been a typographical error.
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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

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