Arts & Entertainment Off To See The Wizard Photo by Peter Coom bs Stage version of a beloved family film comes to the Fisher Theatre. Suzanne Chessler Special to the Jewish News M embers of three different gen- erations — all enduring fans of The Wizard of Oz — have important commitments to the touring musical of the same name to be staged Jan. 29-Feb. 14 at the Fisher Theatre. New York-based Ernie Harburg, 83, son of show lyricist E.Y. (Yip) Harburg, has seen the production twice and has many recollections of his dad's work on the film that marked its 70th anniversary last year. Beth Cheryl Tarnow, 22, a member of the ensemble, grew up watching the film and is excited that the stage version opens up her career dreams. Josee York, 10, of Rochester Hills, another fan of the movie and an aspiring stage performer, welcomes the opportunity to be among the youngest cast members culled from local performers at each tour stop. The play, filled with technical innova- tions to enhance the colorful scenes, recaptures the world of Dorothy, who longs for a better place with her dog Toto, suffers a head injury during a tornado and is transported beyond the rainbow to find magical characters in the Land of Oz. "I think when you have a work of art moving from one medium to another, you get different effects:' says Harburg, a former University of Michigan social sci- entist. "The community feeling you get in a live theater is deeper than from a film:' Harburg, recently at the Jewish Community Center of Washtenaw County to introduce his new book, Liberty, Equality, Consensus and All That Jazz at the Del Rio Bar, believes the universal yearning for personal independence has a lot to do with the success of the Oz book, film and stage production. Recalling the evolution of the film, he says, "Yip, as a poet, rose to a high artis- tic effort that he and composer Harold Arlen put together, but the song 'Over the Rainbow' had been thrown out by the director. "Yip and Harold went ballistic and complained to [MGM studio head] Louis B. Mayer, who sat behind his desk as five or six people argued about whether the number should be included. Finally, Mayer said, let the boys have their song: and that's the way the decision was made Harburg also recalls how his dad got the idea for "Over the Rainbow." The cast of the national tour of the Wizard of Oz. The production is based on the Royal Shakespeare Company's celebration of the 1939 MGM movie. "Yip and Harold had agreed that they needed a song to capture where the girl was yearning to go:' Harburg explains. "Yip said he would get back to Harold with a dummy title so Harold could write the music based on that. "Then one day, Yip was walking on a Beverly Hills lawn when the gardener turned on the sprinkler system. As Yip was starting to run to get away, rainbows appeared in the sprinkles. When he got to a dry place, he thought about it and realized the little girl in Kansas knew only gray so the other side of the rainbow [would be her destination]. "It took several weeks to come to the idea of 'somewhere over the rainbow, and that starts all the action in the film." As Tarnow tours for the first time, most visibly as the mayoress of Munchkinland, she remains a fan of the music in the clas- sic, family-friendly staple of American culture. "It's rare that a show can please so many audiences:' says Tarnow, a May graduate of the Shenandoah Conservatory in Virginia. "The stage show is a celebration of the film with vibrant dance and costumes that bring the story to life. "With all the special effects, I watch the witch melting on stage every night and still can't figure out how they do it. The tornado is experienced with the help of projection screens." Tarnow, who was raised in New Jersey where she had her bat mitzvah, has worked in summer stock and loves get- ting to see the country as she tours. "At each venue we work with the local children playing the Munchkins," she says. "Their dance schools get training kits, and we meet with them to put it all together." Josee, who studies at Deborah's Stage Door in Rochester Hills, where she lives, thinks of the Munchkin costumes and wigs as cool. Ensemble member Beth Tarnow plays the mayoress of Munchkinland. "I'm happy when I'm on stage says the fifth-grader at Long Meadow Elementary School who also enjoys taking part in ceremonies lighting Chanukah candles. "I even love the dance-school practicing." Harburg says that the Munchkins rep- resent the idea of community that was important to his socialist dad. "Community had to do with his Jewish heritage Harburg says. "It's implicit in the Jewish outlook that community is basic to survival. It makes life worth living to be giving to the community" 0 Josee York, second from left in the first row, is one of 12 "local Munchkins" from Deborah's Stage Door in Rochester Hills. The Wizard of Oz will be performed Jan. 29-Feb.14 at the Fisher Theatre. Performances are 7:30 p.m. Tuesdays-Saturdays, 2 p.m. Saturdays, and 1 and 6:30 p.m. Sundays. There is a matinee at 1 p.m. Thursday, Feb.11, and no evening performance on Feb.14. $24-$79. Info: (313) 872-1000 or BroadwayinDetroit.com ; tickets: (800) 982-2787 or ticketmaster.com . January 21 • 2010 35