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| - IMDB Link..Buddy Ebsen
- At the time the movie was begun, Ebsen was in the second year of his second two-year contact with MGM, and was making $1500 per week. Ebsen was a talented dancer who'd had a noteworthy career on the stage. By 1939 he had appeared in eight films, and had danced with Judy Garland in the finale to Broadway Melody of 1938. He was originally intended for the role of the Scarecrow, but was eventually cast as the Tin Man and was involved in early filming in October 1938. On 21 October, nine days into the filming, he suffered a severe allergic reaction from breathing the aluminum dust used in the character's makeup. He was hospitalized for two weeks, and recuperated at home for a month after.
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abstract
| - IMDB Link..Buddy Ebsen
- At the time the movie was begun, Ebsen was in the second year of his second two-year contact with MGM, and was making $1500 per week. Ebsen was a talented dancer who'd had a noteworthy career on the stage. By 1939 he had appeared in eight films, and had danced with Judy Garland in the finale to Broadway Melody of 1938. He was originally intended for the role of the Scarecrow, but was eventually cast as the Tin Man and was involved in early filming in October 1938. On 21 October, nine days into the filming, he suffered a severe allergic reaction from breathing the aluminum dust used in the character's makeup. He was hospitalized for two weeks, and recuperated at home for a month after. Ebsen was replaced by Jack Haley, and aluminum paste was substituted for aluminum dust in the Tin Man's makeup. All of the scenes in which Ebsen appeared were re-shot with Haley, so that Ebsen does not appear in the finished film; yet his voice occurs at one point in the soundtrack, when he, Ray Bolger, and Judy Garland sing "We're Off to See the Wizard" after the Tin Man has been lubricated back to life. Ebsen returned to the MGM studio on December 13, to work not on the Oz project but on a movie called Four Girls in White. He went on to a long career, and achieved late fame in the TV series The Beverly Hillbillies and Barnaby Jones.
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