As my third-grade school year (circa late 70s) began to wind
down, my teacher decided to eat up half a school day treating the class to a showing
of the classic 1939 film The Wizard of Oz. Not on VHS (we didn't have that
technology yet.) Not even on 16mm film. No, this presentation was in film-strip format.
Imagine a seemingly never-ending store of
stills from the film we'd all seen annually on television, each frame punctuated by an ear-stabbing
alarm-clock BEEP! sounding every few
seconds, even during the music segments. "Somewhere, over the
rainbow..." BEEP! "...Way
up high...And the dreams that you dream of..." BEEP! "...Once
in a lullaby."
What should have been a welcome reprieve from the regularly scheduled classroom
curriculum had, by hour three, turned into something of an endurance test. A few kids tried to
lay their heads down on their desks, but even sleep was no escape, because BEEP!
A much more pleasant grade-school film-strip memory was my
music class presentation of this 1963 illustrated interpretation of the Camille
Saint-Saens classical piece Danse Macabre (illustrator is Harold Dexter Hoopes), screen capped below in its entirety from
a transfer posted to YouTube by lostmediaarchive.
I remember breathlessly describing the viewing experience to my Dad
that same night, who suggested (mistakenly, but a good guess) that it may have been the Night On Bald Mountain segment from Disney's Fantasia.
4 comments:
That looks pretty awesome!
Although I recall seeing a Super8(?) Film of Wizard of Oz that was condensed down to about 20 minutes.
I was introduced to Dance Macabre in 3rd grade, but I don’t remember a film strip presentation. All we had to look at was the album cover, which was spooky enough. At that age I was fascinated with skeletons and skulls. If I had seen the film strip, I would have had nightmares for a week. Ha!
Fantastic! Thank you!
Have you read THE GRAVEYARD BOOK by Neil Gaiman?
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