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  • The Wizard Of Oz

Orpheum Theatre

910 Hennepin Ave.
Twin Cities MN 55403
612-339-7007
  • Fri Mar 26 8 pm
    The Wizard Of Oz at Orpheum Theatre

    You can ignore the man behind the curtain, but you can’t really ignore The Wizard Of Oz’s iconic status in American culture. When the film was made in 1939, L. Frank Baum’s Oz books were already popular with a generation of children. But the Hollywood musical has taken on a life of its own—plenty of its dialogue, not to mention songs like “If I Only Had A Brain,” are firmly part of the English language—and it propelled Judy Garland into stardom and near-sainthood in the eyes of her many gay fans.

    Orpheum Theatre 910 Hennepin Ave., Twin Cities, MN
  • Sat Mar 27 2 pm, 8 pm
    The Wizard Of Oz at Orpheum Theatre

    You can ignore the man behind the curtain, but you can’t really ignore The Wizard Of Oz’s iconic status in American culture. When the film was made in 1939, L. Frank Baum’s Oz books were already popular with a generation of children. But the Hollywood musical has taken on a life of its own—plenty of its dialogue, not to mention songs like “If I Only Had A Brain,” are firmly part of the English language—and it propelled Judy Garland into stardom and near-sainthood in the eyes of her many gay fans.

    Orpheum Theatre 910 Hennepin Ave., Twin Cities, MN
  • Sun Mar 28 1 pm, 6:30 pm
    The Wizard Of Oz at Orpheum Theatre

    You can ignore the man behind the curtain, but you can’t really ignore The Wizard Of Oz’s iconic status in American culture. When the film was made in 1939, L. Frank Baum’s Oz books were already popular with a generation of children. But the Hollywood musical has taken on a life of its own—plenty of its dialogue, not to mention songs like “If I Only Had A Brain,” are firmly part of the English language—and it propelled Judy Garland into stardom and near-sainthood in the eyes of her many gay fans.

    Orpheum Theatre 910 Hennepin Ave., Twin Cities, MN
$23-$67

You can ignore the man behind the curtain, but you can’t really ignore The Wizard Of Oz’s iconic status in American culture. When the film was made in 1939, L. Frank Baum’s Oz books were already popular with a generation of children. But the Hollywood musical has taken on a life of its own—plenty of its dialogue, not to mention songs like “If I Only Had A Brain,” are firmly part of the English language—and it propelled Judy Garland into stardom and near-sainthood in the eyes of her many gay fans.

Updated 01/27/2010

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