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-Short Attention Span Theater-
Last of the flying monkeys dies
2005-10-11
Many other bit-parts deleted.

Sig Frohlich, who has died aged 97, was a bit-part actor for much of his long career in Hollywood, playing messengers, waiters, callboys, clerks and soldiers, rarely earning even a flicker of recognition from viewers over 50 years. But he achieved some lasting celebrity as one of the winged monkeys in The Wizard of Oz (1939). This was despite the fact that he was completely disguised in a monkey costume and uttered no words on screen. The 13 actors playing these unlovely animals, in the service of the Wicked Witch of the West, were originally promised $25 for each time they swooped down screaming from the sky on the heroine, Dorothy (Judy Garland). The director, Victor Fleming, protested that this sum was the usual fee for a whole day's work. But it was agreed that Frohlich, who was an early member of the Screen Actors' Guild, should receive an extra $5 a swoop since he was the one who snatched Dorothy's dog, Toto; and he was paid more for his other scenes with Margaret Hamilton, who played the Wicked Witch.

Frohlich, the last surviving monkey, found himself constantly questioned about the film, which enjoys such iconic status in the United States that flying monkeys are periodically referred to in The Simpsons. He was a favourite at the Wizard of Oz festival, which is held in the house where Judy Garland was born at Grand Rapids, Minnesota. Frohlich believed that the great interest was due to the monkeys being the stuff of childhood nightmares of Frank J. He would recall how the monkeys were trussed up like "Thanksgiving Day turkeys" with special belts around their midriffs; these were attached to wires which could carry them through the sky without being seen on screen. Not only do the monkeys have the honour of being listed at 94 in the top 100 film monsters of all time, the slim steel tracks in the reinforced rafters of MGM Sound Stage 29 are still in place as a haunting reminder for visitors.

After Pearl Harbor, he enlisted in the Army Air Force to become a B-24 gunner in action over the Pacific.
Posted by:Jackal

#2  Dang, and I just got back into watching the Classics again. RIP.
Posted by: JosephMendiola   2005-10-11 22:08  

#1  Fly my pretties! Fly!
Posted by: GK   2005-10-11 21:50  

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