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Gale Sondergaard - Wicked Witch of the West

Updated Oct 17, 2024
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Gale Sondergaard - Wicked Witch of the West
Gale Sondergaard was initially cast to play the role of the Wicked Witch of the West in MGM's famous film the Wizard of Oz (1939). Gale changed her mind about the role after MGM decided the Wicked Witch of the West should be evil and ugly as opposed to the glamorous villainess Gale thought she would play (as seen in this photo). Gale was afraid that playing an ugly role would forever hurt her career.

Of course Margaret Hamilton would end up playing the role of the Wicked Witch of the West in MGM's classic movie. Every time I see this photo I wonder how different the film might have been.
Date & Place: at MGM Studio in California United States of America
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Gale Sondergaard was initially cast to play the role of the Wicked Witch of the West in MGM's famous film the Wizard of Oz (1939). But they didn't want a glamorous witch so Margaret Hamilton got the role. Shirley Temple was supposed to be Dorothy. How different would the movie have been? Most people think the flying monkeys are the scariest part of the movie - would they have kept the monkeys with a glamorous witch? What is the scariest movie you have seen?
I love this photo of Gale Sondergaard!
Photo of Margaret Tinsley Rodgers Margaret Tinsley Rodgers
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08/28/2019
Can’t imagine not having Margaret Hamilton. She was perfect.
Completely agree!
Interesting. That couldve been interesting..
Photo of Marianne Cassidy Marianne Cassidy
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08/28/2019
Margaret Hamilton she was perfect
Photo of Mick Brown Mick Brown
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08/28/2019
She was also in “The Letter” with Bette Davis.
Photo of Helen Mclaughlan Helen Mclaughlan
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08/28/2019
One of my favourites.
Photo of AncientFaces AncientFaces
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08/28/2019
Lots of photos of her in other roles at Gale Sondergaard: Photos
Photo of Mick Brown Mick Brown
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08/28/2019
Helen Mclaughlan I think one of Bette’s best roles.
Photo of Jim Retzer Jim Retzer
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08/28/2019
Looks far too similar to the Wicked Queen from Snow White.
At least with Margaret Hamilton they created an entirely original character.
Photo of AncientFaces AncientFaces
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08/28/2019
You're right! Gale thought the character would be like Snow White's wicked Queen! They wanted something different.
Photo of Joyce SJohn Joyce SJohn
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08/28/2019
Margaret Hamilton was best, but honestly - I see this other womans face. why would she "worry" about being made up ugly? she's not all that to begin with. :P
Photo of Helen Mclaughlan Helen Mclaughlan
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08/28/2019
They were both fabulous actresses.
Photo of Collene Oatley Collene Oatley
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08/28/2019
My grandmother was related to the Good witch.
Photo of AncientFaces AncientFaces
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08/28/2019
Billy Burke? :)
Photo of Collene Oatley Collene Oatley
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08/28/2019
AncientFaces yes it was.
So are you .Unless she is a stepgrandma
Photo of Collene Oatley Collene Oatley
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08/28/2019
Deirdre Wilson yes I am. My moms mom.
Photo of Harley Neumann Harley Neumann
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08/28/2019
I love billie burke!! That is awesome!!!
Photo of Margaret Tinsley Rodgers Margaret Tinsley Rodgers
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08/28/2019
Collene Oatley That’s very cool
Photo of Lora Gillman Boston Lora Gillman Boston
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08/28/2019
Billie Burke...married to Ziegfeld!
Photo of Bob Gaines Bob Gaines
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08/29/2019
AncientFaces LOVED Billy Burke in the movie "Topper" in 1937.
Photo of Dennis Keogh Dennis Keogh
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08/30/2019
Collene Oatley Margaret Hamilton!
Photo of Collene Oatley Collene Oatley
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08/30/2019
Dennis Keogh Ne Burke.
Photo of Mj Smida Mj Smida
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08/30/2019
Billie was great in topper
Photo of James Tarzia James Tarzia
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09/01/2019
Billie Burke who was married to Flo Zeigfeld
Photo of Collene Oatley Collene Oatley
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09/01/2019
Yes the Billie Burke
Photo of Joanna Hari Joanna Hari
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08/28/2019
She would be amazing, too! I remember seeing her in the "Blue Bird" with Shirley Temple and she was just unbelievable as a cat... features and movement very eye-catching...
Photo of Leon Shaw Leon Shaw
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08/28/2019
Thanks, I knew that I recognised her. ☮️
Always read the comments before searching.
Photo of Barbara Ann Pinkerton Barbara Ann Pinkerton
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08/28/2019
I am glad it was Margaret Hamilton! She was perfectly scary. 😯
Photo of Yanna D'aiello Yanna D'aiello
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08/28/2019
Margaret Hamilton
Photo of Becky Prior Ewen Becky Prior Ewen
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08/28/2019
I think the movie turned out just as it should...😀
Photo of Macie Kyle Macie Kyle
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08/28/2019
Margaret forever.
Photo of Paula Randolph Paula Randolph
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08/28/2019
I like the Margaret Hamilton version.
Photo of Christine Koski Cross Christine Koski Cross
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08/28/2019
She's smoking
Photo of Lynda Lerum Lynda Lerum
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08/28/2019
Margaret
Photo of Nancy Pirone Nancy Pirone
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08/28/2019
Margaret Hamilton for sure!
Photo of Susanne Bovill Susanne Bovill
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08/28/2019
I would rather see a pretty witch wicked or not the witch doesn’t have to be ugly even though the witch is evil
Photo of Barbara Naprava Cimino Barbara Naprava Cimino
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08/28/2019
Margaret
Photo of Barbara Naprava Cimino Barbara Naprava Cimino
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08/28/2019
So vanity loses and Margaret goes down in history.
Photo of Donna Carter Donna Carter
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08/28/2019
Things work out EXACTLY the way they are supposed to.
Photo of Susanne Bovill Susanne Bovill
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08/28/2019
but that would be up to the writers and makers of the oz movie on what how they would want the wicked witch of the west to look like I can say on what they can or can’t do with the witch 🙂
Photo of Marcos Martinez Marcos Martinez
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08/28/2019
And Buddy Edson was cast as tin man prior to an accident which forced a recast that led to Jack Haley’s iconic role.
Photo of Sandi MacCallum Dunlap Sandi MacCallum Dunlap
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08/29/2019
Marcos Martinez Actually it was Buddy’s allergic reaction to makeup that caused the change to Jack Haley.
Photo of Gillian Barr Gillian Barr
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08/28/2019
Margaret Hamilton played the part brilliantly xxx
Photo of Kyle Bell Kyle Bell
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08/28/2019
Margaret was amazing, but the choice to make the witch ugly could have gone either way. The prettiest people do the ugliest things.
Photo of Terri Berio Terri Berio
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08/28/2019
i think Margaret Hamilton was the perfect choice
Photo of Sharon Greenawalt Sharon Greenawalt
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08/28/2019
Margaret Hamilton was wonderful.
Photo of Susan W. Milam Susan W. Milam
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08/28/2019
Margaret Hamilton!
Photo of Lynn Beck Lynn Beck
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08/28/2019
Margaret Hamilton.💕
Photo of Jean Johnson Jean Johnson
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08/28/2019
Hamilton was perfect!
Photo of Beatriz Misenta Beatriz Misenta
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08/28/2019
Nobody could have done it like Margaret Hamilton! She wanted to look green and ugly!
Photo of Meg Scott Meg Scott
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08/28/2019
Hamilton!
Photo of Laura Cello Woodham Laura Cello Woodham
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08/28/2019
Margaret Hamilton was perfect. The witch needed to be ugly!
Photo of Natalie Ellerton Natalie Ellerton
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08/28/2019
Margaret Hamilton!🤗
Photo of Darlene Eldredge Darlene Eldredge
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08/28/2019
Margaret did the best at melting and got the part! 😏
Photo of Ron Snow Ron Snow
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08/28/2019
Hamilton nailed it!
Photo of Jenny Nana Jenny Nana
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08/28/2019
Don't mess with the green witch...
Photo of Red Golden Red Golden
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08/28/2019
Looks like Nancy Pelosi
...
Photo of Daniel Alexander Wilson Daniel Alexander Wilson
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08/28/2019
Photo of Jan Mortimer Jan Mortimer
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08/28/2019
The witch in the movie, quite appropriate. 👍
Photo of Jan Mortimer Jan Mortimer
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08/28/2019
I love Angelina Jolie in MALEFICENT. She is beautiful but, I can't see any other woman in that part, she is an awesome actress. 👍🔥💖
Photo of Jeanne Moody Short Jeanne Moody Short
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08/28/2019
Love the rather informal Identification Card being held by an unidentified hand.
Best----movie----ever !
Photo of JC Roman JC Roman
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08/28/2019
Miss Hamilton was an Icon. Miss Soderwhatever... who knows?
Photo of Nikkiya Fraser Nikkiya Fraser
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08/28/2019
Somewhere there is an alternate universe where Gale Sondergaard was the Wicked Witch (and Eric Stoltz was in Back to the Future and no one remembers the Beatles.) 😉
Photo of Louie Nonini Louie Nonini
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08/28/2019
Photo of Bob Gaines Bob Gaines
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08/28/2019
We all got the cast we were meant to have, especially Judy Garland! WHAT a year 1939 was for the movies!!!
Photo of Hope Robbins Hope Robbins
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08/28/2019
Margaret was the perfect choice.
Photo of Au Sable Au Sable
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08/28/2019
So this is her in make up then.
Photo of Gloria Rodas Gloria Rodas
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08/28/2019
Gale in the bluebird was creepy
Photo of Jeffrey Scott Fordyce Jeffrey Scott Fordyce
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08/28/2019
Margaret Hamilton is awesome
Photo of Janet Wagner Janet Wagner
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08/28/2019
Gale was pretty scary. She always played those kind of parts really well
Photo of Tim Condon Tim Condon
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08/28/2019
Hamilton
Photo of Margaret AndValdis Juskevics Margaret AndValdis Juskevics
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08/28/2019
Margaret for sure
Photo of Regina Rivetti Regina Rivetti
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08/28/2019
Gale made the right choice
If she couldn’t be sly and glamorous screw them
Margaret’s witch was overkill and way too ugly
Margaret Hamilton, of course!
Photo of Kori Eakin Kori Eakin
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08/28/2019
Kelly Bradley Eakin
Photo of Daniel Alexander Wilson Daniel Alexander Wilson
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08/28/2019
Gale didn’t want to get typecast. She eventually played numerous unglamorous roles.
Photo of Kay Daly Kay Daly
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08/29/2019
Margaret Hamilton for sure
Photo of Tonya Clark Marinaro Tonya Clark Marinaro
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08/29/2019
Old n haggard.
Photo of Linda Virtue Linda Virtue
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08/29/2019
I like sly and glamorous.
Photo of Jennifer Drake Jennifer Drake
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09/01/2019
Ugly was better in this case
Photo of Yuraldi Rodriguez Puentes Yuraldi Rodriguez Puentes
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09/26/2019
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Gale Sondergaard
Gale Sondergaard was an actress between 1936 -1983 who was married to Neill O'Malley in 1922 until 1930 when they divorced, and to Herbert J. Biberman in 1930 until he died in 1971, and they had two children. Born Edith Holm Sondergaard, she began her acting career in theater, and progressed to films in 1936. She was the first recipient of the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress for her film debut in Anthony Adverse (1936). She regularly played supporting roles in films during the late 1930s and 1940s, including The Cat and the Canary (1939), The Mark of Zorro (1940) and The Letter (1940). For her role in Anna and the King of Siam (1946), she was nominated for her second Best Supporting Actress Academy Award. After the late 1940s, her screen work came to an abrupt end for the next 20 years. Married to the director Herbert Biberman, Sondergaard supported him when he was accused of communism and named as one of the Hollywood Ten in the early 1950s. She moved with Biberman to New York City and worked in theatre, and acted in film and television occasionally from the late 1960s. She moved back to Los Angeles where she died from cerebrovascular thrombosis. Early life She was born Edith Holm Sondergaard on February 15, 1899 in Litchfield, Minnesota to Danish-American parents, Hans and Christin (Holm) Sondergaard. Her father taught at the University of Minnesota, where she was a drama student. She studied acting at the Minneapolis School of Dramatic Arts before joining the John Keller Shakespeare Company. She later toured North America in productions of Hamlet, Julius Caesar, The Merchant of Venice, and Macbeth. After becoming a member of the Theatre Guild, she began performing on the New York stage. in the trailer for The Letter (1940) Sondergaard made her first film appearance in Anthony Adverse (1936) as Faith Paleologue and became the first recipient of the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress for her performance. Her career as an actress flourished during the 1930s, including a role with Paul Muni in The Life of Emile Zola (1937). During pre-production of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer's classic The Wizard of Oz (1939), an early idea was to have the Wicked Witch of the West portrayed as a slinky, glamorous villainess in a black, sequined costume, inspired by the Evil Queen in Walt Disney's Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (1937). Sondergaard originally was cast as the witch and was photographed for two wardrobe tests, both of which survive. One was as a glamorous wicked witch, and another as a conventionally ugly wicked witch. After the decision was made to have an ugly wicked witch, Sondergaard, reluctant to wear the disfiguring makeup and fearing it could damage her career, withdrew from the role, and it went to veteran character actress Margaret Hamilton. Sondergaard was, however, cast as the sultry and slinky Tylette (a magically humanized but devious cat) in The Blue Bird (1940). Around the same time, she played the role of the exotic, sinister wife in The Letter (also 1940), a film starring Bette Davis. She featured in a supporting role in The Spider Woman (aka Sherlock Holmes and the Spider Woman, 1943), part of the Universal cycle, followed by the non-canonical The Spider Woman Strikes Back (1946), also for Universal. She received a second Academy Award nomination as Best Supporting Actress for her role as the king's principal wife in Anna and the King of Siam (1946). House Un-American Activities Committee Sondergaard's career suffered irreparable damage during the United States Congressional HUAC Red Scare of the early 1950s when her husband was accused of being a communist and named as one of the Hollywood Ten.[8] (In the 2000 movie One of the Hollywood Ten, Sondergaard was portrayed by actress Greta Scacchi while Jeff Goldblum was cast as Biberman.) With her career stalled, she supported her husband during the production of Salt of the Earth (1954). One of the Hollywood Ten (2000) chronicled Sondergaard's relationship with Biberman and her role in the making of Salt of the Earth. The Bibermans sold their home in Hollywood shortly after they completed Salt of the Earth, and moved to New York where Sondergaard was able to work in theatre. In 1969, she appeared in an off-Broadway one-woman show entitled Woman. Sondergaard resumed her career in film and television around the same time. Her revived career extended into the early 1980s. Her younger sister Hester Sondergaard was also an actress who featured in Seeds of Freedom (1943) The Naked City (1948) and Jigsaw (1949) and The Big Break (1953). Sondergaard first married in 1922 to actor Neill O'Malley; they divorced in 1930. On May 15, 1930, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, she married Herbert Biberman, a theater director then associated with the Theatre Guild Acting Company; he became a film director and died in 1971. They had two children, Daniel Hans Biberman and Mrs. Joan Campos. Following several strokes, she died from cerebral vascular thrombosis in the Motion Picture and Television Hospital in Woodland Hills, California, in 1985, aged 86. She had been admitted to the hospital in 1982. Acting credits Stage Opening date Closing date Title Role Theatre Refs Oct 08, 1928 Nov 1928 Faust The Witch Guild Theatre Nov 19, 1928 Jan 1929 Major Barbara Sarah Undershaft, Lady Britomart's daughter Guild Theatre Oct 7, 1929 Nov 1929 Karl and Anna Marie's sister Guild Theatre Dec 17, 1929 Feb 1930 Red Rust Nina Martin Beck Theatre May 11, 1931 May 23, 1931 Alison's House Elsa - Replacement Ritz Theatre Feb 21, 1933 March 1933 American Dream Lydia Kimball, The First Play, 1650 Guild Theatre May 17, 1934 Jul 1934 Invitation to a Murder Lorinda Channing Theatre Masque Nov 6, 1933 Nov 1933 Doctor Monica Anna Playhouse Theatre Dec 19, 1940 Dec 28, 1940 Cue for Passion Frances Chapman Royale Theatre Apr 02, 1980 April 26, 1980 Goodbye Fidel Prudencia Ambassador Theatre
Age in photo:
39
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