Toto -- Not a Terrier!

Everyone has seen the Wizard of Oz - it's hard to
miss, since it seemsto be on TV at least once a day, on some station
or another. Everyone also knows that Toto is a Terrier - a Cairn
terrier, to be precise. But was he, really?
In the very first book in the Oz series, "The
Wizard of Oz", he was portrayed by illustrator W Denslow as
a Cairn, as is shown in this illustration. But Denslow only illustrated
the very first book in Baum's prolific series. All others were illustrated
by the artist R.A. Neill, and Neill took a very different approach
altogether.
"Frank L Baum's "Oz" series of
children's books featured two books that portrayed Toto as a Frenchie,
*not* a Cairn Terrier as most people remember him. Both "The Road
to Oz", and to a lesser extent "The Emerald City", featured illustrations
by R.A. Neill, and clearly showed Toto as a French Bulldog.
"Illustrator R.A. Neill was born in Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania. Believe it or not, his illustrations usually developed
independently on Baum's text.
Baum would write, send to publisher, publisher
would forward to Neill, Neill would illustrate, return to publisher,
publisher would forward back to Baum to review... most often, Baum
would love what he saw and that was that.
The two men were not known
to have actually spent a lot of time together. "
- courtesy of Larry Weisberg, the OZ Organization
No one seems to know what inspired Neill to portray Toto as a Frenchie,
but since they were in the top five most popular breeds at this time
(1909-1914), it is entirely possible that he in fact owned one himself.
I've found one source which states that Neill owned a French Bulldog
named 'Quinn', along with a 'miniature bulldog' named Ruffian. This
would seem to make perfect sense, in light of his choice of Toto's
breed, but I have not yet been able to verify it, and so it must remain
as speculation. Perhaps, though, a little of both dogs found their
way into his illustrations.
The intial casting of Toto in the movie version of the Wizard of
Oz was a brindle French Bulldog apparently named 'Captain', but Captain
was unceremoniously ditched in favor of a Cairn Terrier when he proved
to less than enthusiastic about some of the commands he was expected
to be able to perform. A signed photo of Judy Garland with Captain
was sold at an Oz Memorabilia auction for an astounding sum of money
several years ago. It's hard to say what the impact on the breed would
have been had Captain's portrayal made it onto the screen.
The early Oz books make a fascinating addition to the collection
of any French Bulldog fancier, but first editions can run as high
as several hundred dollars. Later editions with color covers are much
more reasonably priced. |