The Wizard comes to Wyandotte County

The Tin Man and Dorothy, Brian McKinley and Chelcie Abercrombie, in the production of “The Wizard of Oz” signed autographs Aug. 2 at the National Agricultural Center and Hall of Fame, Bonner Springs. The live theater production was last week at the Providence Medical Center Amphitheater, 130th and State, Bonner Springs. (Photo by Steve Rupert)

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Opinion column

by Murrel Bland

The recent live production of “The Wizard of Oz” at Providence Medical Center Amphitheater in Wyandotte County Park, Bonner Springs, brought back memories of what might have been if the Oz theme park would have come about.

The amphitheater, originally called Sandstone, was the brainchild of restaurateur Gus Fasone. Sandstone opened in 1984 and throughout the years attracted well-known entertainers including Elton John, Chicago, the Everly Brothers, Tom Petty and The Heartbreakers, Frankie Laine, Patti Page, the Beach Boys, The Grateful Dead, Def Leppard, Michael Hedges and Duran Duran.

After Sandstone, Fasone was searching for his next project. He wanted to build a first-class hotel at Wyandotte County Lake. That proposal was summarily rejected by a citizen activist group called “Friends of the Lake.” That group found favor with then State Sen. B.D. Kanan who championed legislation that forbid a hotel at the lake.

Undaunted, Fasone moved his plans for a hotel to a location near I-435 and Parallel Parkway. He also later had plans for a nearby theme park based on The Wizard of Oz. Fasone reasoned that Kansas would be a natural place for an Oz theme park as everyone identified Oz with Kansas.

In the early 1990s, I remember attending a meeting at Fasone’s restaurant of local supporters and investment bankers from Little Rock, Arkansas. Would it be possible for then-President Bill Clinton, an Arkansas native, to come for the grand opening of the Oz theme park?

Fasone and his associates, including Robert Kory, a Los Angeles entertainment lawyer, and Skip Palmer, who had worked for the Disney organization, weren’t able to garner the support of elected officials, particularly Mayor Carol Marinovich. Besides, it was 1997 when the International Speedway Corp. came to Wyandotte County seeking to build what is now the Kansas Speedway. There simply wasn’t enough room for both the speedway and Oz.

Fasone and associates decided to move their development plans to the Sunflower Army Ammunition Plant in northwestern Johnson County near the city of DeSoto. The plant, nearly 11,000 acres, was established in 1941 to meet the demands of World War II. Western Wyandotte County, according to legend, was originally considered as a site for the plant, but there was not adequate acreage.

The Sunflower plant was considered excess property by the U.S. Army in 1997. The hitch for private sector development was the unknown cost of cleaning up the contaminated soil. The property was turned over to the state of Kansas and Johnson County in 2005.

Unfortunately, the Oz promoters encountered similar problems to those in Wyandotte County; they never garnered the support of Johnson County elected officials and grass-root residents. Bill Sheldon, an acquaintance from undergraduate journalism days in the 1960s at the University of Kansas at Lawrence, led fellow Johnson County residents in protesting the Oz development. The opponents called themselves Taxpayers Opposed To Oz—TOTO for short.

So, the Wizard finally did come to Wyandotte County—not as a theme park, but as a first-class musical production. The live entertainers were complemented with backscreen projections from the 1939 MGM movie production. The Theater League produced the show.

The Kansas City, Kansas, Convention and Visitors’ Bureau led in the promotion of the Oz musical by encouraging organizations including the National Agricultural Center and Hall of Fame, the Grinter Place Friends and the Wyandotte County Museum, to celebrate “The Summer of Oz.”

Critic Bob Evans, in his complimentary review of the Oz show, has suggested that other similar live shows may follow. That would be a very welcome addition.

Murrel Bland is the former editor of The Wyandotte West and The Piper Press. He is executive director of Business West.

Dorothy’s ruby red slippers from “The Wizard of Oz” were on display at the National Agricultural Center and Hall of Fame in Bonner Springs. “Wizard of Oz” displays were part of the “Summer of Oz” promotion in Wyandotte County, and a live theater production of “The Wizard of Oz” took place last week at the Providence Medical Center Amphitheater at 130th and State Avenue, Bonner Springs. (Photo by Steve Rupert)

Saints make T-Bones suffer; KC returns home tonight

Kansas City was plagued by a pair of four-run innings from the St. Paul offense Saturday night. On Sunday, a four-run second inning and a three-run fourth sealed the three-game series sweep for the Saints at CHS Field.

It started early when former T-Bone Zach Walters, who homered Saturday night, smacked the ball deep into right field in the bottom of the second. It bounced off the scoreboard and allowed Walters a stand-up double.

Next batter up, Dante Bichette Jr. bunted to the third-base side to reach first and put runners at the corners with no outs. Starting pitcher Lucas Irvine then grazed Nathaniel Maggio to load the bases.

Justin O’Conner, who hit a three-run home run earlier in this series, then dropped the ball into left center, allowing Walters and Bichette Jr. to score and make the score 2-0 St. Paul.

A sacrifice bunt by Phillips moved up the runners to scoring position. Still with no outs, Max Murphy lined a sacrifice to the shortstop to score Maggio. Kyle Barrett then singled with a right field hit, bringing home O’Conner and giving St. Paul a four-run lead.

In the fourth, a Noah Perio Jr. RBI single to right field brought home Todd Cunningham, who had reached on a center field single, then stole second.

However, one step forward was met with three steps back as the Saints pushed in three runs in the bottom of the fourth. Max Murphy crushed a two-run home run off Irvine over the left-center field fence.

An RBI double to right field by former T-Bone Zach Walters then scored Kyle Barrett, who had reached on a single earlier in the inning. Kansas City went into the fifth inning trailing 7-1.

In the top of the fifth, Alay Lago reached on a single and was pushed forward by a double from Logan Moon. Next batter, Tucker Pennell then hit a sacrifice fly to bring home Lago and make the score 7-2 Saints.

St. Paul added insurance runs in the bottom of the fifth with a two-run RBI single to center field by Max Murphy, which scored Nathaniel Maggio and Justin O’Conner to make the score 9-2. In the end, Murphy drove in five RBIs for the Saints Sunday.

The T-Bones tried one more time in the top of the eighth to rally, with a second RBI of the game from Perio Jr. as a single from him to right field that again drove in Cunningham. But that would be the end of it, with the final score 9-3 St. Paul.

Lucas Irvine (5-3) pitched 4 1/3 innings for Kansas City and got the loss. Chris Nunn (4-2) is responsible for the win.

The T-Bones saw strong relief pitching from rookie Adam Bleday who worked two and two-thirds innings, retiring all 10 batters he faced, and striking out half of them. Jackson Lowery pitched one inning, giving up two hits.

Kansas City (46-26) is 1-6 against the Saints (41-32) this year. The T-Bones begin a three-game homestand against the Texas Airhogs (19-52) Monday at 7:05 p.m. in Kansas City, Kansas.

On Monday night, the first 1,000 kids 12 and younger will receive a voucher good for a free hot dog, bag of chips and lemonade.

Season, group tickets, mini-plans and nightly party suites are on sale now and can be purchased by visiting the box office at T-Bones Stadium. Call the box office at 913-328-5618 or purchase and print at www.tbonesbaseball.com. Box office hours are 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday – Friday and 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday.

– Story from T-Bones