Television • In the 1961 animated TV series
Tales of the Wizard of Oz, and its sequel, the 1964 NBC animated
television special Return to Oz, the Scarecrow (here named Socrates) was voiced by
Alfie Scopp. • In an episode of ''
The World's Greatest Super Friends'' titled "Planet of Oz,"
Aquaman temporarily became the Scarecrow after a tornado took him,
Superman and
Wonder Woman to
Mister Mxyzptlk’s Planet of Oz. • In a 1981 episode of
Scooby-Doo and Scrappy-Doo,
Shaggy is dressed as the Scarecrow after a tornado took him, Scooby, and Scrappy to "Ahz", a direct spoof of Oz with a different spelling by its enunciation. •
Jackson Browne performed this character in the 1995 television special
The Wizard of Oz in Concert: Dreams Come True. The Kansas farmworker Hunk does not appear in this production. Browne sang a folk music tempo of
If I Only Had a Brain and the bridge verses sung by the Scarecrow in
Nathan Lane's longer version of
If I Only Had the Nerve. • In the 1996
The Oz Kids, animated cartoon, the Scarecrow now rules the Emerald City and has a son named Scarecrow Jr. His son is smart and knows everything just like him. Scarecrow Sr. is voiced by
Andy Milder. • The
2003 Strawberry Shortcake cartoon's fourth season has the episode Berry Brick Road, where the titular protagonist gets whisked to the land of Oz. The Scarecrow returns as her first companion, now being played by Ginger Snap and sharing his voice actor with the latter. (Strawberry Shortcake herself plays Dorothy Gale.) The Scarecrow's appearance has been changed to look like Ginger Snap, sporting long pigtails that reach his waist and a jacket just like the one she wears for her default outfit. • In the 2005 ABC television movie ''
The Muppets' Wizard of Oz'',
Kermit the Frog plays the role of the Scarecrow. Kermit's other role was himself. Before Dorothy's journey, he organizes a talent scout for a star for a new show. After Dorothy's return, he hires her. • In the 2007
Sci Fi television miniseries Tin Man, the Scarecrow is re-imagined as the character named "
Glitch" (played by
Alan Cumming). Formerly a chief adviser to the queen of the
Outer Zone (O.Z.) named Ambrose, he resists her usurper (and daughter), the evil sorceress
Azkadellia and has his brain removed by the physician as a
reeducation measure. In the series, he wanders the O.Z. searching for his brain and becomes a companion of the protagonist, a girl named DG. • In the 2007
VeggieTales episode ''
The Wonderful Wizard of Ha's'', the Scarecrow and his Kansas counterpart from the 1939 film were played by Mr. Lunt the Gourd. • A commercial for
GE smart-grid technology, which first aired during the
Super Bowl XLIII, featured a computerized Scarecrow dancing clumsily on a radio tower singing "
If I Only Had a Brain". • In the 2017 live-action series
Emerald City, a more modern retelling, the Scarecrow equivalent in the series is "Lucas" (portrayed by
Oliver Jackson-Cohen) and is an amnesic man who is rescued by Dorothy when she finds him being crucified at the start of her journey. In the course of the story, it is revealed that he is actually Rowan, the husband of Glinda, with his amnesia the result of a spell Glinda casts so that he couldn't betray her secrets if he was captured, but the restoration of his memory puts him and Dorothy at odds, as his devotion to Glinda leaves him incapable of recognizing Dorothy's real objections to Glinda's extreme methods to train younger witches. Psychologically torn between his memories as Rowan and his new relationships as Lucas, he eventually forces Dorothy to stab him to stop himself strangling her, culminating in Dorothy leaving him strung up like a scarecrow to symbolically reflect his desire to have never met her. Despite this, he appears in Kansas in the season finale, accompanied by Toto, to ask Dorothy to return with him to Oz. • The Scarecrow appeared in the
Once Upon a Time episode "Our Decay", voiced by
Paul Scheer. Many years ago, Zelena the Wicked Witch of the West targeted him for his brain as part of her attempt to create a time-travel spell. Before she can remove Scarecrow's brain, Dorothy and Toto arrived where they managed to get away from Zelena. With help from
Hades who enchanted a bicycle that was found at the remains of Dorothy's house, Zelena was able to locate where Dorothy and Scarecrow are hiding. After magically freezing Dorothy, Zelena successfully removed Scarecrow's brain and was about to show it to Hades only to find that he is not there. • Scarecrow appears in the 2017 animated television series
Dorothy and the Wizard of Oz, voiced by
Bill Fagerbakke. • Scarecrow appears in
Lost In Oz, voiced by
Stephen Stanton. • Although not a direct adaptation to the literature itself, the 2013
Super Sentai series,
Zyuden Sentai Kyoryuger features the
Deboth Army's members being themed after the characters in
The Wonderful Wizard of Oz. The then-Funfilled Spy
Luckyulo is designed with the motif of the Scarecrow, who also shares his airheadedness and naivety to his source of inspiration. In
Power Rangers Dino Charge, he was adapted as
Curio.
Live performances •
Hinton Battle originated the role of the Scarecrow in the 1975 Broadway musical
The Wiz, and
Michael Jackson played the Scarecrow in 1978
film adaptation. This version of the Scarecrow was a more tragic character before Dorothy rescues him; while hung on his pole, the crows he is unable to scare, who force him to humiliate himself and entertain them, torment him day and night with their negative and nihilistic worldview, convincing him there's no point in trying to be more than what he is. They force him to sing the song, "You Can't Win", meaning that he cannot escape the crows' rule and his bad luck. While
Stan Winston created Jackson's makeup, it was applied to Jackson's face by Michael R. Thomas who portrayed the Scarecrow in
Barry Mahon's
The Wonderful Land of Oz (1969), as well as doing the makeup for that film.
Elijah Kelley portrayed the Scarecrow in the TV special
The Wiz Live!, as well as the farmhand Sticks. • In the 2003
Broadway musical Wicked, based on
Gregory Maguire's
1995 novel, the Scarecrow is a
composite of the original Scarecrow from
The Wonderful Wizard of Oz and the novel-exclusive character
Fiyero Tigelaar. • In Maguire's novel, Fiyero is a
Winkie prince who attends Shiz University with
Elphaba and
Glinda. As an adult, he begins an illicit affair with Elphaba (now the Wicked Witch of the West), but is murdered by the Wizard's secret police force, leaving behind three children with his arranged wife, Sarima, and a fourth child, Liir, with Elphaba. Later in the novel, Elphaba believes the Scarecrow traveling with Dorothy to be Fiyero in disguise, only to be proven wrong. • The stage musical makes significant changes to Fiyero's character and background, now depicting him as a rebellious transfer student whom Glinda is infatuated with. However, Fiyero develops feelings for Elphaba after the two rescue a
lion cub from imprisonment. Years after Elphaba becomes a fugitive, Fiyero is now Captain of the Wizard's Guard and reluctantly engaged to Glinda, but he elopes with the Wicked Witch soon after her reappearance. When Elphaba is ambushed in Munchkinland following her sister's death, Fiyero comes to her defense, only to be dragged off and beaten by the guards. Elphaba hastily reads a spell from the Grimmerie to protect him but is unsure if it works, causing her to enter a grief-fueled rage. It is not until the end of the musical that Fiyero is revealed to be alive, having been transformed by Elphaba into the Scarecrow; the two then depart Oz. Fiyero's transformed appearance is based on
Ray Bolger's portrayal of the Scarecrow in the 1939
Wizard of Oz film.
Films • The Scarecrow has appeared in nearly every early Oz film, portrayed by different actors each time, including Frank Burns in
The Fairylogue and Radio-Plays (1908);
Robert Z. Leonard in
The Wonderful Wizard of Oz (1910); Herbert Glennon in
The Patchwork Girl of Oz (1914); Frank Moore in
His Majesty, the Scarecrow of Oz (1914); and Donald Henderson in
The Land of Oz (1932). • In the 1925 film
Wizard of Oz, the Scarecrow and the Tin Man were actually human farmhands, who were blown to Oz by the tornado along with Dorothy. Dorothy, in another major departure from the novel, turns out to be the rightful ruler of Oz, having been exiled to Kansas as a baby. ,
The Wizard of Oz 1939 • In the 1939 film
The Wizard of Oz, the Scarecrow was played by
Ray Bolger in what is arguably the actor's most famous role. He was originally cast as the
Tin Woodman, but since Bolger had always wanted to play the Scarecrow, he asked to switch roles with
Buddy Ebsen, originally cast in the Scarecrow. Ebsen did not mind the swap. While Ray was pleased with his role as the Scarecrow, the aluminum dust from Ebsen's Tin Man make-up nearly choked him to death (causing Ebsen to have to give up that role). Ebsen was replaced by
Jack Haley for his role of the Tin Man. Bolger's costume consisted of a straw-stuffed suit and a light face mask of rubber designed to simulate burlap. The mask was fragile and usually had to be completely replaced at the start of each new day of filming. Bolger's Scarecrow costume, minus the mask, is part of the collections of the
National Museum of American History at the
Smithsonian Institution. Bolger was a talented dancer, so The Scarecrow was given an extended dance sequence in the movie. However, to shorten the movie, much of this sequence was edited out since it would slow down the pace of the film. While Bolger admitted in a 1939 radio broadcast that he was too young to have seen
Fred Stone play the Scarecrow in
the 1902 musical extravaganza, he told Stone on the broadcast that the first play he was allowed to see was
The Red Mill featuring Stone, and that his performance in that play was an inspiration. During the scene where the Scarecrow gets his "brain" (an honorary Ph.D. diploma) from the Wizard, he incorrectly recites the
Pythagorean theorem, emphasizing that the real gift bestowed upon the characters was confidence in qualities they already possess. Bolger also portrayed the Scarecrow's Kansas counterpart, Hunk (one of
Aunt Em and
Uncle Henry's
farmworkers), newly created for the film by screenwriter
Noel Langley. A scene which was written in the script, but dropped before filming commenced, ended the movie by sending Hunk off to agricultural college, with Dorothy promising to write. The scene implied the potential for a romance between the two characters. He helps Zeke (Cowardly Lion's alter ego) and Hickory (Tin Man's alter ego) repair a wagon. Unlike Zeke, Hickory and Hunk lose their hats with Uncle Henry as they struggle to open the
cellar when the tornado approaches their farm. He closes and locks the cellar with Zeke when Dorothy arrives at the farmhouse. Hunk reunites with Dorothy when she awakens from being unconscious. He is seen with Aunt Em, Uncle Henry, Zeke, Hickory, and Professor Marvel (The Wizard's alter ego). • In the animated film
Journey Back to Oz (produced in 1964 but not released until the 1970s), the Scarecrow was voiced by
Mickey Rooney. • Justin Case, an
English bicycle acrobat, appeared briefly as the Scarecrow in the 1985 film
Return to Oz. He was turned into an ornament by Nome King. Scarecrow was restored when Dorothy quoted Oz upon touching a green ornament. When Princess Ozma was freed from her mirror prison, Scarecrow allows her to regain the throne. • In the 2013 film
Oz the Great and Powerful, the Scarecrow's origins are explained; being fabricated by the townspeople of Oz as a diversionary tactic during the retaliatory attack on the
Emerald City. • Scarecrow appears in the 2011 direct-to-DVD animated film
Tom and Jerry and the Wizard of Oz, voiced by
Michael Gough. • Michael Gough reprises his role of Scarecrow in the sequel
Tom and Jerry: Back to Oz. • The Scarecrow appears in the 2012 film
Dorothy and the Witches of Oz played by Ari Zigaris. He appears on Earth in the form of a man named Allen Denslow who works as the
illustrator of Dorothy Gale's books. • The Scarecrow appeared in the animated film ''
Legends of Oz: Dorothy's Return (which is based on Dorothy of Oz''), voiced by
Dan Aykroyd. • Scarecrow appears in
The Lego Movie 2: The Second Part. Alongside Dorothy and the rest of her friends, Scarecrow is somehow transported from the Land of Oz to Harmony Town in the Systar System. •
Jonathan Bailey portrays Fiyero Tigelaar/Scarecrow in
Wicked (2024) and
Wicked: For Good (2025), a two-part adaptation of the
stage musical. The character wears blue clothes with ornate patterns to mimic the tribal tattoos of his counterpart from Gregory Maguire's novel. In
Wicked: For Good, before Elphaba and the audience learn Fiyero is alive, his Scarecrow form is seen accompanying Dorothy on her journey, though his face is obscured.
Video games • The Scarecrow (along with his other friends from OZ) are playable in the
Nintendo 3DS game
Code Name: S.T.E.A.M. • Scarecrow appears in
Lego Dimensions, voiced by
William Salyers. During the part of the game that takes place in the Land of Oz,
Batman mistakes Scarecrow for his
Scarecrow. • The Scarecrow appears as an enemy in
Castlevania: Symphony of the Night along with the Tin Man and the Lion in the Forbidden Library. • The Scarecrow appears as one of the narrators for the detective quest in Sherlock: Hidden Match-3 Cases, developed by G5 Entertainment in 2020.
Comic books and novels • A character inspired by the Scarecrow appears in Alan Moore's
Lost Girls. In the work, a young farm boy becomes Dorothy Gale's first sex partner. However, she soon grows bored of him because of his lack of intelligence and imagination, comparing it to having sex with something you use to scare the crows. The "scarecrow" tries to prove to Dorothy that he does have a brain and writes her a poem. • The Scarecrow is a minor character in author Gregory Maguire's revisionist novel
Wicked: The Life and Times of the Wicked Witch of the West. • The Scarecrow is featured more prominently in
Son of a Witch, Maguire's sequel to
Wicked. In that novel, the Scarecrow helps the Witch's son
Liir avoid political turmoil in the Emerald City after the Wizard's departure. Later, various powerful interests place a different Scarecrow on the throne of Oz to serve as a
puppet ruler; the suggestion is that most residents of Oz are unable to distinguish one Scarecrow from another. • In the 2014
Dorothy Must Die series by Danielle Paige that details a darker depiction of the Land of Oz, the Scarecrow and Dorothy's other companions have been corrupted by their gifts and Dorothy's use of magic. The Scarecrow has become a twisted 'mad scientist', performing various experiments on the animals to turn them into spies or warriors for Dorothy's army, as well as extracting their brains to increase his own. He is 'killed' in the second novel in the series
The Wicked Will Rise when the Wizard takes his brains as part of a plan to bring Oz and Kansas together. • In the pages of
Shazam!, Scarecrow is a resident of the location of the Magic land called Wozenderlands. He and the Munchkins find some of the
Shazam Family in their part of Wozenderlands. When
Billy Batson,
Mary Bromfield, and C.C. Batson are teleported to Wozenderlands, they are taken by Scarecrow and the Munchkins to meet with
Dorothy Gale. Scarecrow stated that
Dorothy Gale and
Alice united the Land of Oz and
Wonderland to save them from the threats that came from the Monsterlands. They are attacked by
Cheshire Cat near the Blue Brick Road that goes through the
Queen of Hearts' forest causing Billy and Mary to drive him off. When
Mamaragan appeared and also teleported the rest of the foster siblings to Wozenderlands, White Rabbit then gives Scarecrow the ax that belonged to the Tin Man while apologizing for what the Queen of Hearts and her Card Soldiers did to him. When
Mister Mind has Shazam cast a spell to unite the seven Magiclands, Scarecrow and White Rabbit start to see the effects of it. ==References==