Before dinner with Groucho ... Before hitting the road with Hope and Crosby ... Before Seinfeld ... Nearly 70 years ago, Jerry Maren gave a lollipop to a young girl from Minnesota -- a staged gesture that would forever change his life.
The girl was Judy Garland. The setting was the filming of "The Wizard of Oz." And Maren, a teenager from Boston cast in his first major movie, suddenly found himself following a magical journey that has rarely drifted from the yellow brick road.
"I expected the worst, but Judy Garland was an angel," said Maren, now 88 and one of only eight surviving cast members -- all Munchkins -- left from Oz.
"If it was hot on the set, she'd tell the producer, 'For God's sakes, put the little people where it's cool.' When we went to her dressing room, she gave us chocolates."
She brought Maren fame. Every city Maren visits is the Emerald City. He's off to see Columbia Heights this Saturday and Sunday, where he will appear at the historic Heights Theatre for two 11 a.m. showings of the fully restored 35 mm print of the "Wizard of Oz." Tickets are $8 and the doors open at 9:30 a.m., when Maren will sign his autobiography, "Short and Sweet: The Life and Times of the Lollipop Munchkin." There will also be a silent auction of movie memorabilia.
Maren's appearance will benefit the Judy Garland Museum in Garland's hometown of Grand Rapids, Minn., where he has visited annually for festivals honoring the legendary star.
Not in Boston any more
Maren always had big dreams. And he knew that it would take more than wishing upon a star to make them real.