Wicked
By: Andrew • Essay • 528 Words • November 14, 2009 • 1,259 Views
Essay title: Wicked
Talk about obsessions! Author Gregory Maguire was so enthralled by the 1939 film version of L. Frank Baum's "The Wizard of Oz" that he devoted an entire novel to the back-story, constructing elaborate explanations for talking lions, flying monkeys, ruby slippers and, particularly, the various witches.
That book, "Wicked," is harmless fun, if a bit pedantic. Like most alternate-world fantasy fiction, it bogs down in explanations, ultimately raising as many questions as it answers.
The musical comedy that has been drawn from "Wicked" by Stephen Schwartz and Winnie Holzman is every bit as unruly as the novel but far, far more efficient.
Holzman's script rips through Maguire's wistful musings like a Panzer division through Belgium, destroying all obstacles and taking no prisoners. Instead of the moody, regime-change politics of the book, we get Dick Cheney in a funny suit, manipulating a polyglot population as gullible as it is singy and dancey.
Pretty much everybody and everything becomes, metaphorically, black or white. Or green, of course, since much is made of the "otherness" caused by the skin color of Elphaba, the Witch Formerly Known as the Wicked Witch of the West.
Now I'm no kind of expert on things Oz. As I remember the film, that green makeup looked like somebody's arbitrary choice for the actress Margaret Hamilton. In Maguire's book (and Holzman's libretto), however, skin color and animal oppression stagger under the weight of psycho-social meaning and become, as racial discrimination and genocide, major drivers of the plot.
The core of this show is a titanic effort to fit some higher meaning into a casual fable without disturbing any of the iconic elements, like the striped stockings on the dead Wicked Witch of the East or that damned pointy hat that poor Elphaba gets stuck with.
Because she's the heroine, see, in case you're not familiar with this latter day take on the basic Oz story. Here, Elphaba is the sensitive