WICKED the Broadway Musical

The Civic – THE EDGE®, Auckland

21/09/2013 - 01/11/2013

Production Details



“If every musical had the brain, the heart, and the courage of WICKED, Broadway really would be a magical place.” Time Magazine

WICKED Australia Co-Producer John Frost said, “Right from the beginning this show has been an overwhelming hit everywhere it has played. WICKED is a phenomenon, the most beloved musical of the past decade, and appeals to everyone from 8 to 80. People love it for so many different reasons – some come for the engrossing story, some for the astonishing sets and costumes, some for the soaring ballads, some for the deeper messages, and some to see the life-affirming friendship between the two girls who grow up to be Glinda the Good and the Wicked Witch of the West.

 “We have assembled an extraordinary cast for this 10th Anniversary tour. I’m thrilled to bring WICKED, in all her emerald beauty and with this stellar cast, to the wonderful Civic Theatre,” Frost said.

“The defining musical of the decade.” The New York Times

When WICKED opened on Broadway, it worked its magic on critics and audiences alike. Winner of 35 major awards including a Grammy®, three Tony Awards® and six Helpmann® Awards including Best Musical, WICKED is the untold story of the witches of Oz. Long before Dorothy drops in, two other girls meet in the Land of Oz, one born with emerald green skin, is smart, fiery and misunderstood. The other is beautiful, ambitious and very popular. WICKED tells the story of their remarkable odyssey, how these two unlikely friends grow to become the Wicked Witch of the West and Glinda the Good.

Currently in its 10th year on Broadway, WICKED’s North American and International companies have cumulatively grossed over US$2.9 billion and been seen by nearly 36 million people worldwide. Since opening at the Gershwin Theatre on Broadway in October 2003, WICKED has regularly broken box office records, consistently grossing more than $US1.8 million a week. In the week between Christmas and New Year, 2012, it grossed a chart-topping $2.95 million, the highest grossing week in Broadway history.

In London, WICKED had the highest weekly gross in West End history (a record WICKED also holds on Broadway, as well as a North American weekly touring record in both the United States and Canada), and in Tokyo and Stuttgart it again set new box office records. During its three year tour of Australia, WICKED was seen by over 1.5 million people – which is equivalent to more than 1 in 20 Australians.

“A breathtaking success story of a magnitude that North America has not witnessed since the peak years of THE PHANTOM OF THE OPERA.” Washington Post

www.wickedthemusical.co.nz  

Venue: The Civic
Season: From 21 September – 1 November 2013
Performance Times: Tues–Fri 7.30pm, Sat 2pm and 7.30pm, Sun 1.00pm and 6.30pm
Price: Tickets from $54.90*
Bookings:
www.buytickets.co.nz or phone 0800 BUY TICKETS (0800 289 842)
www.ticketmaster.co.nz or 09 970 9700
Groups 12+ call 09 357 3360
Premium packages visit www.showbiznz.co.nz  


Jay Laga’aia – The Wizard.

Steve Danielsen – Fiyero, the playboy Prince,

Glen Hogstrom – Doctor Dillamond, a professor at Shiz University and the sole animal on the faculty, a goat

Emily Cascarino – wheelchair-bound Nessarose, sister of Elphaba,

Edward Grey – Boq, the munchkin who is enamoured with Glinda.

Jemma Rix – Elphaba, the ‘Wicked’ Witch born with emerald green skin

Suzie Mathers – Glinda, the good witch,

Maggie Kirkpatrick – prickly headmistress Madam Morrible

Ali Calder – Standby for Elphaba,

WICKED ensemble: Daniel Assetta, Rachel Cole, Danielle Cook, Daniel Downing, Danielle Evrat, Tom Handley, Emma Hawthorne, Matt Holly, Angela Lumicisi, Katie McKee, Kassie Martin, John O’Hara, Deanna O’Leary, Joseph O’Sullivan, Justine Puy, Chris Scalzo, Pharic Scott, Ryan Sheppard, Ellen Sutton, Sophie Wright, Dion Bilios, Justin Anderson, Mitch Fistrovic and Monica Swayne



The Emerald City in Auckland City

Review by James Wenley 23rd Sep 2013

[Theatre Scenes Reviewers Sharu Delikan and James Wenley both went to opening night of Wicked. This was James’s fourth time at Wicked. He saw the Australian Cast in Sydney twice in late 2009, thrashed the Broadway cast recording, and saw the London West End production in June this year. He writes as an acknowledged Wicked fan, the Ozmapolitan.]

For its 75th Anniversary, The Wizard of Oz is currently playing in the United States in a re-release converted into Imax 3D. Flogging a dead horse of a different colour? Not at all. While gimmicky (the word is that it’s a rather special experience), it proves the remarkable ongoing legacy and endurance of MGM’s 1939 film masterpiece. While L. Frank Baum’s Oz novels (1900-1919) are much appreciated, it is the film (and its songs and technicolour imagery) that has attached itself, like ruby slippers on Judy Garland’s feet, so fully onto the American psyche.

With fantastical charm, strong moral values, a worldly innocence, and undertones of American exceptionalism (what is Somewhere over the Rainbow if not an ode to the American Dream?), Oz has remained a timeless classic for those “young at heart”, and despite of or perhaps because of its many production troubles, is one of the great works of the 20th Century. [More]

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A Wicked Night Out

Review by Sharu Delilkan 23rd Sep 2013

[Theatre Scenes Reviewers Sharu Delikan and James Wenley both went to opening night of Wicked. This was the first time Sharu has seen Wicked, and she writes as a Wicked first-timer, a girl from Kansas on her first trip to Oz.]

The Girl from Kansas Edition   

We knew we were in for an awesome spectacle as we approached the green carpet leading up to the entrance of The Civic. The opening night audience was clearly in the ‘Wicked’ spirit, evident by the emerald green outfits and hair dyes that lit up The Civic foyer–a refreshing sight in contrast to the otherwise monochromatic outfits that typify JAFA opening nights.

And as we took our seats, the set looked suitably flashy with multiple balconies, ladders, ropes and a massive dragon’s head hovering above the stage, with a curtain portraying a Lord of the Rings-esque map of the Land of Oz. [More

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What a ride

Review by Kate Ward-Smythe 23rd Sep 2013

Green is the new black. From the moment Glinda’s entrance, all bubbles and mirth, transports us into WICKED’s Land of Oz, the opening night audience’s reaction is enthusiastic. We remain upbeat, throughout the first half especially, with generous applause, and to cap it — a well-deserved standing ovation. 

While this cast and creative team is rich with outstanding craft, the success of WICKED lies in the casting of Elphaba and Glinda. This production is blessed with two extraordinary lead ladies: Jemma Rix and Suzie Mathers.

Rix is born to play Elphaba: her vocal performance, from where I sit, is note perfect, utterly affecting, emotive and inspiring. She has the same vocal lucidity as Amy Lee from Evanescence, and her ‘Defying Gravity’ leaves other performances I’ve watched online, in its wake.

Mathers’ performance as Glinda is perfectly perky with just the right amount of light and bright. Her star turn in ‘Popular’ is a vocal and gymnastic tour-de-force. She too, is near flawless, with the exception of her first solo, which is impressively operatic and bold, yet her intonation comes and goes. Perhaps an issue with monitors?

However, what matters is that true performance magic is created when these two sing together. Each time they duet and connect, they own the stage effortlessly.

In terms of their surrounding cast, enduring Australian icon Maggie Kirkpatrick commands attention whenever she strides on as Madame Morrible, and while her singing voice seems more texture than note, when she speaks, she holds court with ease.

Steve Danielsen, as the tall strapping love-interest, Fiyero, is completely breath-taking to view, and every inch an inspirational lead man, striding on in flesh-coloured jodhpurs. While not the strongest singer in the cast, he pulls out memorable notes during his duet with Elphaba, ‘As Long As You’re Mine’.

Edward Grey (Boq) and Emily Cascarino (Nessarose) both deliver. Grey, in particular, is an outstanding vocalist. Glen Hogstrom as teacher (and ‘token-goat’) Doctor Dillamond is entirely likable and New Zealand’s own Jay Laga’aia is a crowd favourite, capturing the fake façade and ‘smoke and mirrors’ of the Wizard, very well. 

WICKED’s ensemble is uniformly fit and fabulous. Dotted with exceptional triple-threats, vocally they deliver a wall of wonderful harmony as well as stand out solo lines, especially the men. Every nuance is heard; every word is audible, thanks to the specific and effective sound design by Tony Meola. While in the Overture I initially feel the orchestra is somewhat muted, soon it becomes obvious that Meola intends to make the live accompaniment (exquisitely directed by David Young) subservient to the sung narrative at all times.

Costume Designer Susan Hilferty’s post-Victorian/Edwardian steam punk is executed to perfection. Every costume is individualised yet thematically connected, right down to the oversized black sunglasses or goggles, top hats, piped hemlines and outstanding shoes that would make Imelda Marcos go green with envy. It’s all Trelise Cooper frill, tulle and stripes, especially in the party scene — and that’s just the men. In addition to this enviable wardrobe, hair and wig designer Tom Watson add excellent note-worthy detail and chic.

Complemented by scenic designer Eugene Lee’s settings, WICKED’s world is breath-taking visual poetry. Lee’s set makes full use of The Civic Theatre’s fabulous fly floor, with moving cogs and giant clocks (staying very true to the book apparently), it’s indicative of the industrial revolution.

Lighting designer Kenneth Posner throws everything into his mix — his huge rig includes festoons, conventionals, bud-lights, moving lights, UV and strobes. The result is an amazing land, full of perspective, effective fades, intricate spotlights, perfect subtleties and captured magic. No more so than in the character-defining ‘Defying Gravity’.

In terms of WICKED’s primary story, I am completely swept up in the friendship and development between Elphaba and Glinda, from sworn enemies at school, with bullying and ridicule, to ‘B.F.F.’ with a twist. What a ride. 

In terms of WICKED’s enduring themes and messaging (good vs. bad intentions; apparent good conquering apparent evil), it is a tad heavy-handed at the top of the show. “Why does wickedness happen?” a little Munchkin asks Glinda. A simple question with no easy answer, though WICKED does show how easy it is for a corrupt leader to manipulate a crowd with the power of suggestion; to create a scapegoat and a willing lynch mob.

Nature vs nurture is also explored as another person in the crowd asks why are some people wicked — what’s the cause? This leads to a flashback of Elphaba’s beginnings. I never thought I’d see a simulated birth sequence in a modern day musical… but there it is!

WICKED also explores hero worshipping and society’s need to elevate individuals to celebrity status, and aspire to be like them — and how disappointing the reality is, when a person’s true, empty, fake nature in revealed, once the façade is stripped away. History and the world now is riddled with false gods, just as it is with all these universal themes.

In both style and substance, WICKED has been described as ‘generic’.* It does seem very familiar at times. The tick-tock set is very White Rabbit / Alice In Wonderland; non-human creatures as teachers, channels Harry Potter; the subsequent struggles of the animals in Oz add a touch of George Orwell’s Animal Farm to the narrative as well.

Musically, there is a familiar, Phantom of the Opera tone, as Fiyero and Elphaba flee The Emerald City and descend into a dark and gloomy forest. Visually, the opening scene in Act 2 (which is strangely flat on opening night) has Glinda looking like a dead cert for Eva Peron in Evita. The styling of the mean human teacher, who replaces the poor scapegoat, is obviously Nazi in design and performance. The backdrop of a map of The Land Of Oz is very The Lord of The Rings in its style.

The one aspect of WICKED I find odd, is the overall structure. While the first half leaves me tingling with pleasure (with the exception of the seemingly gratuitous dance of the three big-headed clowns with extendable necks, which my daughter aptly describes as “freaky”), the second half seems a little untamed and wild at times, nearly dissolving into pantomime at one stage. In terms of the music, choreography and staging, to me, it seems a little messy and off the story-line-rails, when the monkeys take flight… Yet, as I am sitting there thinking it’s all a bit style and bedazzle over substance and structure, my 9 year old daughter declares this scene as her favourite — why? Because it’s “crazy and full-on”. So. Two contrasting perspectives, separated by 35 years. 

What I find most captivating about the second half is the clever weave of storylines, characters, and even the occasional iconic phrase from The Wizard of Oz, into the WICKED timeline. Totally satisfying for fans of both musicals.

*http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wicked_(musical)

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ALEX SF April 20th, 2017

Wicked
Oh! It is a really great musical.
https://broadwayshows-nyc.com/wicked-tickets/
With music and lyrics by Stephen Schwartz and story by Winnie Holzman, Wicked has been raking in Tony Awards since its Broadway debut in 2003 and has developed a fan base that borders on fanaticism.

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Wicked fun and frivolity fit for family

Review by Paul Simei-Barton 23rd Sep 2013

Musical reinterpretation of classic American fairytale captures the irrepressible optimism  

The iconic American fairytale with its catalogue of strange symbols and puzzling metaphors proves to be fertile ground for a musical extravaganza that conjures up intriguing back-stories for the wonderfully weird inhabitants of Oz.

The reinterpretation adds deeper shades of ambiguity to the hidden meanings and strange psychological overtones of the original story.

In a very contemporary inversion of the distinction between good and bad the Wicked Witch of the West is revealed to be a misunderstood outsider who grows into a rebellious spirit committed to social justice. [More]

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