Wicked the Musical Conspiracy Theories
- Susan Savannah
- Jul 7, 2019
- 3 min read
1. The Wicked Witch isn't Wicked
Are people born wicked? Or do they have wickedness thrust upon them? Perhaps they're not really wicked at all. The premise of the book / musical Wicked is that the Wicked Witch of the West, a.k.a. Elphaba, is really the hero of the whole story, and not the villain.
But how can that be? Here's an absurdly brief breakdown. Things are going wrong in Oz, so Elphaba (the 'Wicked' Witch) goes to find the Wizard and asks him to help put things right. It turns out that of all the issues in Oz are the Wizard's doing. Whichever version of this story you read, the Wizard is always a bad guy.
Elphaba, who just wants to do the right thing, flies off the handle and both literally and
lyrically defies gravity. Now, the Wizard needs a scapegoat and doesn't want anybody to believe what Elphaba says about his own wickedness, so he makes everybody believe that Elphaba herself is wicked, and thus she becomes known as the Wicked Witch of the West.
2. The Good Witch isn't Good
This theory has been voiced at different levels, starting at 'she could have said about the shoes earlier', and ending at 'maybe she dropped the house on the Wicked Witch of the East herself, and manipulated the whole story'. It does seem a bit suspicious that Glinda the Good gains so much power from the events that transpire; who's to say that she didn't plan the whole thing?
Wicked presents a less black and white option: that Glinda (or, Galinda) is fundamentally good, but not initially as brave as her close friend, the Wicked Witch of the West (Elphaba).
3. The Wicked Witch of the West survives
The Wizard of Oz would say that she dies. And Wicked the book would agree, but Wicked the musical suggests that it was all a ruse.
In the story of Wicked the musical, the idea that Elphaba could be 'melted' with water is a rumour spun by her enemies as a way of making her seem super evil. So what really happens? Well, she fakes her own death so that she can escape Oz with the Scarecrow … who just happens to be the love of her life, Fiyero.
That said, even within Wicked the musical it could be argued that the 'escape' of Elphaba and Fiyero is metaphorical and, when they say that they can never come back to Oz, it's because they have both died. A more sombre ending, since we've just spent two hours becoming emotionally invested in the character of the (framed) Wicked Witch … maybe it's best to believe that she does survive.
4. Dorothy is actually the Witch of the East
Admittedly, we're getting into slightly more tenuous grounds. This theory is based on the observation that, in Oz, Dorothy meets alternative versions of several 'real life' characters, but never an alternative version of herself. Is there one? Strangely, the only thing that we know about the Wicked Witch of the East is her shoe size, and that fits … coincidence?
5. The Wizard is Willy Wonka's Father
This suggestion is equally as tenuous, but extremely enjoyable. Essentially, it comes from the observation that the land of Oz and Willy Wonka's Chocolate Factory have two major things in common: red roads / red carpets (seen nowhere else in filmic history ever, right?) and Munchkins / Oompa Loompas.
In this theory, the red part of the spiral at the beginning of the yellow brick road ends up at the red carpet leading up to the Chocolate Factory. Oh, and Willy Wonka went to Oz in search of his father, was unsuccessful, so came back with Munchkins instead (who he renamed so as to protect their identity). Seems like a pretty infallible theory to me.
Thank you for joining me and reading some amazing Wicked theories that may be true! Source: https://www.onstageblog.com/columns/2017/10/1/weird-and-wonderful-conspiracy-theories-the-wizard-of-oz-and-wicked

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