The Daily - Sunday Special: Wicked, Good?
Episode Date: November 23, 2025“Wicked” was one of the biggest movies of 2024. It was culturally ubiquitous, a box office smash and an Oscar nominee for Best Picture. Now, a year later, “Wicked: For Good” arrives in theater...s to finish the tale of the complicated friendship between Glinda the Good Witch and Elphaba, the Wicked Witch of the West. Can “Wicked: For Good” be the sensation that its predecessor was? Will it inject new life into a movie business that has suffered a historically bad business year? Will it satisfy the legions of “Wicked” fans who have been waiting to see their favorite musical brought to the big screen?Gilbert Cruz is joined by Kyle Buchanan, a pop culture reporter for The New York Times who profiled the stars of “Wicked,” and Madison Malone Kircher, a reporter for the Styles desk and affirmed “Wicked” fanatic, to discuss what “Wicked: For Good” means for the movies. On Today’s EpisodeMadison Malone Kircher is a reporter covering internet culture for The Times.Kyle Buchanan is a pop culture reporter and serves as The Projectionist, the awards season columnist for The New York Times.Photo: Universal Pictures Additional ReadingAriana Grande Still Has Surprises in StoreThere Have Been Dozens of “Wicked” Interviews. Why Did This One Go Viral? Subscribe today at nytimes.com/podcasts or on Apple Podcasts and Spotify. You can also subscribe via your favorite podcast app here https://www.nytimes.com/activate-access/audio?source=podcatcher. For more podcasts and narrated articles, download The New York Times app at nytimes.com/app.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to the Sunday special. I'm Gilbert Cruz.
Wicked is back. Wicked for Good has just been released. This is film number two. The first movie,
simply titled Wicked, came out almost exactly one year ago today. And Wicked for Good
is going to be one of the biggest films of the year. Joining me to talk about it is Kyle
Buchanan, who covers Hollywood for the Times, and who recently profiled Ariana Grande, one of the
stars of the film.
Hello, Kyle.
Hello, Gilder.
And Madison Malone Kircher, who covers Internet culture for the Times, but more importantly,
for the purposes of this conversation, is an Ozian.
She is a wicked enthusiast.
Yeah, we'll go with that.
Hello, Madison.
I'm thrilled to be here.
We're going to try not to spoil too much of this movie, but we are going to talk about some
specific scenes, so if you're the type of person,
for which that is important, keep that in mind.
All right, to get started,
I think listeners should have a sense
from all of us of where we stand,
wicked-wise, in relation to wicked.
How wikified are we?
How wicked-pilled are we?
I've never seen the Broadway show,
but I've seen the first movie several times.
I enjoyed it.
Saw the second movie.
Listen to the music.
Kyle, we're going to start with you.
What's your relationship to Wicked?
You know, I came to Wicked as something of a virgin.
I had never seen it on stage, which made me feel like a little bit of an aberration.
But I actually think that gave me a very sort of clean perspective on the movie project itself.
And also, this may well be how people come to Wicked in the future because the movies are such a phenomenon that I think a lot of people and future generations will experience this as a movie-first situation.
Madison, you are slightly...
Perhaps slightly more or less green, I guess, in this particular.
A little different from Kyle here.
You were familiar with the musical.
I am familiar with the musical.
I have seen it on the Broadway.
When Wicked returned after the pandemic shut down,
deep in the pandemic, my little sister called me and said,
we have to be there, the first night.
And we like Wicked, but this is not like a musical
that we have a deep, long, sisterly tradition of.
And I said, why?
And she goes, the first line, Glinda comes down from the bubble and says,
it's good to see me, isn't it?
And my sister said, the crowd is going to go nuts.
It will cure the depression we've been sunk into for years.
And she was right.
She was really right.
Being there that night was, for lack of a better word, magical.
Was that the first time that you had seen it?
I had seen it in Chicago, of all places.
And also, I grew up as a young millennial musical theater geek with blonde hair and a gentle curl, as it were.
So what I'm saying is I did sing for good at my eighth grade graduation.
with a girl I literally never saw again after that day.
I think this was a formative experience for many.
Some people come into your life for a reason.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
It's because they can also, like, hold a pitch.
Before these movies came out,
would you say that this was something
that you had ever been interested
in seeing a film version of?
I mean, been interested.
I don't know how closely you followed
the production of Wicked the film.
It took decades, is that right?
Yeah, very, very.
long time. It was sort of like, you know, like Lucy and the football for many of us online.
It was like, Wicked Movie is Coming. Wicked movie is coming. You get, you know, I was working in
entertainment journalism. You'd get dribs and drabs of announcements. And we'd all sort of be like,
yeah, okay. Sure. See you when I see ya. So yeah, it was exciting to finally see it become
made manifest. So now that we've established where each of us stand, I want to sort of focus on these
two movies for a bit. You know, the team behind this decided to split, it's a story into two
separate films. Essentially, Wicked is Act 1, Wicked for Good, is Act 2. This was a choice that,
you know, in the lead-up to the release of the first film last year, a lot of people were
talking smack about. They were like, why are we doing this? This is a musical in which
you're going to have a second movie full of lackluster songs in which there's not a ton of plot.
The first film, however, was an undeniable success.
It was financially successful, culturally dominant, somewhat critically successful.
It was nominated for Best Picture.
What are you staring at?
Which I still think is crazy.
The first movie, just to remind people what it's about, it's about Alphaba, she becomes
the Wicked Witch of the West.
You're green.
You have Glinda, who becomes the good witch.
She's so good.
We love you.
Takes you through their school years, where they go to Shiz University, which is...
I'll say it like a question.
A name they should have changed for the movie.
Alphabet.
You can room with Miss Galinda.
They form this unlikely friendship, and the movie ends with arguably the musical's biggest hit, which is Define Gravity.
There's no fight we cannot win.
Just you and I divide.
Um, Kyle, you've spoken to members of the cast and the crew over the past couple years.
Did these two films always feel like they were going to be a success?
I think people hoped that they would be, but there was enough precedent to suggest that they wouldn't.
I mean, when you look at the really big musical theater phenomenons that have come out on film, something like, you know, Le Miserables or Phantom of the Opera, they couldn't quite translate that gigantic, overwhelming,
enthusiasm to, you know, big Bafo box office scores.
And then you had, you know, outright bombs like Deer Evan Hansen or Cats that maybe did
a little bit of damage to the actual, you know, brand on stage.
So it was not a done deal at all that Wicked would be a success.
And in fact, I think that's why it took so long to get off the ground.
Yeah.
It's interesting and thinking about that because movie musicals, since the invention of sound,
have been one of the mainstays of sort of big Hollywood productions.
They've obviously gone through peaks and dips.
You had, you know, you had the phase where we were making Dr. Doolittle and stuff like that in the late 60s,
and that was pretty awful.
You talk about Les Mizz.
I think we were both working at Vulture at the time.
I was so excited because I love Les Mizz.
And I think within the first 15 minutes, I was like, this is going to be rough going.
Stars in their multitudes.
Russell Crow
is a great actor
He should not have been in that movie
And yet
Wicked Part 1 was a great success
And I think that's in part
Not just because of the film
But also because of the lead-up to the release
I think we've all observed
How the way that actors
And stars do the press circuit
Now is as
entertaining sometimes as the film itself
And Ariana
and Cynthia were on what seemed like a 32-month press tour.
It just lasted forever.
And Madison, you observed so much for this.
As the chronically online person in the room,
yes, the pink and green blur that was the press tour for Wicked Part 1.
Arina and Cynthia were everywhere,
and notably they were everywhere together.
This is a film about sisterhood,
which apparently means you can never leave each other's side.
They're everywhere.
they're constantly in costume-adjacent dress.
Like, lest you forget, like, I am green and she is pink
and which, which is which, you could not,
you could not forget, you could not escape it.
I think perhaps the biggest and most viral moment, though,
that breaks out of this particular press circuit is,
and I will now, Kyle, can I have your finger?
I'm delicately clutching Kyle's point your finger.
The moment in which the phrase,
holding space for defying gravity enters the digital lexicon,
it was a, what should have been just an incredible,
or potentially incredibly mundane press junket interview.
This week, people are taking the lyrics of Defying Gravity
and really holding space with that.
An interviewer named Tracy Go Krest asked arguably just an insane question
about people online holding space for the lyrics of Define Gravity.
Ariana and Cynthia are incredibly consummate, professional, polite.
But you can tell behind their eyes, they're going,
what is this person asking us about?
I can't remember which one of them says it,
but they're like, oh, I didn't, I didn't know that was happening.
It was like, Cynthia.
I know that I'm not.
I didn't know that was happening.
I've seen it on a couple posts.
I don't know how widespread, but, you know, I am in queer media, so.
And it goes on to become this moment.
Brands co-opted.
It becomes a meme.
This phrase transcends the film in the way that marketers sit in a room and go,
okay, how can we figure out how to have a holding space moment.
Like, it was one of those, the sort of thing you cannot fake.
I had to say, it must have been.
amazing for Ariana Grande and Cynthia Rivo, because you're asked the same questions over and over.
There's some variation of the same questions. And then for this one magical moment, they have no
idea what's going on. And they really have to, you know, respond in real time. I also think that
Ariana and Cynthia, you know, they have this ability on screen and certainly when they sing to sort of match
each other's frequency. They can also do that emotionally in real life. But certainly
in this case, where
nobody was quite sure what anyone
was doing, and yet the moment continued
to heighten, heighten, heighten,
until it reached an absolutely absurd
place. I don't know that anybody
involved knows how they got there, but
God bless them for doing it. That's what's beautiful
about it. There is still magic in the
world, is my reaction
to that video. So we also
Wicked for Good, and I would
love to talk about it. Listeners, again, you've
been warned. It's been
22 years since the musical came out,
and about three days since the movie came out.
We're going to talk about it.
There's a bit of a time jump from the first film.
Haven't you heard?
I'm the wicked witch of the West.
Elphaba has been officially branded the Wicked Witch of the West
by The Wizard of Oz, played by Jeff Goldblum in this film,
and Madame Morrible, played by Michelle Yo.
The Wicked Witch can't elude us forever.
The two of them, they're still being mean to animals,
and Alvaba is still trying to free all the animals.
Blinda has been made like the propaganda face
of this new administration here.
It's more important than ever
that you lift everyone's spirits.
She's tasked with wearing a lot of pink,
lifting the spirits of the people of Oz.
But the thing is, she still loves her friend,
and she still wants the best for her.
Alphabet, they're coming for you.
There's a lot of other stuff that goes on.
film is darker than the first one.
There's a lot of not very subtle political undertones.
Let's talk about it.
Madison, you, as we establish, are the biggest fan of Wicked in the entire New York Times building.
What is your understanding of the difficulties of adapting essentially the second act of the show to its own film?
Notably, Act 1 ends on the highest note in the show, right?
It ends on that riff in defying gravity.
It is, there's quite literal height to it.
And so there's an immediate crash that follows,
and the second act of the show is fairly thin.
Both in terms of content, there's not a ton of plot left to happen.
The big twists don't come until the last, you know, 10 minutes or so.
There aren't that many songs, quite literally,
there just aren't that many numbers.
And frankly, I'm so sorry to anyone out here who's in this for The Wizard.
But, like, wonderful, sentimental man, repress.
These are the songs that we, the musical theater.
or girlies skip.
Yeah.
You don't like the guys.
Yeah, obviously.
I'm not, no one is watching Wicked for the men.
Okay.
Well, apologies to People magazine, I suppose.
And Jonathan Bailey.
Sexiest man alive.
But it's very thin.
There's not a ton of plot.
A lot of it exists simply to tie in the world that Gregor McGuire, the author of the book,
has built around the existing Wizard of Oz IP.
So, you know, the Yellow Brick Road, Dorothy Gale.
the entire story you know and love
so much happened before the house dropped in
like mostly the second act exists to tie all those things together
and make you go oh and then you get for good and we all cry
that's a really good song
but it's interesting too because as somebody who came to this material
very fresh and with a cynical eye of
oh are they really splitting it into for maximum profit
when I watched the first movie
I was surprised at how complete it felt
it felt to me as though
all of the real questions of this property
were answered by the end.
I know why she became the wicked witch.
So I sort of wonder to myself
what more terrain is there to cover
in the second movie.
And I think having seen it,
the answer is it doesn't feel necessarily
like a complete and urgent movie
in the way that the first one does,
but I do think it works
as sort of an extended coda
with these characters.
If you like spending time
with these two in the first movie,
well, here you go.
Here's two hours more
that you can have
to wrap up that experience.
I do think, like, even if it doesn't feel like this film has the same stakes as the original,
that people, that audiences will appreciate that extended time that they get with Cynthia and Ariana.
Yeah. And as someone who, again, wrote about Ariana for The Times,
it seems like a lot of this film was really predicated on her character, her character arc, her performance.
What was your understanding of what she and the director, John Chu,
sort of tried to do with Linda?
Yeah, even when John decided to split these movies into two,
the first script he printed on green pages
and the second one he printed on pink,
you know, just to sort of indicate that the second film,
in a lot of ways, the ark is Glinda's,
or at least the most interesting conflict here.
You know, Glinda has sort of bought into this fascist ideal
that the wizard is espousing
because it means that she gets to wear a lot of pretty pink dresses
and be famous.
But within that gilded life,
within that bubble, she's dying inside.
She doesn't have access to her friends.
Everybody's kind of turning on her,
and she has to keep espousing these lies.
And I think Ariana plays this really well.
You know, I think all of Cynthia's highlights,
at least the major parts of that performance
that everyone will remember, are in the first movie.
And a lot of the really strong, dramatic material
that Ariana gets is in the second one.
Yeah.
Madison, what did you think of the film?
Horrendible.
That is extreme.
Horrendible.
Hideodious?
I'm running out of Ozian slang from my memory.
I didn't love it.
It just felt thin.
And I agree to your point about the first film feeling just beautifully composed.
I went into that movie with very high expectations and I left having them met, if not exceeded.
I was deeply impressed with Ariana Grande, who was giving Doris Day if she wore a highlighter from Pat McGrath, just genuinely was very impressed by both of those performances and the film and left.
thinking, okay, let's see what they got for part two. The new songs didn't do a ton
for me. There's not a ton of blood. There are two new songs. One of which is called The Girl in the
bubble. It's incredibly heavy-handed. You're saying a musical song is heavy-ha. It all but
stopped short of having Ariana, you know, poke the bubble in the end. You're saying a musical theater song
as heavy here.
You know, there's some room for subtlety.
Uh-huh.
Isn't it high time
or her bubble
to pop?
There simply isn't enough plot to sustain it
and also by nature of the politics of the world we're living
in right now, so many of the undertones just feel.
I've already used heavy-handed, ham-fisted.
They just, it's, there's no magic, there's only drudgery.
Yeah, I agree with you that some of it does feel heavy-handed, the sort of the present-day
resonances, but the original book, and by virtue of that, the original musical, that
stuff is baked into there as well.
When Gregor McGuire wrote this in 1995, when the musical came out, around the time of the
Iraq War, you know, it was sort of a different idea.
idea of who's in power and what are the messages that they are giving us and who are the people that are spreading what some considered to be propaganda.
And that comes down to the difference between a 45-minute second act and a two-hour and 18-minute second act.
Yeah.
Because at a certain point, you're just saying the same thing over and over again.
So many banners in this movie.
So many banners.
Like, what's the banner budget?
Every scene is like, here's new banners from the sky.
They're all saying the Wickewitch's bans.
At a certain point, we got it.
I want to push back on something, though, which is, you know, you're criticizing the heavy-handedness of the fascist message and the metaphors.
But I don't think they worked on our dear friend Gilbert Cruz, because Gilbert is very anti-animal after having watched the Wicked movies.
This is...
Gilbert does not want those animals to have rights.
This is totally unnecessary to put here.
Albert.
I love animals.
Uh-huh.
Prove it.
You just don't want to listen to what they have to say.
I just, I don't know that predicating Alpha Buzz's entire journey on wanting to advocate for animal rights is the strongest or most convincing motivation for a character.
animals are great
I don't want to hear them talk
I don't know
it's just what
do we care this much about the animals of Oz
what is the animal system
we see one animal who's a teacher
not a very good teacher as far as I could tell
and that is what we're supposed to base
our entire love of this animal
underclass on
I'm just imagining Gilbert going to rate my teacher
dot com and looking at Dr. Dilman's scores
I do not
understand the animal higher
in Oz. Neither do I understand, as you recall. At one point during this movie, I'm taking notes in a notebook, like, you know, a good little journalist. And Gilbert just shoulders me, like elbows me in the shoulder and takes my pen and scribbles in his hand. We get to the end of the film and I'm like, Gilbert, what, and it's the only note you took the entire movie. Yeah. What did you write down?
I wrote down, what is Oz's political system? The entire first half of the movie, I was like, so is the wizard a dictator?
Where's the government?
I understand there's this council of governors
and Nessa Rose is a munching governor.
But canonically, Munchkin City also has a mayor.
Like, that's the source text.
So I agree.
Do you see my confusion?
Yeah, no, I agree.
Okay.
She's green.
Just go with it.
You're right.
You're right.
I'm thinking too much about it.
All that being said, there's some pretty great highs of this.
I found four good quite emotionally moving.
There's a scene towards the end where they're in the town.
and Elphaba puts Linda behind a door and says, you have to hide here.
Dorothy, she puts her in a closet.
Dorothy is coming.
Take the book.
Hide here.
There's a split screen.
And the two of them are on opposite sides of the door for quite a long time.
And I was just like, these two love each other so much.
When are they going to kiss?
And they never did.
Well, that's something that they arrived in in rehearsals, according to John Chu.
Really?
When they were just simply rehearsing it before, I think they were.
even got into London where they shot this film,
Ariana and Cynthia were singing that song
and then essentially mimed a door.
So their relationship, their bond,
is what informed the staging of that movie ultimately.
Madison, what are the scenes that stuck with you?
Good or bad?
Well, we have to talk about the cardigan and the shoulder.
Okay.
Well, there's a slightly racy scene
for a PG movie, I feel like, in this film.
Which is Fierro, who's played by Jonathan Bailey.
The man, people are coming to see Wicked For, my sincerest apologies.
The sexiest man alive.
He is DLinda's fiancé, but since the first film, he has been in love with Elphaba.
He's the head of essentially the wizard's royal guard at this point in the story, but he makes a decision to flee with Alphabah.
They go to her tree house in the woods, and they have a love scene.
I'll wake up my body and make up for a lost time.
And Alphabet takes off her robe, which I was wondering, is she just going to wear this the whole movie?
Does she ever bathe?
Like, what's going on?
And she puts on a very ratty-looking gray sweater.
And there's a lot of shoulder action going on.
Rattie chic. It's this long coat sweater that looks like it's from a costuming plot from a
modernist take on cats. Like that is Grisabella's costume in some college production of black box
of cats. They don't have unique low enough. Not yet. Maybe post wizard. I was, maybe I'm just
a bit of a prude, but I was surprised at the heat that was generated in this scene. I was honestly
surprised to get even just the amount of bare shoulders. The very strong,
wrong implication that these two
characters had slept together. It was a little
bit of a relief to me. I thought, okay,
they're not pussyfooting around this.
I mean, I couldn't think of the very last
time that it was clear
that two characters in a big
tent pole movie had hooked up.
I'm happy for them.
Because
he turns into a scarecrow at the
end. And as far as I know, has no
genitals.
Madison, what do you think audiences are
going to walk away from this movie feeling good about?
The moments in Wicked for Good that touched me are the ones that are these intimate little
moments between Ariana and Cynthia who do have this undeniable chemistry.
And that is really the love story that this entire franchise is about, right?
The relationship between these two women.
And it's so clear, even it's easy to become cynical watching the never-ending green
and pink press tour and feel that this is a little contrived.
But there's this scene.
It's actually in the trailer, where they're talking and Cynthia says something like,
Just look at me.
Not with your eyes.
With theirs.
Look at me, not with your eyes with theirs.
And you can just like, in these micro movements of her, like, perfect little eyebrows, you can just, the emotions that Ariana Grande is able to telegraph and the feelings she has towards Cynthia.
And also towards Elphaba, this is a show that is deeply special and important to Ariana Grande and has been since she has.
she was a child. You can, you can feel that sitting in your seat. And I think that is actually
sort of a big takeaway that people will have, not just from the second movie, but from both of
these movies, which is Cynthia and Ariana are delivering something that is remarkably human-sized
given the epic scale of this project. And they're not afraid to play these characters very real
and intimate and small when they need to, which I think makes the big moments feel even bigger.
Yeah. It is, it is the human moments. It's not.
the animal moments. And that's my point.
Like, we don't need to.
Gilbert, no. Oh, man, we walk right into that one.
Humans are animals, too.
Well, do you own a pet?
I have a dog.
Tracks. I love him very much.
Tracks. What does that mean?
I'm just saying someone who owns a pet.
Subjugating an animal.
We treat that dog. God damn well, okay.
Gilbert, I'm going to need to know your thoughts on Zootopia, too.
All right, all right.
We are going to take a quick break.
And when we come back, we're going to talk about why this franchise has done so well,
is continuing to do so well in what is, by all accounts, a pretty dark time for Hollywood.
We'll be right back.
All right.
We're going to talk about Hollywood right now.
Hollywood has not been doing great this fall.
I don't think that's a secret.
The industry, I think, has been struggling to get people into theaters for years now, certainly since the pandemic.
And we have seen the past few months this trend of movies with people who at least used to be regarded as movie stars really sort of bombing at the box office or not making a dent in any way.
I think I saw the stat that if you adjust for inflation, which we always must do, I really don't understand what that means.
and exclude 2020 because of the pandemic.
This October's box office,
this is only one month,
but this October's box office
was the lowest monthly total on record ever.
Kyle, I'd love for you to talk through,
you know, what is happening in Hollywood right now
and, like, where does Wicked fit in?
It's been rough, man.
Like you said, yeah, a lot of these films
have been underperforming no matter the star power.
You know, there's a really lovely Channing Tatum,
Kirsten Dunstramedy called Roofman that came out
that I think back in the day,
would have made at least $60, $70 million would have been a word of mouth hit, and people just
simply didn't go.
There are success stories this year.
You know, you have sinners, one battle after another, weapons.
But in two of those three cases, what sinners and one battle did very effectively, in
addition to just being good movies, is they felt like events.
They felt like you have to see it in this premium format.
And if you don't see sinners in IMAX-70 or one battle after another in VistaVision, are you really
doing it right bro like you've got to go see it in the right format and that creates the feeling
of this actually is special this is a particular thing that you ought to do and a small movie can
feel like an event but you've got to make sure that people feel if i don't see this i won't be
part of the cultural conversation that it will move past me so there's stakes to going to the film
and wicked has that you know that the cultural conversation is going to be about wicked during you know
these few weeks. So you've got to go at some point. One of the other things that a movie can have,
to state the obvious, is a connection to IP, which is a phrase that we've used, intellectual property,
franchises, pre-existing, sort of already baked lore.
Lore or names that, you know, sort of do half the work already to getting people in theaters.
Wicked is based on a very long chain of IP. It was never called IP back then, but you
have a book that came out in 1900. And then you had a movie musical that came out in 1939,
still one of the most famous American movies ever made, The Wizard of Oz. And then you have
this book in 1995 by Gregory McGuire. You have this musical in 2003. And now you have these two
movies. Kyle, I'm wondering how much of the success of these two films you attribute to the fact
that this is, you know, at least in America, sort of a story that's been around for so long.
and this is a part of it.
The OZIP?
Exactly.
You know, this is an interesting test case
because obviously I think that when we grew up
and I would wager most of the listeners,
the Wizard of Oz was ubiquitous.
You would always see it on television.
It was, you know, perhaps.
Every Thanksgiving, a grandma's house.
It aired at least once a year for more than 30 years.
Certainly felt like one of the top three
most famous movies ever made
and probably one of the top three movies most watched.
You could pretty much.
count on anybody you met having watched that movie at some point. I'm not sure that that is true
of the generation that is coming up. Would a 10-year-old have seen The Wizard of Oz as many
times as we would have by 10? Or would a 10-year-old have seen it at all? You know, they're not
watching movies that are ubiquitous on TV because they're more prone to watch a Roblox play-through
on YouTube. So I don't know that... You just really depressed me. I'm sorry. I'm saying that
This might be an interesting case of the tail wagging the dog in the future that people will be coming to the Wizard of Oz predominantly through wicked and not the other way around.
And it's going to be particularly interesting because Wicked for Good, the second film really relies on how well you know the Wizard of Oz, particularly the movie version of that, because the characters are getting into places a lot as implied.
And I don't know if young kids today are going to get all those.
references. One thought, just in terms of IP, yellow brick Roblox. I think this is the tie-in
we've been looking for. I think that's right, but I also think there's a possibility where that
makes Wicked for good more enjoyable to those viewers, because I think if you have read the
original book, you've seen the film a gazillion times and you come to Wicked, the twists at the
ending are quite obvious, right? It's not really a surprise. You know, I saw that coming a mile away.
But if you can't see it coming a mile away,
I can imagine the ending of this film
would be that much more satisfying
if, you know, scratchy-faced scarecrow man
comes as a genuine surprise to you.
Yeah. I guess I was surprised at again.
I have listened to the show
and I've seen a scratchy bootleg.
I guess I forgot how much the second act
really ties into The Wizard of Oz,
which is a film maybe like Kyle,
maybe like you. I've seen dozens and dozens of times
either in full or in part.
And I just side note,
if you are a parent
and you have not shown your child,
the Wizard of Oz already,
shame on you,
and you should do that immediately.
It is one of the great things
that this country has ever produced.
How did your son react when you showed him?
He loved it.
Was that post-wicked?
It was not post-wit.
I think we showed it to him.
Did it scare him?
Yes, there were a couple parts.
That scared him.
The kids are going to be okay.
The wicked witch of the West
in the 1939,
musical is scary.
There are lots of things that are weird about that movie and sort of offbeat, but it is beautiful
and it is something that everyone should experience.
So please show your children the Wizard of Oz, either before or after going to see this
movie.
This has been a public service announcement.
So Wicked for Good, as we said, it's sort of pitched to be one of the top grossing movies
of the year.
And Kyle, I'm wondering, what is missing in movies that this movie is providing to viewers,
providing in the marketplace.
It feels like it's sort of filling a hole
that desperately wants to be filled in some way.
Yeah, I mean, I think there's a really incredible contrast
that can be drawn here.
At a time when it's hard to get almost every demographic
to the movies, you have one demographic,
young girls, who will not just go to the movies
but will go over and over.
That repeat audience is why Wicked became such a phenomenon,
and you can trace that back to movies like Barbie,
even all the way back to Titanic,
that if women really like something,
as they do with, you know,
K-pop Demon Hunters or Wednesday,
they will watch it multiple times,
they will discuss it with their friends,
now they will make fan edits.
You know, the bounds of their fandom and obsession
are ultimately very lucrative
in a way where I'm not sure that we actually have enough product
coming out to satisfy, you know,
probably the most loyal fan base there is.
the most loyal demographic. So much of what we're seeing and what we're seeing not work is aimed
at either young men or older audiences who simply aren't showing up. And then you have this
slice of the demographic pie where they're not just showing up. They're showing up once,
twice, three times, four times, and bringing their friends. So what he's saying is,
could you hurry up with Practical Magic 2? We're waiting, we're ready. I've got $22
two bucks, ad nauseum.
Practical magic, too. You've got Devil Wears Prada, too, coming out.
But then also, let's make more properties that I think, you know, young women want to feel like
they've stumbled upon these things themselves, that they are part of the ground floor in making
these things a hit.
Lady Bird.
I think my mother's ears just perked up about an hour and a half away when she heard you say
Practical Magic 2. There's no one who's more excited for this film.
Tell her to call me.
Madison, I don't know if you would call yourself an Ozian.
But you have been part of a subset of this fandom from the beginning before there was ever...
I'm just trying not to claim, like, stolen green valor, but I think we've established that I am a long-time fan.
Okay, okay, okay. I don't want to speak for you.
You should not speak for the animals.
No one should speak for the animals. What was the...
Can you tell us, like, what has the fandom for this been like? You know, what was it like back when it was just on Broadway?
Yeah, Wicked has always been an extremely online musical, because if you think about it, Wicked,
the novel, boil it down, it's fanfic, which is a deeply online genre. And it's also quite
obviously a story about being othered, whether that's as a queer person or a person of color or
really anyone who has any experience of feeling not part of the in-group can watch the show
and really connect to it. And those are the communities that historically congregate in online
spaces, right? And that's chat rooms, forums, boards. So it makes perfect sense to me that
the groups of people with whom this show resonates, present company included,
then found themselves looking for the community who was also feeling that resonance
and we found it online.
Broadway, also for many, is an online experience if you don't live here,
if you can't afford to see an exorbitantly expensive show.
That leaves you with the internet.
You said you watched a scratchy bootleg.
A lot of people experience Broadway online through,
and I'm not suggesting anyone film a Broadway show while they're sitting in it.
Do not do that.
Do not do that.
It's rude.
people have and people do. And so for many fans at this show, getting to see it only happens
through a camera that was snuck into a theater and then uploaded to YouTube. Okay, I am still
new to this world. So what are some of the ways in which fans, like, sort of engaged with each
other over Wicked? I mean, some of my favorite Wicked rabbit holes are their entire compilations
online nights where the flying mechanism didn't work. No fly nights where Elphaba doesn't get off
the ground. And so you've just kind of got, you know, Idina Manzella, whoever's standing in the
middle of the stage at the Gershwin holding a broom on the ground, getting louder and louder,
but not going up. Oh, no. And then there's also my favorite compilations are people who are
hyper-analytical about the riffs in the show. So, like, the incredibly small differences
between how actresses who have played these roles sing them.
People get very
being able to identify them within one note.
It's an incredibly fun game online.
I highly recommend if you haven't spent some time
in this corner of the internet.
I'll do that over Thanksgiving.
Yeah.
We don't have anything this year approaching holding space.
But, you know, still, once again, this has been a press tour, a marketing cycle that has been pretty intense.
Madison, I know you have wanted to use green deodorant for your entire life.
What is it like as someone who has been a wicked fan for so long just to see sort of the overwhelming sort of wave of wicked stuff out there?
I mean, it makes it frankly easier to tune out, right?
The same marketers who are in that room trying to figure out how to have their holding special.
moment, should probably know that I think at this point, wicked fans who are going to go see
this movie a couple of times or feel very strongly about the musical, and I'm not going to buy
the pink ketchup.
Like, I don't need the eye shadow palette.
I'm not going to get the crocs.
I'm making all these up.
I don't know if they exist, just to be clear, for our legal team who's listening.
It just becomes pink and green noise that one tunes out entirely.
It's not lost on me that the only breakthrough moment of this film's press cycle is actually,
and it sort of ties into the film, like, quite violent and dark.
It was a man who rushed Ariana Grande on a carpet in Singapore,
and Cynthia sort of like steps in to protect her.
It's this quite frightening moment,
and that's, I think, the one moment of the press cycle
that has really broken through the noise this time,
less so the pink and green ketchup.
Well, not to sound like a capitalist shill,
but I think that, you know, for people who are going through their first round with Wicked,
I think maybe they do want some of those things.
I mean, I'm surprised when I spoke to people for the first movie,
friends of mine who I consider to be, you know, somewhat difficult to impress when it comes to film.
And they fanned out so hard about Wicked.
And I, you know, I found it somewhat out of character.
And then I would find out that they owned the grimmery when they were 13, you know?
Great book.
Still are they buying the ketchup?
So have we reached Peak Wicked?
Like, what's next for this?
It is, I've been sort of hesitant to call it a franchise because it's only two films,
but it is part of, as we said, the sort of greater Wicked or greater Wizard of Oz
decades-long sort of intellectual property.
Like, what could be next for this?
What's the afterlife of Wicked?
Yeah.
Well, look, there's the lesson that I hope Hollywood would learn,
which is to make more properties that are aimed at and for and that can empower young women.
And then there's the lesson that I think Hollywood will learn, which is we should make more wicked.
I expect more spinoffs.
Spinoff films.
Spinoff films or spin-off anything.
You know, animated prequels, some sort of Shiz University, spin-off.
There are several other books.
Yes, I mean, there's a lot that you could mind.
But I think that this film ends in a way where if they made a standalone Glinda movie, you could see how they're setting that up.
And I'm curious to see if they'll follow through on that.
Obviously, you know, they'd have to come up with songs and experiences that that don't exist in the Broadway show.
But they've already done that to some extent in these movies.
And I think they feel empowered to keep doing it as long as Ariana wants to.
Yeah.
We have talked so much, possibly too much about Wicked Madison's Making a Face.
We are going to...
That is just my face.
Take a break.
And when we come back, we're going to end this episode as we do every week with a little.
game.
Cote hater.
I love my dog.
Okay.
Madison and Kyle, we're going to wrap up this episode as we wrap up every episode with a game.
And today, we're going to set off down the yellow brick road toward the Emerald City.
Are you two ready?
Very.
Let's go.
Do you have your ruby sloth?
flippers? Well, for purposes of copyright, they are silver. Do you have your little dog?
And you're a little dog, too. As well. I've got three rounds for you, so please put your hands on your
buzzers. Are you ready? Let's do it. Let's go. All right, we're off to see the wizard.
Round one is called If I Only Had a Brain. The answers to all of the questions in this round have a theme.
with the right answer, and you will get
a point.
Dr. Jonathan Crane
is the alter ego
of what fear-toxin-spewing
Batman villain portrayed
on-screen by Killian Murphy
in Christopher Nolan's Batman trilogy.
Kyle. The Scarecrow.
Scarecrow, that is correct.
This British
Theatre legend performed in his own
plays, Blythe's spirits,
private lives, and present laughter.
Kyle.
No,
Coward. No coward. That is correct. This filmmaking icon and one-time Oscar winner made
his first short film, Last Hustle in Brooklyn while a student at Morehouse College.
Kyle. Spike Lee. Spike Lee. Kyle.
Oh, sorry. Busted. Spike Lee, that is correct. Slats, Jackie, Tanner, and Leo,
all of whom have appeared in the logo for the Hollywood studio, MGM, are what kind of animal?
Madison. A lion. A lion, that is correct. In 2011, Stephen Spielberg and Peter Jackson teamed up to bring what Belgian comic book character, an intrepid reporter with a dog named Snowy, to the big screen?
That would be Tintin.
Tintin. That is correct.
This Hollywood actress met her husband while auditioning for the cable guy and went on to star in three of his films alongside the couple's two daughters, Maude, and Iris.
Kyle
Leslie Mann
Leslie Mann
Correct to recap those answers
Scarecrow, coward, Lee,
Lion, Tin, Tin Man
I think you get the theme
It's lost on me
Okay, great
There's maybe no moments in musical theater
That comes right from the heart
As much as that final note
At the end of Define Gravity
The Act 1, Film One finale,
in Wicked. I'm going to play you a recording
of a notable person
performing that moment
and you tell me who the person
is. And there's a note for Madison.
These are not obscure Broadway
Act. Okay.
All right.
Madison.
Adina Manzel. That is correct.
All right. Next.
Kyle.
I think that might be Kiki Palmer.
It is not Kiki Palmer.
She does a good one, though.
She does.
I'm waiting for that one.
Madison, do you want to give it a try?
Trish Pettus.
I don't know who that is.
This, however, is Sabrina Carpenter.
Oh.
That was Sabrina Carpenter.
Next.
Madison.
Cynthia Arevo.
Cynthia Arrivo.
That is correct.
Next one.
There's no place.
No place like Rome.
Anyone.
Is that Ben Platt?
That is not Ben Platt medicine.
Kyle.
No clue.
That is Paul Miscall.
What?
Do you remember Glickett?
Oh, my God, yeah.
As a phenomenon,
Who made him do that?
That was from Saturday Night Live.
Okay, we have a couple more here next.
I didn't think I was going to win because...
Well, that is Kiki Palmer.
That is definitely Kiki Palmer.
Very good.
Final one.
I even...
I hate myself trying to sing like...
Madison.
Is it Harvey Fireste?
It is not.
Harvey Firestein.
That is Hank Azaria as his iconic character,
Professor John Ike, Nirdobam, Frank Jr. from The Simpsons.
Sure, obviously.
Professor Frank.
Final round, round three, titled,
What Makes the Musk Rat Guard His Musk?
Courage.
This round is going to take some guts.
I'm going to give you a category,
and you have to tell me how many.
items in that category you can name.
Whoever says they can name more is going to get a chance to try.
Succeed and you'll get a point, fail, and your opponent gets the point.
Kyle, you are currently in the lead, so you are going to go first.
The first category is Songs from Wicked for Good.
How many items can you think you can name in that category?
Oh my God, this is going to be humiliating.
I'm going to say three.
Madison, how many do you think you can name?
Four.
I definitely can't do five.
Madison, you picked one more than Kyle, which is kind of a cheap way to do this.
Cowardly Lion, baby.
You'd have to name four songs from Wicked For Good.
For Good.
That is correct.
The Girl in the Bubble.
That is correct.
No Good Deed.
That is also correct.
As long as you're mine.
That is also correct.
Keep going.
Keep going.
Just keep going.
Sentimental man reprised, the Wicked Witch of the East.
Wonderful.
That new one they wrote for Cynthia about the Yellow Brook Road that I don't remember the name of.
I believe it's called No Place Like Home.
Oh, okay, great.
No Place Like Home, the one on the gaping mall of the Yellow Brick Road Hole.
All right.
You proved your bona fides.
You won that round.
Very good.
Thank you.
would have been disappointed if you hadn't.
Yeah, same.
Okay.
Next category is movies that take place in Oz.
Okay.
Madison, how many movies that take place in Oz do you think you can name?
Three.
That is solo.
Kyle, how many movies that take place in Oz do you think you can name?
Five.
Madison, you can't do six since this is your move?
Absolutely not.
Okay.
All right.
It's good to know oneself.
Kyle, you're on.
Well, obviously, wicked and wicked for good.
That's two.
The Wizard of Oz, we're at three already.
Return to Oz if you want to really freak your kids out.
That is a weird one.
And then Sam Ramey's Oz the Great and Powerful.
That is correct.
Very good.
Do you want to keep going?
And does Australia count?
What is that?
Oz.
The land of Oz.
Starring the boy from Oz?
Yeah, exactly.
Great.
I'm in.
I'm back.
Does that counts?
I'm back in.
Kyle, you won that category.
Very good.
We are down to our final category in our final round.
This is a big one.
Musicals that were nominated for Best Picture.
How many musicals that were nominated for Best Picture, Kyle, do you think you can name?
Oh, man.
Nominated for Best Picture, that's interesting because they didn't have to win.
Correct.
That's what that means.
I'm just going to go with five conservatively.
Like, you guys, these are.
Low numbers. Madison, how many musicals nominated for Best Picture do you think you can name?
It's final round.
Six?
What are you doing?
Kyle, do you think you can name more than six?
I want to watch Madison do it.
Oh, boy, that is cruel.
Also, hilarious.
Madison, you're up.
You have to name six movies that were nominated for Best Picture.
Les Mis.
That is correct
West Side Story
That is correct
Wicked Part 1
That is correct
Lala Land
That is correct
In the Heights
That is not
That is not
Correct
Wow
Tough break
All right
You were so close
You did very
Very
poorly
Well
Kyle
You're gonna get the point
That was a good strategy
on your part
But I just, I want to hear your name some more.
I'll add two more to those.
Chicago, which won.
Mm-hmm.
And the Spielberg West Side Story, which was also nominated.
Oh, that's cheating.
Hey, wow.
It counts.
Let's end this round by asking very quickly, what's your favorite movie musical?
Oh, man.
Hello, Dolly.
Hello, Dolly.
That's good.
You know, honestly, for me, the sound of music.
Sound of music.
Mine is my fair lady.
And it, it paids me to say.
this, but literally all three of the movies that we just mentioned were nominated for
Best Picture. Neither of you guessed them, which is fine. Nobody's perfect, so they say. The more
perfect competitor today, however, is Kyle. Kyle, you have won. You flew all the way from Los
Angeles to win this game, to win an actual prize. Oh, is it a bounty of gold bricks?
It is not, that would not have fit in this cheap tote bag that I have here.
However, the thing inside is even cheaper than the tote bag.
It is a plastic trophy with my face on it.
Oh, wow.
We call it the Gilby.
I'm treasuring this.
This is incredible.
Congratulations.
I don't know what they would say in Oz.
It is gold.
It is gold.
Wow.
Well done.
Congratulations, Kyle.
Thank you.
That's so nice you to say, Madison.
Thank you both for coming on.
Thank you.
And I feel like Madison and I had a nice good alpha-bug linda rival.
that deepened into true friendship
over the course. Put your finger out again so she can hold it.
This is where we do the musical number, right?
I was told there would be a musical number.
That's why I showed up.
Madison, thank you for coming on.
Thanks for having me.
Take us out with a riff, Madison.
That was gold.
This episode was produced by Kate Lopresti
with help from Alex Barron,
who's also our Quizmaster, Luke van der Plug, and Dahlia Haddad.
It was edited by Wendy Doer and engineered by Rowan Nemistow.
Original music by Dan Powell, Alicia E.2, and Diane Wong.
Special thanks to Paula Schumann.
Thanks for listening. See you next week.
Thank you.
