Just got back from seeing Wicked
Sep. 6th, 2009 11:02 pmHOLY CRAP THAT WAS AWESOME.
So, yeah, five years after having
softstepshoes told me I should see it, I finally got to see Wicked. The travelling production is in Nashville for three weeks right now, and since it is a long weekend, I could make the trip home. Totally worth the wait.
Our Elphaba was amazing. She was just so earnest and sincere--very, very believable in the role. Apparently she had been playing Elphaba on Broadway before joining the touring cast. (Her name's Marcia Dodd if that means anything to anyone.) And her voice is fantastic.
"Defying Gravity" sent chills down my spine all the way through it. HOLY CRAP. I knew from the soundtrack it was incredible, but this was just...I...wow. (I kind of want to have the lighting designer's babies.)
Something else amazing: I apparently made it through five years and several friends being obsessed with this musical without learning the ending. No, really. I totally thought Fiyero kicked the bucket when the guards dragged him off, and that Elphaba died at the end. Really. I had no idea they lived and ran away together! I'm not sure if that changes my opinion of it for better or worse--I mean, Elphaba lives, hooray!, but at the same time, I was totally into Galinda's sadness. Hmm. I think I'm still just mostly shocked that I made it this far without being spoiled, or rather without realizing I hadn't been spoiled.
I loved the costumes and the sets. So, so cool. I love clockwork anything, so I was in heaven with all the cogs and gears that made up the backgrounds. (I did wonder what the clocks had to do with things, though. Is that a reference to the movie? I still haven't seen it all the way through. I seem to recall being traumatized by the flying monkies when I was very small.) I didn't really get what the animatronic dragon at the top of things was all about, either, aside from being another place to send out fog, which unfortunately made my eyes all watery several times. Boo.
Oh, and another question: So was Boq supposed to be Dorothy's tin man, and the lion cub her lion? I thought they were, but then Boq showed back up after Galinda sent Dorothy & co. on their way. And of course Fiyero seemed to be turning into the Scarecrow, but he couldn't have been Dorothy's scarecrow. Did Elphaba just go around turing lots of people into lions and scarecrows and tin men?
Galinda's rack of shoes cracked me up. So did all the sarcastic dialogue--"Well, we can't all travel by bubble!" is one I particularly remember. Elphaba was freaking hilarious. I see why people love her.
There were only two things I would've changed:
1. Okay, this is almost certainly a function of the fact that my tolerance for Valley Girl humor is somewhere in the negative double digits. But our Galinda had dialed the ditz up to eleven. My mom found her hilarious all the way through, and I did find her quite funny most of the time (Elphaba's sarcasm was better, but Galinda had her moments--"Pink goes with green! Who knew?" is one that stands out in my memory)...but. She had this high-pitched squealy thing she did, complete with hand-flapping and flailing arms, that made me want to stab her in the face repeatedly. She calmed down a bit in the second act, for which I was supremely grateful. But I definitely got the impression that she'd memorized Kristen Chenoweth's interpretation of the role, and then asked herself, "How different can I make this while still being perky?" The Cheno had an underlying sincerity that seemed to be missing in this one. She had a great voice, though; she sounded particularly fantastic in her duets with Elphaba.
2. It felt like there should've been some choreography to go along with "As Long as Your Mine." It was a little weird, with Elphaba and Fiyero kneeling on the floor a couple feet away from each other and singing at one another, occasionally holding hands or something, for a rather long time. Maybe that's just me and my interest in dance, though.
But in the grand scheme of things, those are very minor. I know there are more fabulous bits, both of the show itself and our production of it, that I'm forgetting. If I get the chance, I will totally see this again, because THAT WAS AWESOME.
So, yeah, five years after having
Our Elphaba was amazing. She was just so earnest and sincere--very, very believable in the role. Apparently she had been playing Elphaba on Broadway before joining the touring cast. (Her name's Marcia Dodd if that means anything to anyone.) And her voice is fantastic.
"Defying Gravity" sent chills down my spine all the way through it. HOLY CRAP. I knew from the soundtrack it was incredible, but this was just...I...wow. (I kind of want to have the lighting designer's babies.)
Something else amazing: I apparently made it through five years and several friends being obsessed with this musical without learning the ending. No, really. I totally thought Fiyero kicked the bucket when the guards dragged him off, and that Elphaba died at the end. Really. I had no idea they lived and ran away together! I'm not sure if that changes my opinion of it for better or worse--I mean, Elphaba lives, hooray!, but at the same time, I was totally into Galinda's sadness. Hmm. I think I'm still just mostly shocked that I made it this far without being spoiled, or rather without realizing I hadn't been spoiled.
I loved the costumes and the sets. So, so cool. I love clockwork anything, so I was in heaven with all the cogs and gears that made up the backgrounds. (I did wonder what the clocks had to do with things, though. Is that a reference to the movie? I still haven't seen it all the way through. I seem to recall being traumatized by the flying monkies when I was very small.) I didn't really get what the animatronic dragon at the top of things was all about, either, aside from being another place to send out fog, which unfortunately made my eyes all watery several times. Boo.
Oh, and another question: So was Boq supposed to be Dorothy's tin man, and the lion cub her lion? I thought they were, but then Boq showed back up after Galinda sent Dorothy & co. on their way. And of course Fiyero seemed to be turning into the Scarecrow, but he couldn't have been Dorothy's scarecrow. Did Elphaba just go around turing lots of people into lions and scarecrows and tin men?
Galinda's rack of shoes cracked me up. So did all the sarcastic dialogue--"Well, we can't all travel by bubble!" is one I particularly remember. Elphaba was freaking hilarious. I see why people love her.
There were only two things I would've changed:
1. Okay, this is almost certainly a function of the fact that my tolerance for Valley Girl humor is somewhere in the negative double digits. But our Galinda had dialed the ditz up to eleven. My mom found her hilarious all the way through, and I did find her quite funny most of the time (Elphaba's sarcasm was better, but Galinda had her moments--"Pink goes with green! Who knew?" is one that stands out in my memory)...but. She had this high-pitched squealy thing she did, complete with hand-flapping and flailing arms, that made me want to stab her in the face repeatedly. She calmed down a bit in the second act, for which I was supremely grateful. But I definitely got the impression that she'd memorized Kristen Chenoweth's interpretation of the role, and then asked herself, "How different can I make this while still being perky?" The Cheno had an underlying sincerity that seemed to be missing in this one. She had a great voice, though; she sounded particularly fantastic in her duets with Elphaba.
2. It felt like there should've been some choreography to go along with "As Long as Your Mine." It was a little weird, with Elphaba and Fiyero kneeling on the floor a couple feet away from each other and singing at one another, occasionally holding hands or something, for a rather long time. Maybe that's just me and my interest in dance, though.
But in the grand scheme of things, those are very minor. I know there are more fabulous bits, both of the show itself and our production of it, that I'm forgetting. If I get the chance, I will totally see this again, because THAT WAS AWESOME.
no subject
Date: 2009-09-07 06:07 pm (UTC)